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GRAPHIC NOVELS! INFO COMICS! TRANSMEDIA KNOWLEDGE!
ENGL 1168-106 • TuTh 1:25-2:40 • Rockefeller 102
Prof. Jon McKenzie • jvm62@cornell.edu • Office: Tues 2:30-4:00 • Mann Cafe
Google Drive class folders: Google folder link       Zoom class link         Zoom recording link
Cornell Library Catalogue   OWL MLA citation guide

Graphic novels and comics have long mixed research and storytelling. From Maus to Logicomix to Fun Home, graphic novelists often tackle complex historical, scientific, and literary issues. The For Beginners and Introducing… comic books series include such titles as Climate Change for Beginners, Black Women for Beginners, Quantum Theory, Mind and Brain, and Einstein. Finally, the field of graphic medicine translates medical science into info comics for patients and other at-risk communities.

Supporting Cornell’s public mission of community engagement, this First-year Writing Seminar teaches students to read and compose argumentative essays, info comics, multimedia presentations, and other genres of transmedia knowledge. Transmedia knowledge translates ideas, stories, and images across different media in order to engage different audiences and produce different rhetorical effects.

We will focus on writing as thinking, learning to analyze, create, and share concepts through both argumentation and storytelling across different scholarly genres. Descriptions of evidence often take narrative form, as does the history of any field, institution, or community. Moreover, specialized knowledge often applies and legitimates itself through the stories it shows and tells in the broader world. We will study and write about this process through examples drawn from graphic medicine, science communication, literary studies, and media studies.

Projects

Students complete six writing projects—descriptive analysis, conceptual analysis, information comics, comparative analysis, and a term paper and formal presentation—focusing on skills of reading, outlining, drafting, reviewing, revising, and finalizing texts. 

Traditional and emerging scholarly genres often seek to inform, enlighten, convince, persuade, and sometimes entertain and move readers. You will learn critical and creative skills for thinking, sharing research, and creating impact with different audiences, including specialists, community members, and the general public.

Evaluation

All projects are worth 10% of your final grade, except for the term paper, which is worth 30%, and the final presentation, which is rolled into participation. Participation, which also includes attendance, discussion, and contribution to revisions, is worth 20%. Two absences may result in final grade reduction; three in failure. 

Learning outcomes

 

Conceptual analysis and synthesis
Argumentation and narrative
Individual and collaborative problem-solving
Divergent and convergent thinking

Outlining, storyboarding, sparklining
Media skills in software such as Word,
Comic Life, and PowerPoint

Cornell Writing CentersThe Cornell Writing Centers (WC) is a free resource available to everyone on campus for nearly any kind of writing project: applications, presentations, lab reports, essays, papers, and more. Tutors serve as responsive listeners and readers who can address questions of confidence, critical reading, analytic thought, and imagination. Writing tutors also have experience working with non-native speakers of English. The WC are open Mon-Thurs, 3:30 – 5:30pm (Mann Library & Rockefeller Hall 178) and Sun-Thurs 7:00 – 10:00pm (Olin library Room 403; Uris Library Room 108; Tatkon Center Room 3343).  Writers can schedule appointments or drop in at a convenient time. For more info:  https://cornell.mywconline.net/

Academic Integrity: Each student in this course is expected to abide by the Cornell University Code of Academic Integrity. Any work submitted by a student in this course for academic credit will be the student’s own work. 

Inclusivity: The English department is committed to providing an atmosphere for learning that respects diversity. While working together to build this community we ask all members to:

 

Share their unique experiences, values and beliefs
Be open to the views of others
Honor the uniqueness of their colleagues

Appreciate the opportunity to learn from each other
Keep confidential discussions of a personal (or professional) nature
Discuss ways we can create an inclusive environment

Accommodations for students with disabilities: In compliance with the Cornell University policy and equal access laws, I am available to discuss appropriate academic accommodations that may be required for student with disabilities. Requests for academic accommodations are to be made during the first three weeks of the semester, except for unusual circumstances, so arrangements can be made. Students are encouraged to register with Student Disability Services to verify their eligibility for appropriate accommodations. 

 

Schedule

 

Tuesday

Thursday

Week 1 Introduction

8/22 Welcome

8/24 Read and discuss
Hopkins, et al. It Takes a Village, Part 1
Horton 1-40

Project 1 assignment

Week 2 Descriptive Analysis

8/29 Read and discuss
Hopkins, et al. It Takes a Village, Part 2 and Part 3.

8/31 Workshop
Draft dialogues due

Peer editing 

Week 3  Descriptive Analysis

9/5 Project 1 Due 

Project 5 and 6 assignment

Resources
Cornell Library Comics and Graphic Novels 
Comics for Collectors
iStoryStudio
For Beginners series
Wake the Form: Artists’ Books in Context
Werner Pfeiffer’s Book-Objects and Artist Books

9/7 Read and discuss
Horton 41-50
Birch, “Culturally Competent Care”
Borges, “The Fearful Sphere of Pascal”

Project 2 assignment

Week 4 Conceptual Analysis

9/12 Studio

Lanham, “Who’s Kicking Who?”

