Episodes
Jared Gardner shares his journey with comics and how this lead to his formal study of comics as a professor. He discusses his work on Charles Schulz, the cross-pollinating history of film and comics, as well as his work as an editor of the journal Inks and the comics series with OSU Press. Discussion includes transmedial storytelling, Board Games, cartoon strips, and more.
Published 09/04/20
African American cartoonists and comics; representation; identification; stereotypes; discourses of citizenship; how comics as a medium (sequentiality and framing) allow readers to think of past, present, and future in relation to identity; histories of being excluded from history and drawing black people into history; political belonging. Discussion also includes Jennifer Cruté's cartoons, Brumsic Brandon Jr.'s Luther, Kyle Baker's Truth, Gene Yuen Lang's American Born Chinese, HBO's...
Published 08/26/20
OSU Professor Sean O'Sullivan Talks: Narrative Theory, Seriality, Literature, Film, & TV. Discussion includes director Mike Leigh, Sopranos, Charles Dickens, The Wire, Deadwood, and so much more!
Published 08/24/20
Deman shares his journey with comics, visual semiotics, Orientalism, and margins of alternative comics. Along the way, Deman discusses Scott McCloud, comics in the 1990s and its seeking of legitimacy, pornography and sexuality in comics, Sam Kieth's Maxx, Aline Kominsky Crumb's It Ain't Me Babe, Chris Claremont, Harley Quinn Vol. 3, #8--as well as the Canadian Society for the Study of Comics, his blog, and his "The Claremont Run" big data research lab. "The big 3 (Maus, Persepolis, Fun...
Published 08/21/20
OSU Professor Katra Byram Shares her Journey and Research on Narrative, Memory, Identity, Language, Gender & Spaces, Small Houses--and her book Ethics and the Dynamic Observer Narrator with OSU Press.
Published 08/17/20
Katherine Kelp-Stebbins takes us on a journey into art, money, power & planetary comics, including gatekeeping & capitalist global systems of power; politics of exclusion; formal elements of comics that resist conventions of reading and convey resistant political worldviews. Discussion includes Magdy El Shafee's Metro: A Graphic Novel, Alison Bechdel's Fun Home, Michael Nicoll Yahgulanaas's Red: A Haida Manga, Riad Sattouf's Arab of the Future. . . Katherine asks: “Who gets to feel...
Published 08/12/20
OSU Distinguished Professor Jim Phelan Talks: Rhetorical Narrative Theory & Narrative Medicine by Professor Latinx
Published 08/10/20
Eszter Szep discusses the centrality of the body in comics as well as the vulnerability of the line in Lynda Barry, Joe Sacco, Miriam Katin. Along the way we learn about the history of Hungary's Képregény (Picture-Novel), her own Comics & The Body and her co-created scholarly comic "Lines and Bodies" as well as the International Comics Festival in Budapest. "Drawing the body, movement of the body & its interpretation is at the heart of how we approach comics"
Published 08/05/20
Professor Ian Gordon shares his work on superheroes, comics, film, and comic strips. Discussion includes significance of the superhero symbol, superhero mythos, transmedia, and so much more!
Published 08/03/20
Dynamic Duo Matthew Smith & Randy Duncan Talk: Power of Comics Yesterday, Today & Tomorrow by Professor Latinx
Published 07/24/20
Sean Kleefeld Shares his Journey with Comics, beginning with reading Batman, Superman, Justice League & TVs Super Friends as a kid and it was John Byrne's Fantastic Four #254 and then Kirby that turned Sean into a superhero comics aficionado--and later an avid reader of Watchmen and Maus. Along the way the talks about his blog as well as books Fanthropology & Webcomics.
