Noun

comics

  1. Plural form of comic.
  2. An artistic medium consisting of juxtaposed pictorial and other images in deliberate sequence, intended to convey information and/or to produce an aesthetic response in the viewer (also, comix)
  3. A collection of comic strips
  4. (US) The page of a newspaper especially devoted to comic strips

From Wiktionary under the GNU Free Documentation License.
Tue Aug 4 00:44:24 2009

Comics (from the Greek κωμικός, kōmikos "of or pertaining to comedy" from κῶμος - kōmos "revel, komos", via the Latin cōmicus) is a graphic medium in which images are utilized in order to convey a sequential narrative; the term, derived from massive early use to convey comic themes, came to be applied to all uses of this medium including those which are far from comic. It is the sequential nature of the pictures, and the predominance of pictures over words, that distinguish comics from picture books, though there is some overlap between the two media. Most comics combine words with images, often indicating speech in the form of word balloons, but wordless comics, such as The Little King, are not uncommon. Words other than dialogue, captions for example, usually expand upon the pictures, but sometimes act in counterpoint.

Early precursors of comics as they are known today include Trajan's Column and the work of William Hogarth. By 19th century, the medium as we know it today, began to take form among European and American artists. Comics as a real mass medium started to emerge in the United States in the early 20th century, with the newspaper comic strip, where its form began to be standardized (image-driven, speech balloons etc). The combination of words and pictures proved popular, and quickly spread throughout the world. Comic strips were soon gathered into cheap booklets, comic books, and original comic books soon followed. Today, comics are found in newspapers, magazines, comic books, graphic novels, and on the web.

Although historically the form dealt with humorous subject matter, its scope has expanded to encompass the full range of literary genres. Also see: Comic strip and cartoon. In the anglo-Saxon world, comics are still typically seen as a low art, although there are a few exceptions, such as Krazy Kat and Barnaby. However, such an elitist "low art/high art" distinction doesn't exist in the French-speaking world (and, to some extent, continental Europe), where the bandes dessinées medium as a whole is commonly accepted as "the Ninth Art", is usually dedicated a non-negligible space in bookshops and libraries, and is regularly celebrated in international events such as the Angoulême International Comics Festival.

In the late 20th and early 21st century there has been a movement to rehabilitate the medium. Critical discussions of the form appeared as early as the 1920s, but serious studies were rare until the late 20th century.

Although practitioners can eschew any formal constraints, they often use particular forms and conventions to convey narration and speech, or to evoke emotional or sensuous responses. Devices such as speech balloons and boxes are used to indicate dialogue and impart establishing information, while panels, layout, gutters and zip ribbons can help indicate the flow of the story. Comics use of text, ambiguity, symbolism, design, iconography, literary technique, mixed media and stylistic elements of art help build a subtext of meanings. Different conventions were developed around the globe, from the manga of Japan to the manhua of China and the manhwa of Korea, the comic books of the United States, and the larger hardcover albums in Europe.

From Wikipedia under the GNU Free Documentation License
Wed Aug 5 01:00:19 2009

What are a good brand of pens to ink comics with?
Q. Alright, so one of my best friends is a great artist and is really into comics, so I thought a good birthday gift idea would be to buy him some good pens to work with. However, while I'm an artist too, I don't typically work in ink so I have no idea what kind to get for him. Does anyone have good suggestions? I'm working on about a $30-40 budget. Thanks for the help!
Asked by verna_venisa - Mon Jul 21 23:41:42 2008 - - 2 Answers - 0 Comments

A. If he is already using a brand of pen, I wouldn't suggest you purchasing anything other than what he already uses. Artists tend to work most comfortably with the tools they know. The risk of you buying something else, for your friend is that he may put them away and never use them. I have gone through years of using art pen nibs, crowquill, Rotrings, RapidOGraphs and many others, but, I finally settled on plain, old, ordinary, Sharpie Markers for what inking I still do on paper. They are clean, easy to use and, for drawing in the field, are readily replaceable at, virtually, any grocery or convienence store and bait shop all over the nation. If I needed a replacement Rotring, I'd have to go out and find an art supply or stationery… [cont.]
Answered by Vince M - Tue Jul 22 16:35:50 2008

Do you believe comics does a better understanding communication than words alone?
Q. According to Scott McCloud he believes that comics develop an better understanding in comics to you? Do you believe psychology ties within communication levels? I need help because im not to much of a comic fan and I need to develop reasons on Scott arguement!
Asked by SHay - Thu Apr 2 13:48:45 2009 - - 4 Answers - 0 Comments

