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741.5 Comics, Cartoons, Karikaturen

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Was könnte man denn mal wieder zusammen machen? : F. K. Waechters literarischer Nachlass wird im Frankfurter "Fenster zur Stadt" gezeigt (2012)
Lisson, Marthe
German postmemory and ambivalent home desires: a critical reading of Nora Krug’s (2018) graphic novel "Heimat: a german family album" (2019)
Grujić, Marija ; Schaum, Ina
This review analyses the aesthetic engagement with Nazi atrocities during WWII and belonging in post-war Germany as presented in Nora Krug’s graphic novel Heimat: A German Family Album. The authors employ Marianne Hirsch’s concept of ‘postmemory’ as an analytical tool that helps them locate the complex historical and emotional contexts from which this graphic novel receives its impulses. The concrete scenes from the novel are presented and subsequently related to the field of memory and postmemory scholarship. Wider critical debates on how aesthetic articulations of past atrocities influence the next generations of ‘victims’ and ‘perpetrators’ are examined, to ask: What does it mean to inhabit memories of ghostly narratives about perpetrators and how does it form a feeling of post-home?
Reimagining cultural memory of the arctic in the graphic narratives of Oqaluttuaq (2021)
Viljoen, Jeanne-Marie ; Żółkoś, Magdalena
The Greenlandic oral story-telling tradition, Oqaluttuaq, meaning “history,” “legend,” and “narrative,” is recognized as an important entry point into Arctic collective memory. The graphic artist Nuka K. Godtfredsen and his literary and scientific collaborators have used the term as the title of graphic narratives published from 2009 to 2018, and focused on four moments or ‘snippets’ from Greenland’s history (from the periods of Saqqaq, late Dorset, Norse settlement, and European colonization). Adopting a fragmentary and episodic approach to historical narrativization, the texts frame the modern European presence in Greenland as one of multiple migrations to and settlements in the Artic, rather than its central axis. We argue that, in consequence, the Oqaluttuaq narratives not only “provincialize” the tradition of hyperborean colonial memories, but also provide a postcolonial mnemonic construction of Greenland as a place of multiple histories, plural peoples, and heterogenous temporalities. As such, the books also narrativize loss and disappearance—of people, cultures, and environments—as a distinctive melancholic strand in Greenlandic history. Informed by approaches in the field of cultural memory and in the study memorial objects, Marks’ haptic visuality and Keenan and Weizman’s forensic aesthetics, we analyze the graphic narratives of Oqaluttuaq in regard to their aesthetic dimensions, as well as investigate the role of material objects and artifacts, which work as narrative “props” for multiple stories of encounter and survival in the Arctic.
Reimagining cultural memory of the arctic in the graphic narratives of Oqaluttuaq (2021)
Viljoen, Jeanne-Marie ; Żółkoś, Magdalena
The Greenlandic oral story-telling tradition, Oqaluttuaq, meaning “history,” “legend,” and “narrative,” is recognized as an important entry point into Arctic collective memory. The graphic artist Nuka K. Godtfredsen and his literary and scientific collaborators have used the term as the title of graphic narratives published from 2009 to 2018, and focused on four moments or ‘snippets’ from Greenland’s history (from the periods of Saqqaq, late Dorset, Norse settlement, and European colonization). Adopting a fragmentary and episodic approach to historical narrativization, the texts frame the modern European presence in Greenland as one of multiple migrations to and settlements in the Artic, rather than its central axis. We argue that, in consequence, the Oqaluttuaq narratives not only “provincialize” the tradition of hyperborean colonial memories, but also provide a postcolonial mnemonic construction of Greenland as a place of multiple histories, plural peoples, and heterogenous temporalities. As such, the books also narrativize loss and disappearance—of people, cultures, and environments-as a distinctive melancholic strand in Greenlandic history. Informed by approaches in the field of cultural memory and in the study memorial objects, Marks’ haptic visuality and Keenan and Weizman’s forensic aesthetics, we analyze the graphic narratives of Oqaluttuaq in regard to their aesthetic dimensions, as well as investigate the role of material objects and artifacts, which work as narrative “props” for multiple stories of encounter and survival in the Arctic.
[Rezension zu:] Meyer, Christina: Producing Mass Entertainment. The Serial Life of the Yellow Kid. Columbus: The Ohio State University Press, 2019 (Studies in Comics and Cartoons). xxi, 239 S. (2020)
Holzen, Aleta-Amirée von
[Rezension zu:] Holzen, Aleta-Amirée von: Maskierte Helden. Zur Doppelidentität in Pulp-Novels und Superheldencomics. Zürich: Chronos, 2019 (Populäre Literaturen und Medien; 13). 417 S. (2020)
Paiska, Maike
[Rezension zu:] Dallmann, Christine / Hartung, Anja / Aigner, Alfons / Buchele, Kai-Thorsten (Hg.): Comics. Interdisziplinäre Perspektiven aus Theorie und Praxis auf ein Stiefkind der Medienpädagogik. München: kopaed, 2018. 280 S. (2020)
Führer, Carolin
[Rezension zu:] Press, Alexander: Die Bilder des Comics. Funktionsweisen aus kunst- und bildwissenschaftlicher Perspektive. Bielefeld: transcript, 2018. 198 S. (2019)
Vollbrecht, Ralf
[Rezension zu:] Museumsinsel Lüttenheid (Hrsg.): Rudolph Dirks. Zwei Lausbuben und die Erfindung des modernen Comics. Konzept und Redaktion: Benedikt Brebeck. Berlin: Ch. A. Bachmann, 2018. 136 S. (2019)
Sarvari, Lukas
"Iz an Freuenschuh! An mirobelli Freuenschuh!" : die fiktive Sprache in Carson Ellis’ "Du Iz Tak?" als Feld der Polyvalenz und Prüfstein der Bilderbuchübersetzung (2019)
Wilhelmy, Ben
Carson Ellis’ Bilderbuch "Du Iz Tak?" (2016) stellt eine besondere Herausforderung der Bilderbuchübersetzung dar, da der Schrifttext ausschließlich in einer fiktiven Sprache verfasst ist. Eine Übersetzung erscheint damit zwar auf den ersten Blick überflüssig. Eine nähere Untersuchung des Ausgangstextes legt jedoch vielfaltige intermodale, inter- und intralinguale Bezuge frei, die einerseits ein Feld der Polyvalenz entfalten und die Übersetzung erschweren, andererseits eine Übersetzung unumgänglich machen.
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