In recognition of Valentine’s Day, I decided to write a post about love in comics. But not any kind of love, of course, will do for this post—it should be about love across boundaries and the language that instantiates it. Scenes from a Multiverse is a web comic by Jon Rosenberg that began appearing on the web in 2010. It explores social situations from an extraordinarily wide-ranging perspective of a multiplicity of worlds. As a satirist, Rosenberg often borrows from current events or internet memes and adapts them for his own purposes, making commentary about what he sees as social problems. Frequent objects of his critique are religion and race relations, among others
Welcome to the third post in the Pencil Panel Page roundtable on George Herriman’s Krazy Kat. We are...
his week (starting Monday 10 June 2013), CNN is broadcasting stories every day in a series called Co...
HEADGEARS have never made so much news as a symbol of intolerance and ignorance. American Sikhs are ...
In early August 2013, Alyssa Rosenberg posted an article about a panel discussion she attended, whic...
My interest in comics from an academic standpoint is how language codes function. Mostly I examine h...
For the final installment of this series about comics and representations of everyday life, I will b...
On 23-24 April 2013, I attended a conference called “Images of Terror, Narratives of Insecurity: Lit...
In two separate posts on Pencil Panel Page, Qiana Whitted and Aaron Meskin have explored the way com...
This Issue: Quiet, Please! Fall 2013 Staffed Library Hours Exam Reminders Featured Law Librarian [Me...
In my last post, I wrote about simultaneous talk in comics, exploring the way that speech balloons c...
For my part in the retrospective, I have the pleasure of revisiting Roy’s questions to choose my fav...
This weekend, I have the great fortune to participate in Comics Studies in the US South, a symposium...
My friend wanted me to explain the following comment, and quickly, because it was making him feel gu...
This is a review of: Bill Campbell, Jason Rodriguez, and John Jennings, eds., APB: Artists against P...
Presents updates and news from the Southern Miss Student Archivists Association (Southern Miss SAA) ...
Welcome to the third post in the Pencil Panel Page roundtable on George Herriman’s Krazy Kat. We are...
his week (starting Monday 10 June 2013), CNN is broadcasting stories every day in a series called Co...
HEADGEARS have never made so much news as a symbol of intolerance and ignorance. American Sikhs are ...
In early August 2013, Alyssa Rosenberg posted an article about a panel discussion she attended, whic...
My interest in comics from an academic standpoint is how language codes function. Mostly I examine h...
For the final installment of this series about comics and representations of everyday life, I will b...
On 23-24 April 2013, I attended a conference called “Images of Terror, Narratives of Insecurity: Lit...
In two separate posts on Pencil Panel Page, Qiana Whitted and Aaron Meskin have explored the way com...
This Issue: Quiet, Please! Fall 2013 Staffed Library Hours Exam Reminders Featured Law Librarian [Me...
In my last post, I wrote about simultaneous talk in comics, exploring the way that speech balloons c...
For my part in the retrospective, I have the pleasure of revisiting Roy’s questions to choose my fav...
This weekend, I have the great fortune to participate in Comics Studies in the US South, a symposium...
My friend wanted me to explain the following comment, and quickly, because it was making him feel gu...
This is a review of: Bill Campbell, Jason Rodriguez, and John Jennings, eds., APB: Artists against P...
Presents updates and news from the Southern Miss Student Archivists Association (Southern Miss SAA) ...
Welcome to the third post in the Pencil Panel Page roundtable on George Herriman’s Krazy Kat. We are...
his week (starting Monday 10 June 2013), CNN is broadcasting stories every day in a series called Co...
HEADGEARS have never made so much news as a symbol of intolerance and ignorance. American Sikhs are ...