Understanding Society: a Survey of Modern Social Theory; Douglas Mann; 2011

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

Understanding Society: a Survey of Modern Social Theory; Douglas Mann; 2011 Understanding Society: A Survey of Modern Social Theory; Douglas Mann; 2011 Oxford University Press, 2011; 481 pages; 2011; Douglas Mann; 0195432509, 9780195432503; Understanding Society: A Survey of Modern Social Theory; Understanding Society: A Survey of Modern Social Theory, second edition, introduces the major streams of contemporary social theory and traces their evolution to the present day. Among the many new features of this edition is an entirely new chapter on three recent schools of thought centering on the somatic (bodily) aspects of personal identity - race, gender, and queer theory. In addition, a series of fictional vignettes and 'flashbacks' throughout illuminate the topics in each chapterand help students make connections between social theory and real-world issues. With a contemporary and accessible writing style that will engage readers, this uniquely Canadian text features current debates on such topics as communication, popular culture, the global village, corporatism, and globalization. file download fymu.pdf The Philosophical Politics of Comics; Doug Mann; 440 pages; Comics & Graphic Novels; "Considers a variety of comic storylines and characters, in print and in film, illustrating how they echo our ideas of justice, power, and responsibility."--Back cover; ISBN:1894987799; Great Power and Great Responsibility; Nov 4, 2014 Understanding Society: A Survey of Modern Social Theory pdf Joseph Campbell, arguably the greatest mythologist of our time, was certainly one of our greatest storytellers. This new cloth edition of The Hero's Journey, published to; The Hero's Journey; Body, Mind & Spirit; 1990; Joseph Campbell, Phil Cousineau, Stuart L. Brown; Joseph Campbell on His Life and Work; 249 pages; ISBN:1577314042 Social pdf ISBN:0415922224; Why have people from different cultures and eras formulated myths and stories with similar structures? What does this similarity tell us about the mind, morality, and structure; Maps of Meaning; 541 pages; 1999; The Architecture of Belief; Jordan B. Peterson; Psychology 2007; Philosophy; ISBN:1934389072; Eastern philosophy is not only an intellectual pursuit but one that involves one's entire being. Much of it is so deeply entwined with the non-intellectual art of meditation; Eastern Philosophy for Beginners; Jim Powell; 182 pages Understanding Society: A Survey of Modern Social Theory pdf download 222 pages; Lao Tzu, Ralph Alan Dale; The Tao Te Ching; Religion; ISBN:1842931237; Sep 1, 2006; The Tao Te Ching is universally renowned as a sublimely poetic spiritual teaching by the legendary sage, Lao Tzu. Its easily assimilated aphorisms provide a continuous source ISBN:0844215872; Mel Thompson; From the exotic images of sexual Tantra to the simple precision of Zen, from the moral precepts of Confucianism to the rich array of Hindu ideas and lifestyles, Eastern; Eastern Philosophy; 243 pages; 1999; Philosophy, Asian of History and Social Theory; History; 224 pages; 2005; Peter Burke; The second edition of this indispensable review of the emergence of the fields of history and social science and traces their tentative convergence as he reappraises the; ISBN:0801472857 a screenplay; 144 pages; 2001; UOM:39015055921863; The preeminent anthology of the graphic arts, BLAB!'s list of contributors past and present reads like a Who's Who of the contemporary visual art world. Each issue functions on; Daniel Clowes, Terry Zwigoff; Ghost world; Fiction Understanding 256 pages; From the exotic images of sexual Tantra to the simple precision of Zen, from the moral precepts of Confucianism to the rich array of Hindu ideas and lifestyles, Eastern; Teach Yourself Eastern Philosophy; Mel Thompson; Philosophy; ISBN:0071421319; 2003 Survey ISBN:1428818057; The Multicultural and Classic Readings; Never HIGHLIGHT a Book Again! Virtually all of the testable terms, concepts, persons, places, and events from the textbook are included. Cram101 Just the FACTS101 studyguides; Education; 220 pages; 2006; Charles Lemert, Cram101 Textbook Reviews; Social