Gibson, Mel (2023) Librarians, Agency, Young People, and Comics: Graphic Account and the Development of Graphic Novel Collections in Libraries in Britain in the 1990s. In: Comics and Agency. Comics Studies . De Gruyter, pp. 201-216. ISBN 9783110754407, 9783110754483
|
Text
10.1515_9783110754483-011.pdf - Published Version Available under License Creative Commons Attribution Non-commercial No Derivatives 4.0. Download (253kB) | Preview |
Abstract
In the mid to late twentieth century in Britain, the comics medium was often wrongly characterized as only aimed at and suitable for children and young people. Equally inaccurately, the medium was simultaneously seen by many adults, whether parents or professionals, as sometimes dangerous for that audience. When combined, these contradictory views created tensions around understandings of both childhood and comics. These tensions can be understood in various ways, but in this chapter the approach is to describe a series of interrelations and shifting networks of relationships between groups of actors, in line with actor-network theory as developed by Bruno Latour and others (Law and Moser 2002).These actors include people in various roles, objects (comics and graphic novels),institutions (whether government, the library, or the family), and concepts (child-hood, morality, and literacy). Initially, agency was located with adult professionals in this evolving media configuration, but as the chapter explores, this becomes a network where “it is no longer easy to determine the locus of agency, to point to one place and say with certainty that action emerges from that point rather than from somewhere else”(Law and Moser 2002, 3). Both agency and network can be argued to have shifted in response to the various actors involved in the assemblage Graphic Account(Barker 1993), where the action emerged from a number of points, both human and textual
Item Type: | Book Section |
---|---|
Subjects: | P400 Publishing W800 Imaginative Writing X900 Others in Education |
Department: | Faculties > Health and Life Sciences > Social Work, Education and Community Wellbeing |
Depositing User: | Rachel Branson |
Date Deposited: | 01 Mar 2023 16:12 |
Last Modified: | 01 Mar 2023 16:15 |
URI: | https://nrl.northumbria.ac.uk/id/eprint/51535 |
Downloads
Downloads per month over past year