1 / 21

A History of Comic Book Storytelling

A History of Comic Book Storytelling. From. to. Definition. By any definition that’s likely to be given, comic books only date back to 1933 However, there are many forms of storytelling that use the same style of comics, but that nobody would ever describe as being comics!

lynch
Télécharger la présentation

A History of Comic Book Storytelling

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. A History of Comic Book Storytelling From to

  2. Definition • By any definition that’s likely to be given, comic books only date back to 1933 • However, there are many forms of storytelling that use the same style of comics, but that nobody would ever describe as being comics! • For these, we use the term…

  3. SEQUENTIAL ART: “Juxtaposed pictorial or other images in deliberate sequence”

  4. What does that mean? • It just means “pictures that are meant to be seen together in a certain order to tell a story” • It also means that the history of the kind of storytelling used by comics is suddenly very, very long indeed!

  5. “Histoire de Monsieur Cryptogame” – RodolpheTöpffer, 1830

  6. “A Harlot’s Progress” – William Hogarth, 1791

  7. “The Torture of St. Erasmus” – c.1460

  8. “The Bayeux Tapestry” – 1066 AD, and over 70 metres long! “8-Deer ‘Tiger’s Claw’” – 1049 AD, and 36 feet long!

  9. Painting in the tomb of Ancient Egyptian scribe, Menna – c.1300 BC

  10. As you can see, this has been a very popular style of storytelling throughout humanity’s long history! So where do modern comics come in? What’s a “graphic novel”?

  11. Graphic Novels and Modern Culture • “Graphic Novel” is a very recent term • It refers to multiple comics bound together into books as chapters of a larger story, but is also used when people want to talk about comics without sounding childish • Even though it’s getting better, comics still have a sort of STIGMA in modern Western culture that they don’t have in others

  12. In Other Cultures • Comics have seen huge popularity in two cultures in particular: As “BandesDessinees” in Europe and as “Manga” in Japan

  13. BANDES DESSINEES

  14. Comics have been a part of European culture for a long time – see the Töpffer strip above! • Comics as we know them are primarily seen in France and Belgium • They really took off during and after World War II – the German occupation made it hard to import American comics, and when the war ended, the comics produced locally remained much more popular • Comics in Europe are a much more respected form of art than in America. One writer, Maurice De Bevere, even described them as “The Ninth Art” • The French term “bandesdessinees” does not imply any sort of content. “Comic Book” implies something lighthearted, funny, childish; “bandesdessinees” simply means “drawn strips”

  15. Though European comics aren’t that well known outside of France and Belgium, some have become very popular worldwide. Examples include Tintin, shown here, and Asterix, shown below.

  16. Manga 漫画 マンガ

  17. In Japan, comics as we know them emerged after World War II – later than in even America • They became far more widespread and respected very fast, helped along by legendary writers like Osamu Tezuka (Astro Boy) • In Japan, there is manga for literally everybody – for children and teenagers, young adults, and even housewives and businessmen! • Of the three cultural comics, Japan’s manga are the most widely published internationally

  18. Astro Boy, by Osamu Tezuka

  19. A businessman reading a manga magazine on the train

  20. Josei manga is meant for housewives and older women – like the Harlequin romance novels that we have. Manga in this genre is basically the “50 Shades of Gray” of Japan

More Related