Browsing Scholarly Works by Subject "Comics"

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  • Wallachy, Alexandra (University of Oregon, 2016-06)
    The goal of this thesis is to examine how news satire has changed in the United States since the country was founded in 1776. This thesis will show that the connection between news and satire is important because satire ...
  • Maggiulli, Katrina (University of Oregon, 2016-10-27)
    According to the material feminist corpus, namely Stacy Alaimo’s concept of trans-corporeality, material flows and interconnectivity between humans and their environment insists that the human body has never been atomistic, ...
  • Kunyosying, Kom (University of Oregon, 2011-09)
    This dissertation analyzes issues of race, ethnicity, and identity in American comics and visual culture, and identifies important areas for alternative means to cultural authority located at the intersections of verbal ...
  • Gilroy, Andrea (University of Oregon, 2015-08-18)
    My dissertation argues that comics’ unique formal properties are particularly suited toward exploring and representing the complex nature of identity. Just as the comics form is broadly defined by a peculiar tension between ...
  • Mowery, Zane (University of Oregon, 2014-06)
    This work marks an attempt to redirect the focus of academic writing on race in the early twentieth-century comic strip Krazy Kat away from its author, George Herriman, and towards the comic itself. I argue that Herriman ...
  • Baxter, Quinn (University of Oregon, 2014-06)
    This work is a creative thesis which attempts to detail the thematic inspiration and historical context which were integral in composing my suite, Two Guys in a Lunatic Asylum. I have also included a comprehensive analysis ...
  • McNamee, Audra (University of Oregon, 2022)
    While the number of high-quality educational comics is growing, there are no modern long-form comics discussing computer science at an undergraduate level. The computer science comics that do exist, along with being for a ...
  • Monkewicz, Madeleine Nichole (University of Oregon, 2020)
    Webcomics are largely the domain of romance and comedy at the moment, but that is swiftly changing. As creators and audiences diversify, so does the content. Good writing and good art are both essential elements to the ...

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