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How Come Boys Get To Keep Their Noses Women And Jewish American Identity In Contemporary Graphic Memoirs Tahneer Oksman

  • SKU: BELL-6677072
How Come Boys Get To Keep Their Noses Women And Jewish American Identity In Contemporary Graphic Memoirs Tahneer Oksman
$ 31.00 $ 45.00 (-31%)

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How Come Boys Get To Keep Their Noses Women And Jewish American Identity In Contemporary Graphic Memoirs Tahneer Oksman instant download after payment.

Publisher: Columbia University Press
File Extension: PDF
File size: 74.64 MB
Pages: 309
Author: Tahneer Oksman
ISBN: 9780231172752, 0231172753
Language: English
Year: 2016

Product desciption

How Come Boys Get To Keep Their Noses Women And Jewish American Identity In Contemporary Graphic Memoirs Tahneer Oksman by Tahneer Oksman 9780231172752, 0231172753 instant download after payment.

American comics reflect the distinct sensibilities and experiences of the Jewish American men who played an outsized role in creating them, but what about the contributions of Jewish women? Focusing on the visionary work of seven contemporary female Jewish cartoonists, Tahneer Oksman draws a remarkable connection between innovations in modes of graphic storytelling and the unstable, contradictory, and ambiguous figurations of the Jewish self in the postmodern era.
Oksman isolates the dynamic Jewishness that connects each frame in the autobiographical comics of Aline Kominsky Crumb, Vanessa Davis, Miss Lasko-Gross, Lauren Weinstein, Sarah Glidden, Miriam Libicki, and Liana Finck. Rooted in a conception of identity based as much on rebellion as identification and belonging, these artists' representations of Jewishness take shape in the spaces between how we see ourselves and how others see us. They experiment with different representations and affiliations without forgetting that identity ties the self to others. Stemming from Kominsky Crumb's iconic 1989 comic "Nose Job," in which her alter ego refuses to assimilate through cosmetic surgery, Oksman's study is an arresting exploration of invention in the face of the pressure to disappear.

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