Welcome to the third post in the Pencil Panel Page roundtable on George Herriman’s Krazy Kat. We are glad to have found a new home here at Hooded Utilitarian, and as Adrielle said in her inaugural post, you should dive into our archives here. Since there has been some concern expressed on the Hooded Utilitarian site about the state of linguistic analysis, I wish to start my post on Krazy Kat with a note about the linguistic analysis of comics in general. As a linguist, I am most interested in the way that linguistic codes function in comics. I concentrate on the analysis of dialogue using methods borrowed from conversation analysis, primarily but not exclusively to highlight the interrelationship of language and identity. You might take a l...
I wish to express my appreciation to Lorraine Kasprisin and all those responsible for giving me the ...
Chet—thank you for responding to my rejoinder. Since you bring it up and lest we leave readers in th...
Oral Reading Fluency (ORF) is a widely‐used index of reading ability in early elementary grades; how...
My interest in comics from an academic standpoint is how language codes function. Mostly I examine h...
As a linguist, I am professionally devoted to the scientific study of language. But I have a confess...
In my last post, I wrote about simultaneous talk in comics, exploring the way that speech balloons c...
How Black artists-othered and positioned at the margins of civilization in the United States-const...
In recognition of Valentine’s Day, I decided to write a post about love in comics. But not any kind ...
Curatorial note from Digital Pedagogy in the Humanities: Kate Singer’s article examines the utility ...
This is a review of: Bill Campbell, Jason Rodriguez, and John Jennings, eds., APB: Artists against P...
We are concerned with possibility, with opening windows on alternative realities, with moving throug...
In two separate posts on Pencil Panel Page, Qiana Whitted and Aaron Meskin have explored the way com...
Based on a character from the 1950s, The Rawhide Kid: Slap Leather appeared in 2003 as a five– part ...
Many studies in both free-ranging and captive apes have shown that some forms of laterality of hand ...
In early August 2013, Alyssa Rosenberg posted an article about a panel discussion she attended, whic...
I wish to express my appreciation to Lorraine Kasprisin and all those responsible for giving me the ...
Chet—thank you for responding to my rejoinder. Since you bring it up and lest we leave readers in th...
Oral Reading Fluency (ORF) is a widely‐used index of reading ability in early elementary grades; how...
My interest in comics from an academic standpoint is how language codes function. Mostly I examine h...
As a linguist, I am professionally devoted to the scientific study of language. But I have a confess...
In my last post, I wrote about simultaneous talk in comics, exploring the way that speech balloons c...
How Black artists-othered and positioned at the margins of civilization in the United States-const...
In recognition of Valentine’s Day, I decided to write a post about love in comics. But not any kind ...
Curatorial note from Digital Pedagogy in the Humanities: Kate Singer’s article examines the utility ...
This is a review of: Bill Campbell, Jason Rodriguez, and John Jennings, eds., APB: Artists against P...
We are concerned with possibility, with opening windows on alternative realities, with moving throug...
In two separate posts on Pencil Panel Page, Qiana Whitted and Aaron Meskin have explored the way com...
Based on a character from the 1950s, The Rawhide Kid: Slap Leather appeared in 2003 as a five– part ...
Many studies in both free-ranging and captive apes have shown that some forms of laterality of hand ...
In early August 2013, Alyssa Rosenberg posted an article about a panel discussion she attended, whic...
I wish to express my appreciation to Lorraine Kasprisin and all those responsible for giving me the ...
Chet—thank you for responding to my rejoinder. Since you bring it up and lest we leave readers in th...
Oral Reading Fluency (ORF) is a widely‐used index of reading ability in early elementary grades; how...