Theory ISBN:9780224060882; Daniel Clowes; 2000; Comic books, strips, etc; Ghost World is the story of Enid and Rebecca, teenage friends facing the unwelcome prospect of adulthood, and the uncertain future of their complicated relationship. Clowes; Ghost World; 80 pages 2007; 195 pages; Thinking the unthinkable; STANFORD:36105122855971; Charles C. Lemert; the riddles of classical social theories; Social Science; In the eloquent style for which he has become famous, Charles Lemert writes of social theory as no one else. Thinking the Unthinkableis offered as text for instruction, yet it Society: 307 pages; ISBN:9781412980128; The McDonaldization of Society 6; 2011; George Ritzer; As one of the most noteworthy and popular sociology books of all time, The McDonaldization of Society 6 demonstrates the power of the sociological imagination to 21st century; Social Science A Understanding Society: A Survey of Modern Social Theory download Fiction; Chuck Palahniuk; ISBN:0393039765; 1996; Fight Club; 208 pages; In a confusing world poised on the brink of mayhem, Tyler Durden, a projectionist, waiter, and anarchic genius, comes up with an idea to create clubs in which young men can Theory pdf download ISBN:0199255709; Austin Harrington; This book provides a comprehensive introduction to the leading topics, theories, and debates in modern social theory. Fourteen chapters have been written by specialists in the; Jan 1, 2005; 378 pages; An Introduction; Social Science; Modern Social Theory ISBN:0521097851; 1971; Anthony Giddens; Political Science; An Analysis of the Writings of Marx, Durkheim and Max Weber; Capitalism and Modern Social Theory; Giddens's analysis of the writings of Marx, Durkheim and Weber has become the classic text for any student seeking to understand the three thinkers who established the basic; 261 pages download pdf file 1970; UOM:39015002841271; Herbert Marcuse; an exposition and a polemic; 114 pages; Alasdair C. MacIntyre; Philosophy Understanding Society: A Survey of Modern Social Theory pdf file Understanding Society; 1947; 749 pages; UOM:39015019978827; Howard Washington Odum; The Principles of Dynamic Sociology; Civilization UOM:39015002379272; Philosophy; 327 pages; A Kind of Poet; 1971; Kierkegaard; Louis Mackey 548 pages; ISBN:0192851098; Jul 2, 1981; Leszek Kolakowski, Paul Stephen Falla; Main Currents of Marxism: its origins, growth and dissolution, Volume 2; its origins, growth and dissolution; Political Science Modern https://sawaynavah.files.wordpress.com/2016/04/cinufif.pdf.
Recommended publications
  • The Art of Storytelling: a Peek Into the Graphic Literary World Literary World Has Never Been Only Black and White
    Mgr. et Mgr. Jana Kasparova; University of West Bohemia, Faculty of Philosophy and Arts, Dept. of English Lang. and Lit. The Art of Storytelling: A Peek Into the Graphic Literary World Literary world has never been only black and white. The characters we love to read about have never been only good and bad. Let us peek into the world where graphics and colours play as important role as the words and letters written on the page. Let us explore the world of contemporary comic books and graphic novels, learn about their characteristics and specifics and meet the authors who are considered to be the superheroes of this rediscovered literary genre. Someone might think that comics and graphic novels are just for children and young adults. But that would be a mistake! Look at a few examples of graphic novels which may blow your mind and teach you about real world! Graphic novel VERSUS Comic Book Before talking about particular representatives of contemporary graphic literature, learn a bit about the basics of the genre. Do you know the terminology? Can you define the following terms, pointing at possible differences between them? comic book - graphic novel - A brief historical overview combination of words and pictures stretches back into antiquity (ancient Egyptian wall paintings) current vocabulary shaped with the rise of the comic strip popularized in newspapers at the start of the 20th century introduction of the fundamentals of the comics language — (balloons, panel to panel narrative progression) Winsor McCay, George Herriman, E.C.
