Available Formats
Hardback
Published: 31st January 2017
Paperback
Published: 16th January 2017
Paperback
Published: 28th December 2018
Hardback
Published: 11th January 2018
Paperback
Published: 3rd January 2018
Comic Connections: Reflecting on Women in Popular Culture
By (Author) Sandra Eckard
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Rowman & Littlefield Publishers
3rd January 2018
United States
Professional and Scholarly
Fiction
Gender studies: women and girls
Teaching of a specific subject
Educational: First / native language: Reading and writing skills
Teachers classroom resources and material
Educational: First / native language: Literature studies
741.53522
Paperback
158
Width 152mm, Height 229mm, Spine 12mm
240g
With the popularity of comic adaptations on television and at the movies, these current topics can be a great way to engage students by bringing characters and stories they connect with into the classroom to help them build the skills that they need to be successful. Comic Connections: Reflecting on Women in Popular Culture is designed to help teachers from middle school through college find exciting new strategies that they can use right away as part of their curricular goals. Each chapter has three pieces: comic relevance, classroom connections, and concluding thoughts; this format allows a reader to pick-and-choose where to start. Some readers might want to delve into the history of a comic to better understand characters and their usefulness, while other readers might want to pick up an activity, presentation, or project that they can fold into that days lesson. This volume in Comic Connections series focuses on female charactersWonder Woman, Peggy Carter, and Lois Lane, to name a fewwith each chapter deconstructing a specific character to help students engage in meaningful conversations, writing projects, and other activities that will complement and enhance their literacy skills.
Comic Connections: Reflecting on Women in Popular Culture provides a dynamic and complex look at paradoxes often faced by a diverse collection of female characters within comics. Contributing authors offer a range of teaching perspectives, including: K-12 classrooms, local community organizations, and institutes of higher education. All of whom contribute to the enlightenment as well as the empowerment of key social issues by taking a closer look at how these issues have changed over time through various reflective and critical literacy strategies that enable agents of change beyond the classroom. -- Rachel Kaminski Sanders, Language and Literacy Education, University of Georgia
This much-needed book highlights the important contributions that women have historically made to the comics industry, and to popular culture more generally, not only as authors and artists, but also as heroines of their own stories. By focusing on a diverse range of characters, from Wonder Woman to Peggy Carter to Buffy to Kamala Khan, the authors whose work is featured in this volume challenge readers to consider how womens roles in comics have evolved to reflect changing gender norms, and how female characters have operated within the contexts of their respective story worlds to explore new ways of performing femininity. In doing so, the book offers educators access to a wealth of practical suggestions and activities they can use to support students as they learn to read popular culture texts critically and to center females in comics as deserving of close study in secondary and college classes. -- Sean P. Connors, associate professor, English Education, University of Arkansas
Sandra Eckard is a professor of English at East Stroudsburg University, where she teaches writing, works with English Education students, and directs the Writing Studio, a space to help student writers. She specializes in teaching writing, tutoring writing, and using popular culture in the classroom.