The Aesthetics of Comics

by
Format: Paperback
Pub. Date: 2001-12-01
Publisher(s): Pennsylvania State Univ Pr
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Summary

From Gary Larsons The Far Side to George Herrimans Krazy Kat, comic strips have two obvious defining features. They are visual narratives, using both words and pictures to tell stories, and they use word balloons to represent the speech and thought of depicted characters. Art historians have studied visual artifacts from every culture; cultural historians have recently paid close attention to movies. Yet the comic strip, an art form known to everyone, has not yet been much studied by aestheticians or art historians. This is the first full-length philosophical account of the comic strip.Distinguished philosopher David Carrier looks at popular American and Japanese comic strips to identify and solve the aesthetic problems posed by comic strips and to explain the relationship of this artistic genre to other forms of visual art. He traces the use of speech and thought balloons to early Renaissance art and claims that the speech balloon defines comics as neither a purely visual nor a strictly verbal art form, but as something radically new. Comics, he claims, are es

Author Biography

David Carrier is Champney Family Visiting Professor, Case Western Reserve University/Cleveland Institute of Art

Table of Contents

List of Illustrations
ix
Acknowledgments xi
Introduction 1(10)
PART ONE: THE NATURE OF COMICS
Caricature; or, Representing Causal Connection
11(16)
The Speech Balloon; or, The Problem of Representing Other Minds
27(20)
The Image Sequence; or, Moving Modernist Pictures
47(14)
Words and Pictures Bound Together; or, Experiencing the Unity of Comics
61(16)
PART TWO: INTERPRETING COMICS
The Content of the Form; or, Seeing Pictures, Reading Texts, Viewing Comics
77(10)
Interpreting a Populist Art Form; or, The Liberating Force of Krazy Kat
87(20)
PART THREE: THE PLACE OF COMICS IN RELATION TO ART HISTORY
Posthistorical Art; or, Comics and the Realm of Absolute Knowledge
107(18)
Bibliography 125(12)
Index 137

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