| Robert G. Weiner - 2009 - 243 pages
For more than 60 years, Captain America was one of Marvel Comics’ flagship characters, representing truth, strength, liberty, and justice. The assassination of his alter ego ... | |
| Robert G. Weiner - 2010 - 288 pages
To say that graphic novels, comics, and other forms of sequential art have become a major part of popular culture and academia would be a vast understatement. Now an ... | |
| Robert Moses Peaslee, Robert G. Weiner - 2014 - 271 pages
This volume collects a wide-ranging sample of fresh analyses of Spider-Man. It traverses boundaries of medium, genre, epistemology and discipline in essays both insightful and ... | |
| Carrye Kay Syma, Robert G. Weiner - 2013 - 299 pages
Sequential art combines the visual and the narrative in a way that readers have to interpret the images with the writing. Comics make a good fit with education because students ... | |
| Robert Moses Peaslee, Robert G. Weiner - 2015 - 288 pages
Along with Batman, Spider-Man, and Superman, the Joker stands out as one of the most recognizable comics characters in popular culture. While there has been a great deal of ... | |
| Robert G. Weiner, John Cline - 2010 - 420 pages
This is a provocative collection of essays that provide cutting edge, original research in film studies, discussing a number of 'transgressive' films that have never before had ... | |
| John Cline, Robert G. Weiner - 2010 - 362 pages
This collection of essays represents key contributions to 'transgression cinema:' overlooked, forgotten, or under-analyzed movies that walk the fine line between 'arthouse' and ... | |
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