This article is about comics, the art form. There is a separate article about comics, the humorous performers also known as comedians.
Comics is an art form using a series of static images in fixed sequence. Written text is often incorporated into the images. The two most common forms of comics are comic strips (as appear in newspapers) and comic books (also popularly called manga when referring to Japanese comic books). Large volumes or collections of comic books are often termed graphic novels.
The comic form has extended to new media as they have been developed, although in spirit they are the same. These include web comics and sprite comics.
The term comics is typically not applied to animation, which uses technology to create the illusion of true movement, rather than relying on being a sequence of static images.
The term "comics" likely originated in early 20th century comic strips, which were originally a venue for serial and gag humor (i.e., the name came from comedy). Comic books developed as collections of previously printed newspaper comic strips and carried the name forward. This use of a term traditionally applied to subject matter instead being applied to a medium is sometimes confusing.
A radical break with the traditional comic genres occurred in the late 1960s with the advent of satirical, psychedelic, and sexually explicit underground comics. Those set the precident for a subsequent (and ongoing) international movement toward personal, artistically ambitious comics that are published without the involvement of the "mainstream" comic book industry. These are loosely grouped under the labels "independent" or "alternative" comics.
Bibliografia A collection of bibliographies of italian comic creators. Published by Anonima fumetti, and available in Italian, French and English. http://www.fumetti.org/biblio.htm
Comic Book Legal Defense Fund: Research A Comics Censorship Bibliography focusing on censorship of the medium, as well as information on cases the CBLDF has helped defend. Also includes timeline of comic book censorship. http://cbldf.org/research/index.html
Comics Research Bibliography Very exhaustive and profound bibliography on comics and comics-related subjects. Categories include history, criticism and education; features and reviews; business and marketing; original works. Also a shortlist of very good comics sites. http://www.rpi.edu/~bulloj/comxbib.html
Jewish Comics Bibliography of comics that have Jewish characters in them, such as Ragman, Sabra, Shaloman, the Seraph and various Golems http://www.geocities.com/Athens/Acropolis/5756/JWISHC.HTM
Comics Scholarship: Annotated bibliographies A collection of thematic bibliographies on comics and comics-related subjects, such as interview collections, history and criticism and anthologies. Also an annotated links list. http://www.sp.uconn.edu/~epk93002/ComicsScholarship/
Resources For The Study of Comics Pointers to sites of scholarly interest : bibliographic resources, critical materials, libraries, conferences, and discussion. http://www-personal.umich.edu/~cmarx/resources.html
Comic Art in Scholarly Writing: A Citation Guide Bibliographic citation is problematic when dealing with comic art, and particularly in the case of comic books. This guide functions as a set of solutions for these problems, as developed by the Comic Art and Comics area of the Popular Culture Association. http://www.comicsresearch.org/CAC/cite.html
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