![]() ![]() More often than not, comics scholarship has dealt with the art form’s aesthetic conventions. Since Superman’s earliest Depression-era battles against corrupt businessmen and crooked politicians, comics have often reflected historic events, prevailing attitudes, and contemporary social problems. Since the earliest days of the medium, comic books have provided an engaging platform from which to study the shifts in American culture. Baltimore: The Johns Hopkins University Press, 2001. Comic Book Nation: The Transformation of Youth Culture in America. Volume 3, Issue 2: William Blake and Visual Culture.Volume 3, Issue 3: Comics and Childhood.Volume 4, Issue 1: The Comics Work of Neil Gaiman.Volume 4, Issue 3: ImageSexT Proceedings.Volume 5, Issue 3: Convergences Proceedings.Volume 5, Issue 4: Alan Moore and Adaptation.Volume 6, Issue 2: ImageNext Proceedings. ![]() Volume 6, Issue 3: Shakespeare and Visual Rhetoric.Volume 7, Issue 1: Worlds of the Hernandez Brothers.Volume 8, Issue 1: Monsters in the Margins.Volume 9, Issue 2: Mixing Visual Media in Comics. ![]()
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