    [Show full text]
  • Graphic Novels for Children and Teens
    J/YA Graphic Novel Titles The 9/11 Report: A Graphic Adaptation Sid Jacobson Hill & Wang Gr. 9+ Age of Bronze, Volume 1: A Thousand Ships Eric Shanower Image Comics Gr. 9+ The Amazing “True” Story of a Teenage Single Mom Katherine Arnoldi Hyperion Gr. 9+ American Born Chinese Gene Yang First Second Gr. 7+ American Splendor Harvey Pekar Vertigo Gr. 10+ Amy Unbounded: Belondweg Blossoming Rachel Hartman Pug House Press Gr. 3+ The Arrival Shaun Tan A.A. Levine Gr. 6+ Astonishing X-Men Joss Whedon Marvel Gr. 9+ Astro City: Life in the Big City Kurt Busiek DC Comics Gr. 10+ Babymouse Holm, Jennifer Random House Children’s Gr. 1-5 Baby-Sitter’s Club Graphix (nos. 1-4) Ann M. Martin & Raina Telgemeier Scholastic Gr. 3-7 Barefoot Gen, Volume 1: A Cartoon Story of Hiroshima Keiji Nakazawa Last Gasp Gr. 9+ Beowulf (graphic adaptation of epic poem) Gareth Hinds Candlewick Press Gr. 7+ Berlin: City of Stones Berlin: City of Smoke Jason Lutes Drawn & Quarterly Gr. 9+ Blankets Craig Thompson Top Shelf Gr. 10+ Bluesman (vols. 1, 2, & 3) Rob Vollmar NBM Publishing Gr. 10+ Bone Jeff Smith Cartoon Books Gr. 3+ Breaking Up: a Fashion High graphic novel Aimee Friedman Graphix Gr. 5+ Buffy the Vampire Slayer (Season 8) Joss Whedon Dark Horse Gr. 7+ Castle Waiting Linda Medley Fantagraphics Gr. 5+ Chiggers Hope Larson Aladdin Mix Gr. 5-9 Cirque du Freak: the Manga Darren Shan Yen Press Gr. 7+ City of Light, City of Dark: A Comic Book Novel Avi Orchard Books Gr.
    [Show full text]
  • Cosmopolitanism, Remediation and the Ghost World of Bollywood
    COSMOPOLITANISM, REMEDIATION, AND THE GHOST WORLD OF BOLLYWOOD DAVID NOVAK CUniversity ofA California, Santa Barbara Over the past two decades, there has been unprecedented interest in Asian popular media in the United States. Regionally identified productions such as Japanese anime, Hong Kong action movies, and Bollywood film have developed substantial nondiasporic fan bases in North America and Europe. This transnational consumption has passed largely under the radar of culturalist interpretations, to be described as an ephemeral by-product of media circulation and its eclectic overproduction of images and signifiers. But culture is produced anew in these “foreign takes” on popular media, in which acts of cultural borrowing channel emergent forms of cosmopolitan subjectivity. Bollywood’s global circulations have been especially complex and surprising in reaching beyond South Asian diasporas to connect with audiences throughout the world. But unlike markets in Africa, Eastern Europe, and Southeast Asia, the growing North American reception of Bollywood is not necessarily based on the films themselves but on excerpts from classic Bollywood films, especially song-and- dance sequences. The music is redistributed on Western-produced compilations andsampledonDJremixCDssuchasBollywood Beats, Bollywood Breaks, and Bollywood Funk; costumes and choreography are parodied on mainstream television programs; “Bollywood dancing” is all over YouTube and classes are offered both in India and the United States.1 In this essay, I trace the circulation of Jaan Pehechaan Ho, a song-and-dance sequence from the 1965 Raja Nawathe film Gumnaam that has been widely recircu- lated in an “alternative” nondiasporic reception in the United States. I begin with CULTURAL ANTHROPOLOGY, Vol. 25, Issue 1, pp.