 

9/14 Workshop

Sample essays
Nguyen – AI: Modern Frankenstein
Sakakisara – Atomic Reconstruction

Week 5  Conceptual Analysis

9/19 Project 2 Due
Project 3 assignment
WhyWhatHow Sparkline
Guide
Rubric

9/21 Read 
Caldwell, “Information Comics”
McCloud, Understanding Comics, i-23

Student info comics
Water We
Living at the Intersection
Prisoners Sentenced to Death in Tanzania
The Evolution of the Atomic Model

Week 6
Information Comic

9/26 Workshop
Draft dialogues due

Install free Comic Life

 

9/28 Studio
McCloud, Making Comics 8-57
Madden, 99 Ways to Tell a Story
Sample storyboard 1
Sample storyboard 2

Week 7
Information Comic  

10/3 Workshop

10/5 Peer editing

Draft info comics due

Week 8
Information Comic 

10/10 NO CLASS

10/12 Project 3 Due

 

Project 4 assignment

Week 9
Comparative Analysis

10/17 Read and discuss

Horton 131-135, 136-147

Grosskopf, et al. “Design Thinking implemented in Software Engineering Tools”
Victor, “Media for Thinking the Unthinkable” (6 min clip)
Victor, “Media for Thinking the Unthinkable” (full 40 min)

10/19 Read

 

Stiegler, Making a Mouk

Optional:

Tinnel: Grammatization: Bernard Stiegler’s Theory of Writing and Technology

McKenzie, Becoming Maker: Creating Transmedia Knowledge

Sample papers

Albert He
James Kong
Mario Penna
Henry Ramstad

Week 10
Comparative Analysis

10/24  Workshop

Use spreadsheet to outline paper and compose proposal abstract.

Choose Proj 5/6 text

The Boat
A Second Chance
Harvest of Change
Fallen of World War II
etc.
For Beginners books

10/26 Workshops

Peer editing of drafts

Week 11 
The Longer Essay

10/31 Project 4 Due

Project 5 and 6 assignment

Notes toward Your Longer Essay

11/2 Read

Horton 155-202

Watch Michael Chaney: How to Read a Graphic Novel

Week 12 

11/7 Theory Matrix Bring in abstract and notes

11/9  Workshop

Read
Queneau, Exercises in Style
Class notes on transmedia flow

Week 13

11/14 Outline/Sparkline Workshop

Outline/Sparkline worksheet

TUTOR TEXTS
Jesse Krimes, Voices from the Heartland (2022) 
Temple Grandin: The world needs all kinds of minds (2010)
Dan Featherstone, Barabuieria (1986)
Andy Griffith, What It Was, Was Football (1953)

11/16 Pecha Kucha workshop

 

 

Week 14
THANKSGIVING

 11/21 NO CLASS

11/23  NO CLASS

Week 15

 11/28 Draft due of Project 6

11/30 Project 5 Presentations

Finals Week

 

12/5 Final paper due in Google Folder 

 

Readings

Required books

Horton, Susan R. 1982. Thinking through Writing. Baltimore and London: Johns Hopkins.

 

 

 

 

 


Required readings (pdf downloads)

Baetens, Jan and Hugo Frey. 2015. The Graphic Novel: An Introduction. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.

Czerwiec, MK, Ian Williams, Susan Merrill Squier, Michael J. Green, Kimberly R. Myers, and Scott T. Smith. 2015. Graphic Medicine Manifesto. University Park, PA: The Pennsylvania State University Press.

Duarte, Nancy. 2007. Resonate: Present Visual Stories that Transform Audiences. Sebastopol, CA: O’Reilly Media.

Flowers, Ebony. 2017. “Experimenting with Comics: Making as Inquiry.” Visual Arts Research 43: 2 Winter, pp. 21-57.

McCloud, Scott. 2006. Making Comics. New York: Harper.

Horton, Susan R. 1982. Thinking through Writing. Baltimore and London: Johns Hopkins.

McLaughlin, Jeff. 2017. Ed. Graphic Novels as Philosophy. Jackson, MS: University Press of Mississippi.

Mickwitz, Nina. 2016. Documentary Comics: Graphic Truth-Telling in a Skeptical Age. London: Palgrave Macmillan.

The Healthy Aboriginal Network. 2012. It Takes a Village. n.p.: The Healthy Aboriginal Network.


Recommended for term paper topic:

FunHomeBookCoverradioactive-cover

ware

 

 

 

 

 

 

Wyrick, Deborah Baker. 1998. Fanon for Beginners. Danbury, CT: For Beginners.

Bechdel, Allison. 2006. Fun Home: A Family Tragicomic. Boston: Houghton Mifflin.

Redness, Laura. 2011. Radioactive: Marie & Pierre Curie: A Tale of Love and Fallout. New York: !t Books.

Ware, Chris. 2012. Building Stories. New York: Pantheon Press.

The Healthy Aboriginal Network. 2012. It Takes a Village. n.p.: The Healthy Aboriginal Network.

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