Published 07/22/20
Eisner-Award Winning Scholar Carolyn Cocca Talks: Gender, Race, Class, Sexuality in Superhero Comics. Huge insights into comics & #Wave Feminism, diversity, militarism—as well as discussion of X-Men films, Batgirl, and Dr. Cocca’s latest book, Wonder Woman and Captain Marvel
Published 07/17/20
Professor Anna Peppard on Gender, Sexuality, Bodies & Superhero Comics. Discussion also includes secret identities, pornified culture, gendered violence, Valkyrie, Kate Kane, X-Men, Batman's penis in Bermejo and Azzarello's Batman Damned, Avengers, Marvel's Swimsuit Special, Superhero Resurrections, She-Devil, Tigra, Night Nurse, The Cat, Feminist History of Marvel Comics, Female Fandom
Published 07/15/20
San Francisco State Professor & Eisner Award Winning Nick Sousanis on Creating Comics & Comics in the Classroom. Discussion includes his journey as Critical Maker & his groundbreaking Unflattening--the first graphic dissertation turned into book.
Published 07/07/20
Dr. Barbara Postema Talks: Meaning Making in Comics. Discussion includes wordless comics by Peter Kuper, Joe Sacco, along with page layouts in comics like Shutterbug Follies, The City, The Groom, and Skim--as well as her own book Narrative Structure in Comics and her coedited book series, Transcultural/ Transnational Comics Studies.
Published 07/05/20
ProfessorKate Polak Talks: Comics Emotions, Empathy, and Ethics! Discussion includes comics such as Watchmen, Hellblazer, Scalped, Deogratias, Auschwitz, Letting it Go, Lucifer, Black Hole, V for Vendetta, Black Knight Returns, Monstress, Saga. Kate also talks about her own comic book.
Published 07/01/20
Professor Frederik Køhlert discusses the significance of Serial Selves for historically unrepresented communities, including discussion of the Comics Studies program at University of East Anglia, the work of Julie Doucet, Al Davison, Toufic El Rassai, Phoebe Gloeckner, Ariel Schrag, and so much
Published 06/27/20
Professor Andrew Kunka Talks: The importance of Autobiography Comics for the Historically Unrepresented or Underrepresented. Discussion includes Maus, Fun Home, Persepolis, Harvey Pekar, and so much more!
Published 06/21/20
Professor Daniel Yezbick talks about the importance of telling one's own story--one's autobiography--in comics form. Includes discussion of George Carlson, Li'l Abner, Frederic Wertham, Disney, Carl Bark, Underground Comix, Maus, Red Dog, Legend, Animosity, Action Figures, and more.
Published 06/12/20
Professor Héctor Fernández L'Hoeste discusses Latinx Comics, Mexican and Latin American Comics and Popular Culture and the Nation; includes discussion of Kalimán, Lalo Alcaraz, Los Bros Hernandez
Published 05/31/20
OSU Distinguished Professor Brian McHale Talks Postmodern Narrative & Narrative Theory. Discussion includes his entrance into and journey with postmodern narratives, beginning with Thomas Pynchon; his scholarly pull toward the long poem; Poetics Today
Published 05/31/20
OSU Professor Angus Fletcher Talks: Storytelling Science. Discussion includes about how we can learn about our narrative hardwiring and how to storytelling techniques like Hamlet's soliloquy or reverse engineered PIxar film Up! and how these can and do make stories exciting and new through reverse engineering.
Published 05/31/20
Professor Jorge Santos Talks About his Book Graphic Memories of the Civil Rights Movement. Discussion includes: John Lewis and Nate Powell's March, Lila Quintero Weaver's Darkroom, Ho Che Anderson's King, Daniel Parada's Zotz, and New X-Men, Dawn of X. So much insight!
Published 05/27/20
Professor Latinx with Dr. Pramod Nayar on The Indian Graphic Novel. Discussion includes growing up with superhero comics, nonfiction graphic novels, comics about immigration, postcolonial comics, social realism in Indian graphic novels; caste and subaltern oppression; English comics in India creating reading communities; visual and verbal multimodal literacy; autobiography by "nobodies"; cosplay in India; posthumanism; trans-species; ecodystopias; difficulty teaching comics in India because...
Published 05/22/20