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Graphic Indigeneity: Comics in the Americas and Australasia [Minkštas viršelis]

  • Formatas: Paperback / softback, 400 pages, aukštis x plotis x storis: 233x155x21 mm, weight: 575 g, 104 black & white illustrations
  • Išleidimo metai: 30-Jun-2020
  • Leidėjas: University Press of Mississippi
  • ISBN-10: 149682802X
  • ISBN-13: 9781496828026
Kitos knygos pagal šią temą:
  • Formatas: Paperback / softback, 400 pages, aukštis x plotis x storis: 233x155x21 mm, weight: 575 g, 104 black & white illustrations
  • Išleidimo metai: 30-Jun-2020
  • Leidėjas: University Press of Mississippi
  • ISBN-10: 149682802X
  • ISBN-13: 9781496828026
Kitos knygos pagal šią temą:
Contributions by Joshua T. Anderson, Chad A. Barbour, Susan Bernardin, Mike Borkent, Jeremy M. Carnes, Philip Cass, Jordan Clapper, James J. Donahue, Dennin Ellis, Jessica Fontaine, Jonathan Ford, Lee Francis IV, Enrique Garcķa, Javier Garcķa Liendo, Brenna Clarke Gray, Brian Montes, Arij Ouweneel, Kevin Patrick, Candida Rifkind, Jessica Rutherford, and Jorge Santos Cultural works by and about Indigenous identities, histories, and experiences circulate far and wide. However, not all films, animation, television shows, and comic books lead to a nuanced understanding of Indigenous realities.

Acclaimed comics scholar Frederick Luis Aldama shines light on how mainstream comics have clumsily distilled and reconstructed Indigenous identities and experiences. He and contributors emphasize how Indigenous comic artists are themselves clearing new visual-verbal narrative spaces for articulating more complex histories, cultures, experiences, and narratives of self.

To that end, Aldama brings together scholarship that explores both the representation and misrepresentation of Indigenous subjects and experiences as well as research that analyzes and highlights the extraordinary work of Indigenous comic artists. Among others, the book examines Daniel Parada's Zotz, Puerto Rican comics Turey el Taķno and La Borinqueńa, and Moonshot: The Indigenous Comics Collection.

This volume's wide-armed embrace of comics by and about Indigenous peoples of the Americas and Australasia is a first step to understanding how the histories of colonial and imperial domination connect the violent wounds that still haunt across continents. Aldama and contributors resound this message: Indigeneity in comics is an important, powerful force within our visual-verbal narrative arts writ large.
Nourishing Minds and Bodies with Indigenous Comics: A Foreword ix
Lee Francis Iv
Graphic Indigeneity: Terra America and Terra Australasia xi
Frederick Luis Aldama
Part I Mainstreamed Indigeneities
"We the North": Interrogating Indigenous Appropriation as Canadian Identity in Mainstream American Comics
5(22)
Brenna Clarke Gray
Jack Jackson, Native Representation, and Underground Comix
27(26)
Chad A. Barbour
"Goin' Native!": Depictions of the First Peoples from "Down Under"
53(22)
Jack Ford
Philip Cass
Representations of Indigenous Australians in Marvel Comics
75(25)
Dennin Ellis
The Wisdom of the Phantom: The Secret Life of Australia's Indigenous Superhero
100(27)
Kevin Patrick
Part II Decolonial Imaginaries Terra South
Outsmarting the Lords of Death: An Amerindian Cognitive Script in Comics
127(17)
Arij Ouweneel
Memory in Pieces: Chola Power's Origin Story and the Quest for Memory in Peru
144(24)
Javier Garcia Liendo
Visualizing an Alternate Mesoamerican Archive: Daniel Parada's Comic Series Zotz in Historical Perspective
168(13)
Jessica Rutherford
Critical Impulses in Daniel Parada's Zotz: A Case Study in Indigenous Comics
181(16)
Jorge Santos
The Battle for Recollection: Maya Historietas as Art for Remembering War
197(13)
Brian Montes
Turey El Taino and La Borinquena: Puerto Rican Nationalist and Ethnic Resistance in Puerto Rican Comics Dealing with Taino Cultural Heritage
210(27)
Enrique Garcia
Part III Decolonial Imaginaries Terra North
Securing Stones in the Sky: Word-Drawn Recreations of Oral Trickster Tales
237(17)
Jordan Clapper
Super Indians and the Indigenous Comics Renaissance
254(19)
James J. Donahue
Seeing Histories, Building Futurities: Multimodal Decolonization and Conciliation in Indigenous Comics from Canada
273(26)
Mike Borkent
Deep Time and Vast Place: Visualizing Land/Water Relations across Time and Space in Moonshot: The Indigenous Comics Collection
299(17)
Jeremy M. Carnes
Deer Woman Re-Generations: Re-Activating First Beings and Re-Arming Sisterhoods of Survivance in Deer Woman: An Anthology
316(24)
Joshua T. Anderson
Indigeneity, Intermediality, and the Haunted Present of Will I See?
340(21)
Candida Rifkind
Jessica Fontaine
Afterlives: A Coda 361(4)
Susan Bernardin
List of Contributors 365(6)
Index 371
Frederick Luis Aldama is Distinguished University Professor at The Ohio State University. He is the award-winning author, coauthor, and editor of forty books, including the Eisner Award-winning Latinx Superheroes in Mainstream Comics. He is editor and coeditor of eight academic press book series as well as editor of Latinographix, a trade-press series that publishes Latinx graphic fiction and nonfiction. He is creator of the first documentary on the history of Latinx superheroes in comics (Amazon Prime) and cofounder and director of SÕL-CON: Brown & Black Comix Expo. He is founder and director of the Obama White House award-winning LASER: Latinx Space for Enrichment & Research as well as founder and codirector of the Humanities & Cognitive Sciences High School Summer Institute. He has a joint appointment in Spanish & Portuguese as well as faculty affiliation in film studies and the Center for Cognitive and Brain Sciences. His children's book, The Adventures of Chupacabra Charlie, will be published by OSU Press in 2020.