Wednesday, June 19, 2013

Comics Today

August 17, 2012Print This Post         

Highlights from the “Comics: Philosophy and Practice” conference at the Richard and Mary L. Gray Center for Arts and Inquiry, University of Chicago. The conference brought together together 17 legendary cartoonists for three days of discussion about the past and future of graphic narrative.

Editor's Picks
Literature:History:Art:

Fitzgerald's Depression

Thomas Heise

After forty, all life is a matter of saving face. For those whose successes have run out early, the years are measured less by the decreasing increments of honors achieved, than by the humiliations staved off and the reversals slowed. Among our canonical twentieth-century writers, none suffered this pronouncement—one avoids labeling it a fate—more than F. Scott Fitzgerald.

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How Western Europe Developed a Full Scientific Method

Christopher Beckwith

The lone survivor of traditional Western European ‘scientific’ culture is science. It has survived because it is now the handmaid of technology, without which contemporary civilization would collapse utterly. Anyone who doubts this should try to get a research grant for genuinely “pure” research.

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William Kentridge and The Benefits of Doubt

Daniel Bosch

He had started the series from inside Plato’s cave, so when William Kentridge launched his sixth and final Charles Eliot Norton Lecture with a retelling of the story of Perseus, he gave familiar things back to his audience — the myth itself, and art’s gesture of circling toward origin at closure.

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