TY - CHAP A1 - Plank, Lukas A2 - Leinfelder, Reinhold A2 - Hamann, Alexandra A2 - Kirstein, Jens A2 - Schleunitz, Marc T1 - Comics and Truth : Why Non-Fiction Comics need Rules T2 - Science meets comics : proceedings of the Symposium on Communicating and Designing the Future of Food in the Antropocene N2 - A comic can tell the story of almost anything: a single atom, the entire solar system, the past, future events, dreams and thoughts. All this, and more, can be depicted. When presenting facts, a certain artistic licence can be deployed if, for instance, the author wants to emphasise important details; likewise, aspects he or she deems irrelevant can be left out. Moreover, questions and issues can be laid out that are difficult or even impossible to portray photographically or cinematically. However, when the cartoon strip sets out its version of information, events, objects and people, it can also result in a distortion of reality. The graphic may not always make clear exactly how something looks or the precise way in which something happened. And even where documentary images exist, the comic strip representation of the non-fictional is always coloured by artistic interpretation. KW - Wahrheit KW - Comic KW - Vereinfachung KW - Objektivität KW - Kulturwissenschaft Y1 - 2017 UR - http://publikationen.ub.uni-frankfurt.de/frontdoor/index/index/docId/46785 UR - https://nbn-resolving.org/urn:nbn:de:hebis:30:3-467852 UR - https://zenodo.org/record/556383#.WyjZtmff673 SN - 978-3-941030-93-0 SP - 28 EP - 39 PB - Ch.A. Bachmann Verlag CY - Berlin ER -