Comics and nation

Titel: Comics and nation : power, pop culture, and political transformation in Poland / Ewa Stańczyk
darin enthalten: Comics in interwar Poland: between homegrown stories and foreign imports -- / Ewa Stańczyk
˜Theœ (anti-)American dream: comics in public debates in the 1950s -- / Ewa Stańczyk
"Polish Europeans": the opening of the 1970s -- / Ewa Stańczyk
˜Theœ foreign invasion: comics and the free-market economy in the 1990s -- / Ewa Stańczyk
Comics after 2000: between individual and collective memory / Ewa Stańczyk
Verfasser:
Veröffentlicht: Columbus : The Ohio State University Press, [2022]
Umfang: xii, 211 Seiten : Illustrationen
Format: Buch
Sprache: Englisch
Schriftenreihe/
mehrbändiges Werk:
Studies in comics and cartoons
RVK-Notation:
ISBN: 9780814258385 ; 9780814214961 ; 9780814282236
Buchumschlag
X

Winner, 2023 Comics Studies Society Charles Hatfield Book Prize Winner, BASEES George Blazyca Award in East European Studies Comics and Nation offers a fresh perspective on the role of popular culture in the one-hundred-year history of the Polish state, from its foundation in 1918 to the present. Drawing on dozens of press articles, interviews, and readers' letters, Ewa Stanczyk discusses how journalists, artists, and audiences used comics to probe the boundaries of national culture and scrutinize the established notions of Polishness. Critical moments of Poland's political transformation --the establishment of the interwar Polish Republic, the Cold War, the liberalization of the 1970s, the 1989 democratic transition, the turn to memory politics in the 2000s--have all been reflected in the history of Polish comics. Stanczyk offers new insights into how the production of homegrown comics and the influx of foreign works enabled commentators to express their fears, hopes, and disillusionment with political, economic, and cultural changes in Poland and beyond. At its core, Comics and Nation rethinks the impact of popular culture and transnational exchange on Polish nation building, citizenship formation, and the legitimation of power.