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Comics Escape a Paper Box and Evolve to the Web

securitas writes "The New York Times' Sarah Boxer takes a look at the evolution of comics from paper to the Internet and asks: 'It's drawn and it's written, but is it still comics?' She cites Scott McCloud's Reinventing Comics '...in which he argued that the future of comics is on the Web.' Also cited in the article are Copper by Kazu Kibuishi, found on boltcity.com and The Discovery of Spoons by Alexander Danner and John Barber, found at twentysevenletters.com, as well as several others. The article links to an angry attack by Gary Groth of Fantagraphics against McCloud and his views in Reinventing Comics."

2 of 159 comments (clear)

  1. I'm not surprised this made it to /. by aussie_a · · Score: 5, Informative

    I'm not surprised to see this article here, but if you click here you'll find a good disection of the piece. Here's a small snippet that summarises the post:

    Boxer's research would barely qualify for a Freshman Comp essay, much less a piece of journalism in a newspaper of record. She seems to have drawn her information off of several Comics Journal articles, read Understanding Comics and Reinventing Comics, and looked at the Web Cartoonists Choice Awards.

    Well, at least she dipped her toe into webcomics before declaring it a failed experiment.


    I found that blog post (yes! It's a blog post! Oh noes!) much more interesting (and informative as well as correct) then the actual news paper article itself.

  2. Re:no need for any further discussion by pfafrich · · Score: 4, Informative
    For a more interesting look at what a comic really is, I highly recomend Understanding Commics, by Scott Mc Cloud. It really is worth the read and makes you think. Theres about a chapter exploring what commics really mean, with many different definitions, he finally comes up with "sequential art", refelecting the intergration of time into the commic experience, this is its main distinction from other forms of art which don't have the time element.

    Theres also lots to read about the creative process, which has relavance to us hackers, hew shows it as a multly level thing. Where you can focus on details, form, structure etc.

    Overall one of the best books I've read.

    --
    There are four sorts of people in the world: fools, lunatics, idiots and morons. - Umberto Eco, Foucaut's pendulum.