Comics and Cartoon Studies

Why persistence is so important

COMICS AND CARTOON STUDIES - The Comics and Cartoon Studies Program in the College of Arts and Sciences invites professional comics artist, such as Ben Passmore, author of "Black Arms to Hold You Up: A History of Black Resistance," as guest lecturers. The guests help students learn about different career options and show them different ways to use their art.

Why persistence is so important

COMICS AND CARTOON STUDIES - The Comics and Cartoon Studies Program in the College of Arts and Sciences invites professional comics artist, such as Ben Passmore, author of "Black Arms to Hold You Up: A History of Black Resistance," as guest lecturers. The guests help students learn about different career options and show them different ways to use their art.

Celebrate Research Progress

Researchers in the College of Arts and Sciences secured $83 million in sponsored grants to fund 199 research projects across the three divisions: Humanities, Natural Sciences, and Social Sciences. This year’s annual report provides a glimpse into the curious minds of researchers and their work.

All hail the King of Comics, Jack Kirby

ENGLISH, COMICS AND CARTOON STUDIES — Ben Saunders, professor and pop-culture scholar in the College of Arts and Sciences, curated a special exhibit in LA featuring comics artist, Jack Kirby. The exhibit, “Jack Kirby: Heroes and Humanity,” received glowing reviews and is a must-see for anyone in the LA area. In this Q&A, Saunders explains what makes Kirby exceptional and why he's so important to him.

Everyone Loves to Hate the Joker

COMICS AND CARTOON STUDIES, DISABILITY STUDIES, ENGLISH - What makes the comic book villain the Joker such a popular antagonist for Batman? It’s one of many questions Professor Elizabeth Wheeler examines in her latest research paper, “The Joker’s Shifting Face: Eighty Years of Mad History in Batman and American Culture.”

CAS initiative draws together comics and science, making research more accessible

COMICS AND CARTOON STUDIES - The Science and Comics Initiative recently teamed up with the International NeuroAI Conference and hosted a satellite workshop for scholars who were attending the conference at the University of Washington. The Science and Comics Initiative works to make science more accessible for a general audience through the comics format.

Speakers will explore Indigenous comic art over the coming year

COMICS AND CARTOON STUDIES, INDIGENOUS, RACE AND ETHNIC STUDIES - Three Indigenous artists whose work deals extensively with environmental questions will take part in the Indigenous Comics Speaker Series over the coming academic year. The series begins with Michael Nicoll Yahgulanaas, an award-winning visual artist and author, at 4 p.m. Wednesday, Oct. 11, in the Knight Library Browsing Room.