Category: (Book)
10 new, starting at $22.50
5 used, starting at $25.00
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In the last fifteen years or so, a wide community of artists working in a variety of western European nations have overturned the dominant traditions of comic book publishing as it has existed since the end of the Second World War. These artists reject both the traditional form and content of comic books (hardcover, full-colour ‘albums’ of humour or adventure stories, generally geared towards children), seeking instead to instil the medium with experimental and avant-garde tendencies commonly associated with the visual arts. Unpopular Culture addresses the transformation of the status of the comic book in Europe since 1990.
Increasingly, comic book artists seek to render a traditionally degraded aspect of popular culture un-popular, transforming it through the adoption of values borrowed from the field of ‘high art.’ The first English-language book to explore these issues, Unpopular Culture represents a challenge to received histories of art and popular culture that downplay significant historical anomalies in favour of more conventional narratives. In tracing the efforts of a large number of artists to disrupt the hegemony of high culture, Bart Beaty raises important questions about cultural value and its place as an important structuring element in contemporary social processes.
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Groundbreaking, challenging, essentialReviewed by Charles Hatfield, 2007-09-30
Beaty's book is both encouraging and, from this scholar's POV,
genuinely challenging to the current scholarship in comics. The
focus is on contemporary European comics, in particular the
European alternative press, as a field of cultural production.
Beaty applies Pierre Bourdieu's ideas about taste, distinction, and
cultural capital in an original and provocative way, with
far-reaching implications for the study of not only European comics
but also comics cultures everywhere, as well as Cultural Studies at
large.
The style, though at times unavoidably dense, is fitting to the
subject and generally quite accessible; more important, the range
of examples and depth of analysis is startling. Here is truly a new
lens for the study of comics production, and a wonderful map, by
the way, to genres of European comics hitherto unstudied in
English. English-language scholarship will have to engage European
comics from a different angle from now on!