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Full Description
How are Australian comics made and read? How do changes in comics and graphic storytelling over the past forty years intersect with our changing ideas about history, culture, community, creativity and technology?
In Folio: Essays on Australian Comics, interdisciplinary scholars and world-leading makers pose questions about Australian comics, including through visual essays, asking how comics move out into community, industry, society, and disciplines both cognate and distant.
It first examines the cultures and communities of Australian comics, from Indigenous cultural contexts to DIY zine fairs, and international markets to the graphic recording industry. It then focuses on practices and readings of individual comics, exploring individual practices and analysing Australian work, from government-commissioned comics with explicit social purpose to comics that employ augmented reality.
Contents
PART ONE: CULTURES AND COMMUNITIES.- Chapter 1-What Kinds of Questions Do We Ask About Australian Comics?.- Chapter 2-Lessons from My Journey into Australian Comics.-Chapter 3-Obsession and Unreasonable Love: creativity and devotion in comics scholarship.- Chapter 4- Considering the 'Australianness' of Comic Books and Graphic Novels by Australian Creators- Chapter 5- Community over Industry? Comics makers at zine fairs in Australia.- Chapter 6- The Comic Art Festival: communities of practice... in practice.- Chapter7- Drawn Together: what can the visual narrative skillset of comic makers enable as a process in social contexts.-PART TWO:PRACTICES AND READINGS.- Chapter 8- Close to the Surface: staged messaging in Australian Government-commissioned comics.- Chapter 9- Masks, Southern Crosses and Old Jungle Sayings: Australian action, adventure, the superheroes, and contributions to a hidden genre.- Chapter 10- Australian Comics Making Places.-Chapter 11- Augmenting Alice: an augmented comic about a Mparntwe road trip.-Chapter 12- The Brownout Murders:using comics to challenge the stereotype of women as victims in the serial killer narrative - by Luke C Jackson, Karen Le Rossignol, Patrick.- Chapter 13- Reconsolidate, Revise, Reframe: narrativising the past with diary comics.- Chapter 14- Pad 2 pad:identity, relationality, and comics practice in Leonie Brialey's Raw Feels and Alice Chipkin and Jessica Tavassoli's Eyes Too Dry.