    [Show full text]
  • 1 Daniel Clowes (1961- ) Is a Highly
    Integrity of the Page: The Creative Process of Daniel Clowes Daniel Clowes (1961- ) is a highly-regarded cartoonist, graphic novelist, and screenwriter. He is best known for his Eightball comic book series (1989-2004) and for his graphic novels Ghost World (1997), Ice Haven (2005), Wilson (2010), Mister Wonderful (2011), and The Death-Ray (2011). The Special Collections Research Center acquired Clowes’ archive in 2015. The acquisition honors Clowes’ personal ties to the University of Chicago – Clowes was born in Chicago and spent much of his childhood in Hyde Park where he attended the University of Chicago Laboratory School until 1979. His grandfather, James Lea Cate (1899-1981), was a history professor at the University of Chicago from 1930 to 1969, and Dr. Cate’s personal papers reside in the Special Collections Research Center. Clowes’ archive also anchors a growing collection of Chicago-related contemporary comics at the Library. The collection supports a burgeoning, cross-disciplinary interest in comics for research and teaching at the University. The Clowes archive contains notes, outlines, narrative drafts, character sketches, draft layouts, and more for three of Clowes’ books: Ice Haven, Mister Wonderful, and The Death-Ray. The exhibition pieces this material together, tracing the evolution of Clowes’ art from conception to production to publication. The materials on display emphasize the exceptional tangibility of Clowes’ work in an era when art can easily be made, and then unmade, on a computer. Throughout his career, the physicality of his craft has been a vital component of his artistic vision and creative process. Clowes remains dedicated to simple paper, pencil, and ink – to what he calls the “integrity of the page.” Explanatory panels throughout the exhibition are composed of excerpts from interviews with Clowes in which he articulates aspects of his style and technique.
    [Show full text]
  • Writing About Comics
    NACAE National Association of Comics Art Educators English 100-v: Writing about Comics From the wild assertions of Unbreakable and the sudden popularity of films adapted from comics (not just Spider-Man or Daredevil, but Ghost World and From Hell), to the abrupt appearance of Dan Clowes and Art Spiegelman all over The New Yorker, interesting claims are now being made about the value of comics and comic books. Are they the visible articulation of some unconscious knowledge or desire -- No, probably not. Are they the new literature of the twenty-first century -- Possibly, possibly... This course offers a reading survey of the best comics of the past twenty years (sometimes called “graphic novels”), and supplies the skills for reading comics critically in terms not only of what they say (which is easy) but of how they say it (which takes some thinking). More importantly than the fact that comics will be touching off all of our conversations, however, this is a course in writing critically: in building an argument, in gathering and organizing literary evidence, and in capturing and retaining the reader's interest (and your own). Don't assume this will be easy, just because we're reading comics. We'll be working hard this semester, doing a lot of reading and plenty of writing. The good news is that it should all be interesting. The texts are all really good books, though you may find you don't like them all equally well. The essays, too, will be guided by your own interest in the texts, and by the end of the course you'll be exploring the unmapped territory of literary comics on your own, following your own nose.
    [Show full text]
  • Graphic Novels in Your School Library
    GRAPHIC NOVELS IN YOUR SCHOOL LIBRARY Jesse Karp ILLUSTRATED BY Rush Kress AMERICAN LIBRARY ASSOCIATION CHICAGO 2012 For more than ten years, JESSE KARP has been a school librarian at LREI (Little Red School House and Elisabeth Irwin High School), one of Manhattan’s oldest independent schools and a long-standing leader in progressive education. He works with students across the cur- riculum, from beginning readers to high school students, with all kinds of material, includ- ing graphic novels. He regularly reviews graphic novels and picture books for Booklist and contributes to the magazine’s yearly graphic novel best list roundup; he has written articles for Book Links and American Libraries as well. He has delivered seminars on the sequen- tial art form at Pratt Institute and Queens College and teaches a graduate course about the history and analysis of the form at Pratt. He has served as a graphic novel panelist at Book Expo America for two years running and served on YALSA’s Great Graphic Novels for Teens committee from 2009 to 2012. He cocreated the education webcomic Dr. Lollipop and is the author of the young adult novel Those That Wake, which is set in Manhattan, where he lives with his wife and two daughters. Please visit his website at www.beyondwhereyoustand.com. RUSH KRESS graduated from the illustrious Joe Kubert School of Cartoon and Graphic Illustration in 1999. He has produced corporate comics for Derivatives Strategy magazine, cocreated the education webcomic Dr. Lollipop, and produced assorted covers for Early Music America magazine. He lives and works in New York City.
