Kid comic strips : a genre across four countries

Author(s)

Bibliographic Information

Kid comic strips : a genre across four countries

Ian Gordon

(Palgrave studies in comics and graphic novels)(Palgrave pivot)

Palgrave Macmillan, c2016

  • : [hardcover]

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Note

Includes bibliographical references and index

Description and Table of Contents

Description

This book looks at the humor that artists and editors believed would have appeal in four different countries. Ian Gordon explains how similar humor played out in comic strips across different cultures and humor styles. By examining Skippy and Ginger Meggs, the book shows a good deal of similarities between American and Australian humor while establishing some distinct differences. In examining the French translation of Perry Winkle, the book explores questions of language and culture. By shifting focus to a later period and looking at the American and British comics entitled Dennis the Menace, two very different comics bearing the same name, Kid Comic Strips details both differences in culture and traditions and the importance of the type of reader imagined by the artist.

Table of Contents

1. Why Kid Comics2. America and Australia: Skippy and Ginger Meggs3. America and France: Perry Winkle and Bicot4. America and Britain: Dennis the Menace (s)5. Comics Scholarship and Comparative Studies

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