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smilinginsomniac

The Grimace Project - 1 views

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    This is an amazing website! To see the theory of facial expression and emotion described by Scott McCloud (which inspired this project), see pp. 80-101 of Making Comics. Description: Grimace is a free Flash-based web component which displays emotions through facial expressions of a comic-like face. It is based on the idea that the face can serve as an accurate representative of emotional information, which is difficult to express verbally. The face is simple yet highly expressive and can represent subtle emotional changes through arbitrary blending of 6 basic emotions. The design is derived from the book Making Comics by Scott McCloud. Possible applications include experimental research settings and the augmentation of textual descriptions on websites with emotional information.
Mark Vega

CFP: "Teaching Graphic Narrative in the Literature Classroom" (M/MLA 4-7 November 2010,... - 1 views

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    Increasingly comic books and graphic narratives/novels find their way onto literature syllabi. Recent anthologies such as _Teaching Visual Literacy: Using Comic Books, Graphic Novels, Anime, Cartoons, and More to Develop Comprehension and Thinking Skills_, edited by Nancy Frey and Douglas Fisher, and _Building Literacy Connections with Graphic Novels: Page by Page, Panel by Panel,_ edited by James Bucky Carter, emphasize the use for such texts in secondary schools. But what are the benefits of teaching comic books and graphic narratives/novels in college? And how do we best go about doing it? This panel seeks papers that discuss the benefits of teaching these new genres in the Literature classroom. Papers may address pedagogical issues and concerns as well as sample lesson plans and/or anecdotes from experience.
Mark Vega

Review: The Art of Jaime Hernandez - 0 views

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    Todd Hignite's text for the Abrams' pretty The Art Of Jaime Hernandez is like the best testimonial ever written for a fancy tribute dinner, the kind of speechifying that makes you tear up a little bit in shared love for the subject of its adoration. One reads a lot of writing about cartoonists, but very little of it makes you want to shake the writer's hand, as is the case here. The love that many comics fans have for the work of Jaime Hernandez may be unique in comics because he's an artist that brings out that emotion in people that I would suggest are largely distrustful if not outright contemptuous of how frequently such feelings are expressed on behalf of so many other artists working in the medium. Jaime is a a comics artist people that find it hard to love artists love. Further, I think that people love Jaime for all the usual reasons one may love a comics artist, and then some folks love him a little more for all the reasons they love a great artist working any medium, and then a few folks love him that much more for being the avatar of a certain kind of relationship to comics, growing in seriousness of intent and human scope just as they were ready to read stories like that.
Angela Becerra Vidergar

The Weekly Crisis - Comic Book Review Blog - 2 views

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    Weekly comic book reviews
Angela Becerra Vidergar

Advance Review: Area 10 - 0 views

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    "Area 10 tells the story of NYPD Detective Adam Kamen as he investigates a series of brutal murders. The killer has caught the media's attention, having been given the moniker "Henry the Eighth" as all of the victims are found headless. ... A good chunk of the story centers around trepanation, a practice dating back thousands of years that involves drilling holes into the skull of a live human."
Angela Becerra Vidergar

JFR Review for India's Immortal Comic Books: Gods, Kings, and Other Heroes - 1 views

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    Review in the Journal of Folklore Research of "India's Immortal Comic Books: Gods, Kings, and Other Heroes," by Jeremy Stoll of Indiana University.
smilinginsomniac

Hayao Miyazaki article "Dreams Grown Red and Black" - 1 views

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    A somewhat incomplete but interesting perspective of the renowned Hayao Miyazaki.  Has Miyazaki squandered is excellence?  Has he gone away from what made him great?  Well, you be the judge.  
Angela Becerra Vidergar

Making of a Comic: The Guild #1 :: Making Of :: Dark Horse Comics - 0 views

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    Shows the process of making a comic - in this case, The Guild by Felicia Day (previously a web video series).
Mark Vega

The Best American Comics Criticism 2010 (Downloadable PDF) - 0 views

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    Table of Contents, Introduction, and excerpts from The Best American Comics Criticism 2010 (Fantagraphics). Whether you choose to call them "comics lit," "graphic novels," or just "thick comic books," book-length narratives told in words and pictures confidently elbowed their way into the cultural spotlight in the first decade of this new millennium - beginning with the simultaneous 2001 release of Chris Ware's Jimmy Corrigan: The Smartest Kid on Earth and Daniel Clowes' David Boring, and continuing on through ground-breaking and best-selling works such as Marjane Satrapi's Persepolis, Robert Crumb's Genesis, Alison Bechdel's Fun Home, and Joe Sacco's Palestine. This renaissance in turn brought forth a chorus of critical commentary that not only addressed these recent works, but also initiated a much-needed look back at the previous century's neglected and forgotten masterpieces. This chorus, as presented in The Best American Comics Criticism, comprises both criticism (Douglas Wolk on Frank Miller and Will Eisner, Robert C. Harvey on Fun Home, Donald Phelps on Steve Ditko and Phoebe Gloeckner) and history (David Hajdu on the 1950s comic-book burnings, Jeet Heer on Gasoline Alley, Ben Schwartz on Little Orphan Annie, Gerard Jones on the birth of the comic-book business), as well as revelatory peer-on-peer essays by novelists (Jonathan Franzen on Peanuts, John Updike on James Thurber) and cartoonists (Chris Ware on Rodolphe Töpffer, Clowes on Mad's Will Elder, and Seth on John Stanley).
Angela Becerra Vidergar

The Graphic Narrative Project Official Site - 1 views

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    Home of The Graphic Narrative Project at Stanford University, to which the Diigo group is affiliated. 
Angela Becerra Vidergar

Closure - The Game - 1 views

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    "Closure": A flash game based on Ch. 3 of Scott McCloud's Understanding Comics. Developed by Tyler Glaiel
Brad Brooks

Recordings of the 1970 San Diego Comic-Con #1: Listen to them Here! - Comic-Convention ... - 1 views

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    The Jack Kirby recording is amazing!
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