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Basic Graphic Novels Vocabulary Set up a page for Cornell notes. This information will be on your exam. Note: the title at the top of the page goes on the left hand side of your Cornell notes
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Basic Graphic Novels Vocabulary Set up a page for Cornell notes. This information will be on your exam. Note: the title at the top of the page goes on.

Jan 12, 2016

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Lester Thornton
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Page 1: Basic Graphic Novels Vocabulary Set up a page for Cornell notes. This information will be on your exam. Note: the title at the top of the page goes on.

Basic Graphic Novels Vocabulary

Set up a page for Cornell notes. This information will be on your exam.

Note: the title at the top of the page goes on the left hand side of your Cornell notes

Page 2: Basic Graphic Novels Vocabulary Set up a page for Cornell notes. This information will be on your exam. Note: the title at the top of the page goes on.

Essential Questions for this unit

• How do graphic novels create meaning differently from traditional literature?

• How can graphic novels use simple images to convey complex ideas?

Page 3: Basic Graphic Novels Vocabulary Set up a page for Cornell notes. This information will be on your exam. Note: the title at the top of the page goes on.

Panel• A box which contains a given scene

• Example : from Calvin and Hobbes by Bill Watterson

Page 4: Basic Graphic Novels Vocabulary Set up a page for Cornell notes. This information will be on your exam. Note: the title at the top of the page goes on.

Panels• Different artists use panel size,

arrangement, etc. to create pacing, suspense, emotion and to draw the reader’s attention to certain things

Page 5: Basic Graphic Novels Vocabulary Set up a page for Cornell notes. This information will be on your exam. Note: the title at the top of the page goes on.

Panels • From Y: the Last Man by Brian K.

Vaughan, Pia Guerra and Jose Marzan

Page 6: Basic Graphic Novels Vocabulary Set up a page for Cornell notes. This information will be on your exam. Note: the title at the top of the page goes on.

Gutter• The white space between panels

• Example :from Maus by Art Spiegelman

Page 7: Basic Graphic Novels Vocabulary Set up a page for Cornell notes. This information will be on your exam. Note: the title at the top of the page goes on.

Gutter

• The size, placement, and presence or absence of the gutter affects the way you read the page

• Example : Incognegro by Mat Johnson and Warren Pleece

Page 8: Basic Graphic Novels Vocabulary Set up a page for Cornell notes. This information will be on your exam. Note: the title at the top of the page goes on.

Border• The outline of the panel

• Examples from Comics and Sequential Art by Will Eisner

Page 9: Basic Graphic Novels Vocabulary Set up a page for Cornell notes. This information will be on your exam. Note: the title at the top of the page goes on.

Balloons• The container of the dialogue spoken by

the character

• There are speech balloons and thought balloons

• Example: from Comics and Sequential Art

Page 10: Basic Graphic Novels Vocabulary Set up a page for Cornell notes. This information will be on your exam. Note: the title at the top of the page goes on.

Tail •Pointer leading from balloon to speaker •From the Bone series by Jeff Smith:

Notice the

different

outlines of

the speech

balloons

Page 11: Basic Graphic Novels Vocabulary Set up a page for Cornell notes. This information will be on your exam. Note: the title at the top of the page goes on.

Style •The manner in which an artist draws

R. Crumb

Marjane Satrapi

Page 12: Basic Graphic Novels Vocabulary Set up a page for Cornell notes. This information will be on your exam. Note: the title at the top of the page goes on.

Who creates comics? Mainstream comics (like those

published by Marvel and DC), tend to use an assembly line approach where many people contribute to the finished product. This evolved in the early days of comic books in order to be able to produce comics quickly.

Page 13: Basic Graphic Novels Vocabulary Set up a page for Cornell notes. This information will be on your exam. Note: the title at the top of the page goes on.

Who creates comics?• Writer: the person who writes the story

and dialogue • Penciller: draws the comic book in pencil• Inker: goes over the pencil drawings in

black ink• Colorist: adds color to black and white

line art. Most colorists today use digital media

• Letterer: is responsible for all the letters in a comic book; titles, captions, credits, letters in speech balloons, etc. Using different fonts creates a different feel for the title or different characters

• Editor: oversees the whole process and assigns the different jobs

Page 14: Basic Graphic Novels Vocabulary Set up a page for Cornell notes. This information will be on your exam. Note: the title at the top of the page goes on.

Comics Creators • Many famous

comics creators, especially from independent and underground comics, both write and draw their own work

QuickTime™ and aTIFF (Uncompressed) decompressor

are needed to see this picture.

Page 15: Basic Graphic Novels Vocabulary Set up a page for Cornell notes. This information will be on your exam. Note: the title at the top of the page goes on.

Homework for tonight

• Analyze one page of the graphic novel you're reading. How many panels on the page? Do the panels have borders? How does the artist use the gutters? How would you describe the art style? What do the balloons look like?