Comics, Culture, and Religion : : Faith Imagined / / edited by Kees de Groot.

This open access book offers an overview of the relations between comics and religion from the perspective of cultural sociology. How do comics function in religions and how does religion appear in comics? And how do graphic narratives inform us about contemporary society and the changing role of re...

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Bibliographic Details
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Place / Publishing House:London : : Bloomsbury Professional,, 2023.
London : : Bloomsbury Publishing (UK),, 2023.
Year of Publication:2023
Edition:11th ed.
Language:English
Physical Description:1 online resource (264 pages)
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Table of Contents:
  • Introduction: Comics and Religion in Liquid Modernity, Kees de Groot (Tilburg University, Netherlands) Part I: Comics in Religion 1. From Subordinates to Superheroes? Comics in Christian Magazines for Children and Youth in Norway, Irene Trysnes (University of Agder, Norway) 2. Cancelling the Second Coming: Manufactured Christian Outrage Online, Evelina Lundmark (Uppsala University, Sweden) 3. The Reception of Comics on Zoroastrianism, Paulina Niechcial (Jagiellonian University, Poland) Part II: Religion in comics 4. Drawn into Krishna: Autobiography and Lived Religion in the Comics of Kaisa and Christoffer Leka, Andreas Häger and Ralf Kauranen (Åbo Akademi University, Finland) 5. What Would Preacher Do? Tactics of Blasphemy in the Strategies of Satire and Parody, Michael J. Prince (University of Agder, Noway) 6. Islam and Anxieties of Liberalism in Craig Thompson's Habibi, Kambiz GhaneaBassiri (Reed College, USA) Part III: Comics as Religion? 7. Implicit Religion and Trauma Narratives in Maus and Watchmen, Ilaria Biano (Istituto Italiano, Italy) 8. Manga Pilgrimages: Visualizing the Sacred / Sacralizing the Visual in Japanese Junrei, Mark MacWilliams (St. Lawrence University, USA) 9. Comics and Meaning Making: Adult Comic Book Readers on What, Why and How They Read, Sofia Sjö (Åbo Akademi University, Finland) Part IV: Learning From Comics 9. The Magic of the Multiverse. Easter Eggs, Superhuman Beings and Metamodernism in Marvel's Story Worlds, Sissel Undheim (University of Bergen, Norway) 10. Comics and Religious Studies: Amar Chitra Katha as an Educational Comic Series, Line Reichelt Føreland (University of Agder, Norway) 11. A Contract with God or a Social Contract? Christoph Monnot (University of Strassbourg, France) Conclusion: Comics as a Way of Doing, Encountering, and Making Religion, Kees de Groot (Tilburg University, Netherlands) Bibliography Index