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Picturebooks: Representation and Narration

Book

Picturebooks: Representation and Narration

DOI link for Picturebooks: Representation and Narration

Picturebooks: Representation and Narration book

Picturebooks: Representation and Narration

DOI link for Picturebooks: Representation and Narration

Picturebooks: Representation and Narration book

Edited ByBettina Kümmerling-Meibauer
Edition 1st Edition
First Published 2013
eBook Published 19 December 2013
Pub. Location New York
Imprint Routledge
DOI https://doi.org/10.4324/9780203582275
Pages 258
eBook ISBN 9780203582275
Subjects Arts, Language & Literature
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Kümmerling-Meibauer, B. (Ed.). (2014). Picturebooks: Representation and Narration (1st ed.). Routledge. https://doi.org/10.4324/9780203582275

ABSTRACT

This volume discusses the aesthetic and cognitive challenges of modern picturebooks from different countries, such as Denmark, France, Germany, Norway, Spain, Sweden, United Kingdom, and USA. The overarching issue concerns the mutual relationship between representation and narration by means of the picturebooks’ multimodal character. Moreover, this volume includes the main lines of debate and approaches to picturebooks by international leading researchers in the field. Topics covered are the impact of paratexts and interpictorial allusions, the relationship between artists’ books, crossover picturebooks, and picturebooks for adults, the narrative defiance of wordless picturebooks, the representation of emotions in images and text, and the depiction of hybrid characters in picturebooks. The enlargement of the picturebook corpus beyond an Anglo-American picturebook canon opens up new horizons and highlights the diverging styles and genre shifts in modern picturebooks. This tendency also demonstrates the influence of specific authors and illustrators on the appreciation of the picturebook genre, as in the case of Astrid Lindgren’s picturebooks and the picturebooks created by renowned illustrators, such as Anthony Browne, Wolf Erlbruch, Stian Hole, and Bruno Munari. This book will be the definite contribution to contemporary picturebook research for many years to come.

TABLE OF CONTENTS

chapter |14 pages

Introduction: Picturebooks between Representation and Narration

ByBETTINA KÜMMERLING-MEIBAUER

part |2 pages

PART I Crossing Genre Boundaries: Artists’ Books, Wordless Picturebooks, and Picturebooks for Adults

chapter 1|20 pages

Picturebooks for Adults

ByÅSE MARIE OMMUNDSEN

chapter 2|16 pages

Artists’ Books, Altered Books, and Picturebooks

ByCAROLE SCOTT

chapter 3|18 pages

The Art of Visual Storytelling: Formal Strategies in Wordless Picturebooks

BySANDRA L. BECKETT

chapter 4|20 pages

Texts and Peritexts in Wordless and Almost Wordless Picturebooks

ByEMMA BOSCH

chapter 5|16 pages

Wordless Picturebooks: Critical and Educational Perspectives on Meaning-making

ByEVELYN ARIZPE

part |2 pages

PART II Change, Emotions, and Hybridity: Characters in Picturebooks

chapter 6|12 pages

Thought and dream are heavenly vehicles’: Character, Bildung, and Aesthetics in Stian Hole’s Garmann Trilogy (2006–2010)

ByNINA CHRISTENSEN

chapter 7|18 pages

“The Penguin Looked Sad”: Picturebooks, Empathy and Theory of Mind

ByMARIA NIKOLAJEVA

chapter 8|24 pages

Understanding the Matchstick Man: Aesthetic and Narrative Properties of a Hybrid Picturebook Character

ByBETTINA KÜMMERLING-MEIBAUER AND JÖRG MEIBAUER

part |2 pages

PART III Interpictoriality and Visual Clues in Picturebooks

chapter 9|20 pages

An Approximation to Intertextuality in Picturebooks: Anthony Browne and his Hypotexts

ByMARIA JOSÉ LOBATO SUERO AND BEATRIZ HOSTER CABO

chapter 10|16 pages

Audience, Theme and Symbolism in Wolf Erlbruch’s Duck, Death and the Tulip

ByJANET EVANS

chapter 11|12 pages

Learn to Read. Learn to Live: The Role of Books and Book Collections in Picturebooks

ByNINA GOGA

chapter 12|14 pages

Prologue and Epilogue Pictures in Astrid Lindgren’s Picturebooks

ByAGNES-MARGRETHE BJORVAND
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