{"title": "Inventing Comics", "covers": [8848459], "key": "/works/OL20198593W", "authors": [{"type": {"key": "/type/author_role"}, "author": {"key": "/authors/OL7654100A"}}], "type": {"key": "/type/work"}, "subjects": ["Graphic arts", "Cartooning", "Visual communication", "Comic books, strips, etc.", "Graphic novels", "Comic books, strips", "Narration (Rhetoric)", "Art and literature", "Physiognomy in art", "Visual communication in art"], "description": {"type": "/type/text", "value": "In recent years, graphic novels have gained a renewed interest from a host of scholars in a diverse range of fields, including rhetoric and writing, media studies, literary studies, visual communication, graphic arts, and art history. While many of these studies reference Rodolphe T\u00f6pffer as the inventor (or, \"father\") of the genre, his scholarly work addressing the theoretical foundation and significance of graphic novels has remained unavailable to English-speaking audiences. Inventing Comics fills this gap by presenting a translation of two essays by T\u00f6pffer that place the invention of graphic novels at the intersection of rhetoric, philosophy, aesthetics, and civic life. In his role as a professor of rhetoric and belle-lettres at the Academy of Geneva, T\u00f6pffer not only wrote popular fiction (graphic novels, novels, plays) but also a host of scholarly works addressing the relationship between aesthetics and poetics. Pulling from T\u00f6pffer's scholarly corpus, Figueiredo argues that T\u00f6pffer's invention of graphic novels was the manifestation of a much broader media theory, one that engaged with the social, cultural, political, and technological shifts accompanying the Industrial Revolution in the early- and mid-nineteenth century. While Figueiredo's primary focus is to situate T\u00f6pffer in the histories of rhetoric, media studies, and the emergence of what Gregory L. Ulmer has called the apparatus of electracy, these essays also resonate with affect theory, apparatus theory, art history, graphic novels, literary studies, philosophy, sensory studies, and writing studies."}, "latest_revision": 4, "revision": 4, "created": {"type": "/type/datetime", "value": "2019-10-08T15:20:04.903342"}, "last_modified": {"type": "/type/datetime", "value": "2025-10-14T08:58:58.684194"}}