YALSA's "Great Graphic Novels" for 2012
Among the top ten, there's an interesting mix of genres. Even the capes got a nod or two.
Labels: "best of" lists, 2012, top ten, YALSA
Labels: "best of" lists, 2012, top ten, YALSA
The University of Chicago's Gray Center for Arts and Inquiry is hosting a conference this May. "Comics: Philosophy & Practice Conference" will run from May 18-20 and feature an amazing line-up of top-tier comics talent. Visit the link in this post's title for more information, and be sure to click the "Conference Participants" link too.Labels: 2012, Chicago, conferences, elite universities, Gray Center for Arts and Inquiry, University of Chicago
Edited by Roger J.R. Levesque of the University of Indiana, this impressive tome (3363 pages!) covers a range of topics pertinent to the development of adolescents and features my "Comics" entry on pages 460-468. What makes this encyclopedia unique is that not only were experts invited to talk about their areas of interest, as with many such texts, but were asked to highlight their own work in the area.Labels: encyclopedia, Encyclopedia of Adolescence, Roger Levesque, University of Indiana
Rationales for Teaching Graphic Novels, a project I edited with around twenty other teachers and teacher educators last year, has been reviewed for Education Review/Resenas Educativas, a multi-lingual journal of book reviews.Labels: education review, Rationales, resenas educativas, reviews, Tiffany A. Flowers
Labels: "best of" lists, 2011, The Comics Journal, top ten
Labels: censorship, FOX, Wertham
It has been several months since DC relaunched its universe with 52 new comics titles. As we speak, several books have been cancelled and several others, less than 6 issues old, are undergoing creative changes. I've only been reading two of the new books, Swamp Thing and Blue Beetle, though I hear great things about Animal Man.Labels: Blue Beetle, Comic Book Resources, DC, El Paso, Hispanic, Jame Reyes, Latino, Tony Bedard
Poems and short stories are given the comics treatment by important comics artists of our day in this must-have collection. Click the link embedded in this post's title to see some preview art.Labels: African American, anthology, collections


needed addition for the line. I appreciate transparency and feel like most other parents do too.Labels: Agnes Rosenstiehl, Benjamin Bear, Geoffrey Hayes, Hilary Knight, Nina books, Patrick books, Philippe Coudray, Silly Lilly, Steven Kroll, Toon Books

Labels: Archie, gay, homosexual, politics, religion, social issues

Labels: 2012, goverment, government, Nebraska, politics, propoganda, Richard Graham
Labels: 2012, CBR, Comic Book Resources, predictions
Labels: Andrew Miller, Buck Institute, comic book literacy, differentiation, Edutopia, ELL, emergent readers, ESL, literacy, multimodal, PBL, problem based learning
Labels: Constitution. Round Table, goverment, government, Katie Monnin, politics, United States
Comics news sites like Comic Book Resources (CBR) are reporting that the comics anthology Stuck in the Middle has survived a challenge to be removed from middle school libraries in some of Maine's public schools. A parent had complained that the book, which is subtitles "Seventeen Comics from an Unpleasant Age" and does deal with some of the "dirty underbellies" of adolescent life and identity.Labels: censorship, Maine, rationa, South Dakota, Stuck in the Middle
Gottsta love an opportunity to listen to my homeboy Gunther Kress! The audio is a little rough and the conversation a little bit rambling, but if you've got about 40 minutes to spare, this is a neat offering from the editors of Language Arts, an NCTE journal with the theme of "Writing the image, Writing the World" for its January 2012 issue. Sooo, soooo interesting to me how close the conversation mirrors many of the aspects of Miles Myers' Changing Our Minds, which is why I use that text and some Kress when I teach courses that focus on multimodal literacies.Labels: Gunther Kress, Jerome C. Harste, Language Arts, multimodal, NCTE, visual literacy
Labels: diamond, Katie Monnin
There's been some chat within the Interwebs regarding General Electric's old educational comics. The Washington Post mentioned them in conjunction with an article on teaching STEM. That article, available here, features a slide show of old covers and comics.Labels: educational comics, General Electric, Nebraska, Richard Graham
If only I had $1200 and the time to apply! Anyway, click here for information on OSU's Project Narrative Summer Institute, which is exploring comics and film in a big way June 11-22 of this year.Labels: Aldama, elite universities, Ohio State, Project Narrative Summer Institute
Labels: Daily Beast, Newsweek