    [Show full text]
  • Exploring Ghost Worlds: a Review of the Daniel Clowes Reader
    Johnston, P 2013 Exploring Ghost Worlds: A Review of The Daniel Clowes THE COMICS GRID Reader. The Comics Grid: Journal of Comics Scholarship, 3(1): 7, pp. 1-5, Journal of comics scholarship DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.5334/cg.ag REVIEW Exploring Ghost Worlds: A Review of The Daniel Clowes Reader The Daniel Clowes Reader, Ken Parille, Softcover: 360 pages, Colour and black & white, Fantagraphics, 2013, ISBN: 9781606995891 Paddy Johnston* Daniel Clowes is undoubtedly one of the most influen- tial and prolific cartoonists working today, with a career spanning many decades. The Daniel Clowes Reader (Parille 2013) comes at the perfect time – when interest in Clowes from scholars and critics is at a high, but in which he is still perhaps given less critical attention than his peers Chris Ware, Art Spiegelman, and Marjane Satrapi, all of whom are cited twice as often as Clowes despite his large canon of significant works in comics. With recent books being published on Chris Ware by The University Press of Mississippi and the forthcoming Art Spiegelman collec- tion from Drawn and Quarterly, more significant focused, monographic books are emerging in comics and comics criticism, and The Daniel Clowes Reader is a more than wel- come addition to this emergence. Rather than providing an exhaustive chronological ret- rospective, as it would be tempting to do with such a vol- ume, the book is organised into three sections based on distinct areas of discussion which provide thematic arcs: section one explores Girls and Adolescence, focusing on Clowes’ landmark graphic novel Ghost World; section two explores Boys and Post-Adolescence using some of Clowes’ short stories from Eightball; and section three explores the broader and more fluid areas of Comics, Artists and Audiences, including Clowes’ illustrated manifesto, “Mod- ern Cartoonist,” which originally accompanied Eightball #18 as an attached pamphlet in 1997.
    [Show full text]
  • This Town. Sameness, Suburbs and Spectrality in Daniel Clowes's Ghost
    Last stop: this town. Sameness, suburbs and spectrality in Daniel Clowes’s Ghost World Giorgio Busi Rizzi Ghost World, first published as a graphic novel by Fantagraphics in 1997, is to date the most famous and successful work by Daniel Clowes1. It recounts a key, yet consistently mundane, moment in the life of two teenagers, Enid Coleslaw and Rebecca Doppelmeier2. It is the summer after the end of high school and the two self-proclaimed witty, cynical, different girls have to confront with the passage their coming of age involves towards an adult life, consider moving to a new town, and face the possible dissolution of their friendship3. 1 The book won the Ignatz Award (1997) and was considered by the mag- azines Times and Paste to be among the ten best graphic novels of all time. 2 Significantly, both names mirror and redouble the identity of the au- thor: Enid Coleslaw is anagram of Daniel Clowes, and Doppelmeier alludes to a pun with doppelgänger that will be explicitly made in the course of the story. Clowes even inserts in the story a third alter ego of himself, a creepy cartoonist called David Clowes. 3 On the first paperback edition’s back cover, Clowes includes a brief syn- opsis: “Ghost World is the story of Enid and Rebecca, teenage friends facing the unwelcome prospect of adulthood and the uncertain future of their com- plicated relationship” (2001). Between, vol. VIII, n. 15 (Maggio/May 2018) Giorgio Busi Rizzi, Last stop: this town Enid and Rebecca live this liminal state in an anonymous 1990s American suburb that Clowes
