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    Drawing the Past, Volume 2: Comics and the Historical Imagination in the World

    £31.46
    £34.95
    Price-Match is available in-store for recommended titles in CCCU module handbooks
    ISBN: 9781496837226
    Products specifications
    Attribute nameAttribute value
    AuthorGoodrum, Mitch
    Pub Date01/01/2022
    BindingPaperback
    Pages308
    Publisher: UNIVERSITY PRESS OF MISSISSIPPI
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    Examines the many ways in which history worldwide has been explored and (re)represented through comics and how history is a complex construction of imagination, reality, and manipulation. The book contends that comics are a form of mediation between sources (both primary and secondary) and the reader.

    In Drawing the Past, Volume 2: Comics and the Historical Imagination in the World, contributors seek to examine the many ways in which history worldwide has been explored and (re)represented through comics and how history is a complex construction of imagination, reality, and manipulation. Through a close analysis of such works as V for Vendetta, Maus, and Persepolis, this volume contends that comics are a form of mediation between sources (both primary and secondary) and the reader. Historical comics are not drawn from memory but offer a nonliteral interpretation of an object (re)constructed in the creator's mind. Indeed, when it comes to history, stretching the limits of the imagination only serves to aid in our understanding of the past and, through that understanding, shape ourselves and our futures.

    This volume, the second in a two-volume series, is divided into three sections: History and Form, Historical Trauma, and Mythic Histories. The first section considers the relationship between history and the comic book form. The second section engages academic scholarship on comics that has recurring interest in the representation of war and trauma. The final section looks at mythic histories that consciously play with events that did not occur but nonetheless inflect our understanding of history. Contributors to the volume also explore questions of diversity and relationality, addressing differences between nations and the cultural, historical, and economic threads that bind them together, however loosely, and however much those bonds might chafe.

    Together, both volumes bring together a range of different approaches to diverse material and feature remarkable scholars from all over the world.

    Contributions by Dorian Alexander, Chris Bishop, David Budgen, Lewis Call, Lillian Cespedes Gonzalez, Dominic Davies, Sean Eedy, Adam Fotos, Michael Goodrum, Simon Gough, David Hitchcock, Robert Hutton, Iain A. MacInnes, Malgorzata Olsza, Philip Smith, Edward Still, and Jing Zhang.