The Routledge Companion to Comics expertly organizes representative work from a range of disciplines, including media and cultural studies, literature, philosophy, and linguistics. new perspectives on comics genres, from funny animal comics to war comics to romance comics and beyond.connections between comics and other artistic media (drawing, caricature, film) as well as the linkages between comics and other academic fields like linguistics and philosophy.issues such as authorship, ethics, adaptation, and translating comics.the history of the temporal, geographical, and formal development of comics, including topics like art comics, manga, comix, and the comics code.Contributor essays provide authoritative, up-to-date overviews of the major topics and questions within comic studies, offering readers a truly global approach to understanding the field. This cutting-edge handbook brings together an international roster of scholars to examine many facets of comics and graphic novels. In essays ranging from Bob Dylan to Blackberry Smoke, this work examines how rock and roll expands, interprets, restates, interrogates, and conflicts with literary Romanticism, all the while understanding that as a term “rock and roll” in reference to popular music from the late 1940s through the early 2000s is every bit as contradictory and difficult to define as the word Romanticism itself.įrank Bramlett, Roy T. Relying on Löwy and Sayre’s Romanticism Against the Tide of Modernity, it explores how hostility, loss, and longing for unity are particularly appropriate terms for classic rock as well as the origins of these emotions. This anthology allows Byron and Wollstonecraft to speak back to contemporary theories of Romanticism through Bob Dylan and the Rolling Stones. Rock and Romanticism: Blake, Wordsworth, and Rock from Dylan to U2 is an edited anthology that seeks to explain just how rock and roll is a Romantic phenomenon that sheds light, retrospectively, on what literary Romanticism was at its different points of origin and on what it has become in the present. Tandy, Janneke Van Der Leest, and Luke Walkerīook contribution, "The Inner Revolution(s) of Wordsworth and the Beatles" by David Boocker. James Rovira, David Boocker, Lisa Plummer Crafton, Rachel Feder, David S. Rock and Romanticism: Blake, Wordsworth, and Rock from Dylan to U2
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