    [Show full text]
  • S18-FANTAGRAPHICS.Pdf
    SUMMER 2018 SUMMER 2018 7563 lake city way ne • seattle, wa 98115 • usa telephone: 206-524-1967 • fax: 206-524-2104 the World’sG reatest customer service: 800-657-1100 her of Cart [email protected] • www.fantagraphics.com is oo Publ nists Distributed to the book trade in the In Japan: In Singapore, Malaysia: Distributed to the comic book specialty United States by: market by Diamond Comics Distribu- Rockbook – Gilles Fauveau Pansing Distribution Pte Ltd tors (www.diamondcomics.com). W.W. NORTON AND COMPANY, INC. Expirime 5F 10-10 Ichibancho 1 New Industrial Road 500 Fifth Avenue Chiyoda-ku Times Centre Also available via Last Gasp Books New York, NY 10110 102-0082 Tokyo Singapore 536196 (www.lastgasp.com). Tel.: 212-354-5500 Japan Tel (65) 6319 9939 Fax: 212-869-0856 Tel: (81) 90 9700 2481 Fax (65) 6459 4930 For information on distribution Tel: (81) 90 3962 4650 Order Dept. Tel.: 800-233-4830 email: [email protected] elsewhere, please contact Martin Bland. email: [email protected] Order Dept. Fax: 800-458-6515 email: [email protected] Customer Service Dept.: 800-233-4830 In Thailand, Cambodia, Laos, Vietnam, Special Sales Dept.: Myanmar: General Inquiries 800-286-4044 In Taiwan and Korea: [email protected] www.wwnorton.com Hardy Bigfoss International Co., Ltd. Sales & Distribution Martin Bland B. K. Norton Ltd. 293 Maenam Kwai Road, Tambol Tha [email protected] In the United Kingdom & Europe: 5F, 60 Roosevelt Road Makham Publicity & Marketing Jacq Cohen Sec. 4, Taipei 100 Amphur Muang [email protected]
    [Show full text]
  • Graphic Novels & Trade Paperbacks
    AUGUST 2008 GRAPHIC NOVELS & TRADE PAPERBACKS ITEM CODE TITLE PRICE AUG053316 1 WORLD MANGA VOL 1 TP £2.99 AUG053317 1 WORLD MANGA VOL 2 TP £2.99 SEP068078 100 BULLETS TP VOL 01 FIRST SHOT LAST CALL £6.50 FEB078229 100 BULLETS TP VOL 02 SPLIT SECOND CHANCE £9.99 MAR058150 100 BULLETS TP VOL 03 HANG UP ON THE HANG LOW £6.50 MAY058170 100 BULLETS TP VOL 04 FOREGONE TOMORROW £11.99 APR058054 100 BULLETS TP VOL 05 THE COUNTERFIFTH DETECTIVE (MR) £8.50 APR068251 100 BULLETS TP VOL 06 SIX FEET UNDER THE GUN £9.99 DEC048354 100 BULLETS TP VOL 07 SAMURAI £8.50 MAY050289 100 BULLETS TP VOL 08 THE HARD WAY (MR) £9.99 JAN060374 100 BULLETS TP VOL 09 STRYCHNINE LIVES (MR) £9.99 SEP060306 100 BULLETS TP VOL 10 DECAYED (MR) £9.99 MAY070233 100 BULLETS TP VOL 11 ONCE UPON A CRIME (MR) £8.50 STAR10512 100 BULLETS VOL 1 FIRST SHOT LAST CALL TP £6.50 JAN040032 100 PAINTINGS HC £9.99 JAN050367 100 PERCENT TP (MR) £16.99 DEC040302 1000 FACES TP VOL 01 (MR) £9.99 MAR063447 110 PER CENT GN £8.50 AUG052969 11TH CAT GN VOL 01 £7.50 NOV052978 11TH CAT GN VOL 02 £7.50 MAY063195 11TH CAT GN VOL 03 (RES) £7.50 AUG063347 11TH CAT GN VOL 04 £7.50 DEC060018 13TH SON WORSE THING WAITING TP £8.50 STAR19938 21 DOWN TP £12.99 JUN073692 24 NIGHTFALL TP £12.99 MAY061717 24 SEVEN GN VOL 01 £16.99 JUN071889 24 SEVEN GN VOL 02 £12.99 JAN073629 28 DAYS LATER THE AFTERMATH GN £11.99 JUN053035 30 DAYS OF NIGHT BLOODSUCKERS TALES HC VOL 01 (MR) £32.99 DEC042684 30 DAYS OF NIGHT HC (MR) £23.50 SEP042761 30 DAYS OF NIGHT RETURN TO BARROW HC (MR) £26.99 FEB073552 30 DAYS OF NIGHT