A. They can communicate better than words sometimes, but the thing with comics is personal interpretation. Comics can be hard for everyone to understand the same way. And often people take a different message than the comic writer intended, i.e. that monkey cartoon that everyone thought was racist because they felt it was Obama. The argument you should develop for supporting this argument is something called the Narrative Paradigm by Walter Fisher. He argues that humans are story tellers and best understand morals, arguments and meaning through stories. So, the argument is that comics are like mini stories and people can understand them better than if you were to just tell them outright.
Answered by Claire W - Thu Apr 2 13:57:03 2009

What are some good computer programs and tools for making comics?
Q. I want a FREE program that'll aid in creating comics. I draw the pictures by hand and then scan them into my computer. What I need is something for creating speech bubbles and other text effects. Any other features would be nice, too. Thanks!
Asked by bob6930121317 - Sat Aug 12 22:47:42 2006 - - 5 Answers - 0 Comments

A. Well, a lot of that could just be done by copying and pasting in Paint or another free simple picture editor. But if you want somebody to make something entirely new and high-quality for this purpose, you should expect to pay for it.
Answered by Kenyai - Sat Aug 12 22:53:38 2006

From Yahoo Answer Search: "comics"
Sun Aug 9 09:30:53 2009

Ultimate Comics Avengers #1 - Comic Book Resources
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Ultimate Comics Avengers #1 kicks things off strongly by setting up the new status quo quickly: after being in a different universe for a while, ...
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Saturday evening at the Chicago Comic -Con, Comix 4 Sight held an auction to benefit comics industry veteran John Ostrander. ...
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From Google News Search: "comics"
Mon Aug 10 18:11:09 2009

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inuit comics collage > 14 Jun 2007 00 56 77k inuit comics collage > 14 Jun 2007 00 56 26k jews comics collage jpg 15 Jun 2007 01 30 213k jews comics collage > 15 Jun 2007 01 30 74k

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From Yahoo Image Search: "comics"
Tue Aug 11 11:05:07 2009

Marvel Boy makes the journey from boy to man in DARK AVENGERS ...
marvel.com
Marvel Boy makes the journey from boy to man in DARK AVENGERS ...

unknown

Sun, 09 Aug 2009 13:20:08 GM

He's the Jerry Maguire of . comics. . I love him for the man he is and I love him for the man he almost is. It's really the best of what Marvel . Comics. are made of; with characters looking for redemption and looking for their special place ...

 Comics Should Be Good! @ Comic Book Resources Another Iconic ...
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unknown

Mon, 10 Aug 2009 04:34:12 GM

Review Copies. . Comics. Should Be Good accepts review copies. Anything sent to us will (for better or for worse) end up reviewed on the blog. See where to send the review copies. ...

Twilight Comics Bloggery - Newsarama | Vampires Werewolves Wizards
poplife.biz
Twilight Comics Bloggery - Newsarama | Vampires Werewolves Wizards

"Stephenie Meyer" - Google News

Sat, 08 Aug 2009 23:03:08 GM

Twilight . Comics. BloggeryNewsara​ma... a blog just for Twilight and . comics. both the upcoming manga and Stephenie Meyer . comic. , and recommendations​ for . comics. that Twilight fans might like. ...

From Google Blog Search: "comics"
Mon Aug 10 15:10:08 2009

Comics is a form of visual art consisting of images which are commonly combined with text, often in the form of speech balloons or image captions. Originally used to illustrate caricatures and to entertain through the use of amusing and trivial stories, it has by now evolved into a literary medium with many subgenres.

Sourced

  • a lot of the people who read comics think of comics as a culture—or as a subculture; something with its own private codes that mark its members as belonging, and everybody else as not belonging.
  • ...all our theories about how comics are put together are invariably about time. The duration of a panel's action and the duration between one panel and the next. We haven't added very much to the Eisner-Steranko concept of "sequential art."
  • An illustrator is someone who takes a story and visualizes it. In a comic, the drawing is the story; it doesn’t illustrate it.
  • As for all this talk I keep hearing about how 'ordinary people' can't handle the weird layouts in comics - well, time for another micro-rant, but that's like your granddad saying he can't handle all the scary, fast-moving information on Top of the Pops and there's really only one answer. Fuck off, granddad. If you're too stupid to read a comic page, you shouldn't be trying to read comic books and probably don't.