Comics carnet : the graphic novelist as global nomad


Autoria(s): Bader, Edward.
Contribuinte(s)

Popular Culture Program

Data(s)

16/11/2009

16/11/2009

16/11/2007

Resumo

An interdisciplinary approach is used to identify a new graphic novel genre, 'comics camet', and its key features. The study situates comics camet in a historical context and shows it to be the result of a cross-pollination between the American and French comics traditions. Comics camet incorporates features from other literary genres: journalism, autobiography, ethnography and travel writing. Its creators, primarily European rriales, document their experiences visiting countries that Europe has traditionally defined as belonging to the 'East'. A visual and narrative analysis, using theoretical perspectives derived from cultural and postcolonial studies, examines how comics camet represents the non-European other and identifies the genre's ideological assumptions. Four representative texts are examined: Joe Sacco's Palestine (2001), Craig Thompson's, Camet de Voyage (2004), Guy Delisle's Pyongyang (2005) and Mrujane Satrpi's Persespolis 2 (2004). The study concludes that the comics camet genre simultaneously reinforces and challenges stereotypical assumptions about non-European people and places.

Identificador

http://hdl.handle.net/10464/2837

Idioma(s)

eng

Publicador

Brock University

Palavras-Chave #Graphic novels. #Travel writing. #Stereotypes (Social psychology) in literature.
Tipo

Electronic Thesis or Dissertation