    [Show full text]
  • Guide to the Daniel Clowes Archive 2000-2014
    University of Chicago Library Guide to the Daniel Clowes Archive 2000-2014 © 2015 University of Chicago Library Table of Contents Descriptive Summary 3 Information on Use 3 Access 3 Citation 3 Biographical Note 3 Scope Note 6 Related Resources 7 Subject Headings 7 INVENTORY 7 Series I: The Death-Ray 7 Series II: Ice Haven 8 Series III: Mr. Wonderful 9 Series IV: Exhibition Ephemera 11 Descriptive Summary Identifier ICU.SPCL.CLOWES Title Clowes, Daniel. Archive Date 2000-2014 Size 18.5 linear feet (16 boxes) Repository Special Collections Research Center University of Chicago Library 1100 East 57th Street Chicago, Illinois 60637 U.S.A. Abstract Daniel Clowes (b. 1961) is an American artist and writer known for his comic-book series Eightball, and for graphic novels such as Ghost World, Ice Haven, Mr. Wonderful, Wilson, and The Death-Ray. The collection contains notes, outlines, narrative drafts, character sketches, draft layouts, line art, and book dummies for The Death-Ray, Ice Haven, and Mr. Wonderful, as well as exhibition ephemera. Materials date between 2000 and 2014, with the bulk dating from 2003 to 2011. Information on Use Access The Daniel Clowes Archive is open for research. Researchers are not permitted to use a camera, cellphone camera, personal scanner, video camera, or other recording device on any part of the collection. Please see Special Collections Research Center staff for all duplication requests. The paper copies of digitally-scanned artwork in boxes 6, 10, and 15 are open for research. The digital files that they represent are, at this time, closed to research.
    [Show full text]
  • Indications of Focalization in the Graphic Novel Ghost World Heidi Tihveräinen Pro Gradu
    “God, look at these stupid cunts!” Indications of focalization in the graphic novel Ghost World Heidi Tihveräinen Pro Gradu Thesis English Philology University of Oulu Spring 2013 Table of contents 1. INTRODUCTION....................................................................................................3 2. THEORETICAL BACKGROUND..........................................................................5 2.1. Language of comics.................................................................................. 5 2.2. Narrative and focalization........................................................................10 2.3. Focalization and graphic narratives.........................................................15 3. MATERIAL............................................................................................................23 4. INDICATIONS OF FOCALIZATION IN GHOST WORLD................................28 4.1. Color and drawing style...........................................................................29 4.1.1. Color scheme and theme................................................................29 4.1.2. Drawing style and characters.........................................................34 4.2. Text and image interaction.......................................................................38 4.2.1. Shared points of view and multiple perspectives...........................39 4.2.2. Shifts in focalization......................................................................50 5. SUMMARY OF FINDINGS AND DISCUSSION................................................57
    [Show full text]