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Comics, Constraints, and Storytelling in the Digital Age

March 18, 2021

 

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, who teaches at the Center for Cartoon Studies in White River Junction, Vt., and is the author of six books, and New Yorker cartoonist recently worked with students enrolled in Advanced Readings in the Graphic Narrative, taught by Associate Professor of East Asian Studies Shiamin Kwa. The course is part of the 360掳 Constraints: Storytelling in the Digital Age.

鈥淚n the case of making comics we are limited by the constraints of the box-like forms of comics panels, groups of panels, and pages,鈥 explains Kwa. 鈥淭he thinking behind this class is that comics are a sophisticated and well-developed version of text-image hybrids, and learning to read them carefully and well is an essential skill because we are communicating in text-image form all the time now. Signage, advertisements, menus, and media of all kinds are no longer exclusively text-based, but use photographs, diagrams, illustrations, and animations to communicate their messages.鈥

Primary texts in the course include Lynda Barry鈥檚 The Freddie Stories and Emil Ferris鈥檚 My Favorite Thing is Monstersalongside theoretical readings from literary and cultural theory, which students draw from to analyze how stories are told in image and text form. 

In keeping with the philosophy that making is a way of thinking, Kwa asked the members of her class to participate in creating comics of their own to experience the constraints encountered by the people who make the books that they are studying every week.

"I have always enjoyed reading novels and comics,鈥 says Annarose King 鈥23, an English major and student in the class. 鈥淭his 360's focus on narrative, and incorporating what we learned into our own work, was really appealing for me. I have new insights about how an author creates emotional and visual depth in a graphic novel.鈥

Walden and Hunsinger led students through lectures on style, form, and character building, followed by exercises. Among the exercises was a challenge to draw random things (a car, Adam Driver, a ferret) in five minutes, then in two minutes, in 30 seconds, and finally five seconds. Other tasks included telling an adventure story using only stick figures; and drawing a two-page autobiographical story in the style of a randomly selected comics artist. 

In addition to Kwa鈥檚 class, students in the 360掳 are also enrolled in Diasporic Voices: Voyages and Identity Narratives taught by Agn猫s Peysson-Zeiss, senior lecturer in French and Francophone Studies.


360 Course Clusters

East Asian Languages and Cultures

French and Francophone Studies