Description

Book Synopsis

Exploring image and imagination in conjunction with natural environments, the animal, and the human, this collection of essays turns the ecocritical and ecocompositional gaze upon comic studies. The comic form has a long tradition of representing environmental rhetoric. Through discussions of comics including A.D.: New Orleans After the Deluge, We3, Concrete, and Black Orchid, these essays bring the rich work of ecological criticism into dialogue with the multi-faceted landscape of comics, graphic novels, web-comics, cartoons, and animation. The contributors ask not only how nature and environment are portrayed in these texts but also how these textual forms inform how we come to know nature and environment--or what we understand those terms to represent. Interdisciplinary in approach, this collection welcomes diverse approaches that integrate not only ecocriticism and comics studies, but animal studies, posthumanism, ecofeminism, queer ecology, semiotics, visual rh

Table of Contents

  • EcoComix: An Introduction (Sidney I. Dobrin)
  • The Threat of (Non)Normative Nature: Queer Ecology in H2O and A.D.: New Orleans After the Deluge (Ashley Holland)
  • The Middle Voice of EcoComix: Reading Philippe Squarzoni's Climate Changed (Terry Harpold)
  • Virtual Farmer, Real Activist? Cory Doctorow and Jen Wang's In Real Life (Anastasia Salter)
  • The "GUD," the "BAD" and the Biorg: Reading the Postanimal in We3 (Melissa Bianchi)
  • Follow the Concrete Submersible (Sidney I. Dobrin)
  • "Where You Create Life": Monsters and Nature in Black Orchid (Spencer Chalifour)
  • How the Comic Book Store Became Ecological (Aaron Kashtan)
  • Trees, ­Anti-Advocacy and Visual Rhetoric in Truax (A Parody of The Lorax) (Madison Jones)
  • Treacherous Fields and Bunny Girls: Representations of Nature in Yuu Watase's Alice 19th (Catherine Kyle)
  • Killing Oliver Queen: Environmentalist Meaning and Demeaning in Green Arrow (Eric C. Otto)
  • About the Contributors
  • Index

EcoComix

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      Publisher: McFarland & Co Inc
      Publication Date: 1/2/2020 12:10:00 AM
      ISBN13: 9781476666341, 978-1476666341
      ISBN10: 1476666342

      Description

      Book Synopsis

      Exploring image and imagination in conjunction with natural environments, the animal, and the human, this collection of essays turns the ecocritical and ecocompositional gaze upon comic studies. The comic form has a long tradition of representing environmental rhetoric. Through discussions of comics including A.D.: New Orleans After the Deluge, We3, Concrete, and Black Orchid, these essays bring the rich work of ecological criticism into dialogue with the multi-faceted landscape of comics, graphic novels, web-comics, cartoons, and animation. The contributors ask not only how nature and environment are portrayed in these texts but also how these textual forms inform how we come to know nature and environment--or what we understand those terms to represent. Interdisciplinary in approach, this collection welcomes diverse approaches that integrate not only ecocriticism and comics studies, but animal studies, posthumanism, ecofeminism, queer ecology, semiotics, visual rh

      Table of Contents

      • EcoComix: An Introduction (Sidney I. Dobrin)
      • The Threat of (Non)Normative Nature: Queer Ecology in H2O and A.D.: New Orleans After the Deluge (Ashley Holland)
      • The Middle Voice of EcoComix: Reading Philippe Squarzoni's Climate Changed (Terry Harpold)
      • Virtual Farmer, Real Activist? Cory Doctorow and Jen Wang's In Real Life (Anastasia Salter)
      • The "GUD," the "BAD" and the Biorg: Reading the Postanimal in We3 (Melissa Bianchi)
      • Follow the Concrete Submersible (Sidney I. Dobrin)
      • "Where You Create Life": Monsters and Nature in Black Orchid (Spencer Chalifour)
      • How the Comic Book Store Became Ecological (Aaron Kashtan)
      • Trees, ­Anti-Advocacy and Visual Rhetoric in Truax (A Parody of The Lorax) (Madison Jones)
      • Treacherous Fields and Bunny Girls: Representations of Nature in Yuu Watase's Alice 19th (Catherine Kyle)
      • Killing Oliver Queen: Environmentalist Meaning and Demeaning in Green Arrow (Eric C. Otto)
      • About the Contributors
      • Index

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