Category: Library News (page 4 of 44)

Research Spotlight: Promoting Queer Literacy and History in High Schools Through Comics

Throughout the summer of 2022, the Billy Ireland Cartoon Library & Museum was proud to host OSU student Maggie Dahlstrom, winner of an Undergraduate Research Library Fellowship (URLF) award. The URLF program pairs students who have an interest in academic research with a library mentor to experience the pivotal role of libraries in academic research. Maggie worked with Curator of Comics and Cartoon Art, Caitlin McGurk, to develop her project: Promoting Queer Literacy and History in High Schools Through Comics:

Maggie spent ten weeks working diligently in the Lucy Shelton Caswell Reading Room at BICLM, mining queer graphic novels, comic books, and minicomics in our collection and developing a project that would use these materials to provide high school teachers with a digital resource for teaching queer narratives in their classroom.

In Maggie’s words: “This resource takes a historical and literal approach to queerness, detailing queer history as well as what it means to exist in specific queer identities. Queerness, by its nature, can’t be described by any one definition, and any attempt to define it will encounter overlap between identities, as well as things that slip through the cracks. Queerness is messy by design, but in the interest of best encapsulating what it means to be queer, each page will include comics from people’s lived experiences. Theory, though important, will never be able to match the power of individuals and communities sharing what it means to actually claim space as queer people in the world.”

The robust guide that Maggie created includes explorations of what it means to be queer, breaking down each element of the LGBTQIA+ acronym. She provides an overview of queer history as told through a variety of print and digital comics, with an eye to specific movements and legislation. The guide culminates in teacher resources that present reading guides and potential assignments for the teaching of Alice Oseman’s HeartstopperSnapdragon by Kat Leyh , A quick and easy guide to queer and trans identities by Mady G., Kiss Number 8 by Colleen AF Venable, and Gender Queer by Maia Kobabe. At a time when so many queer narratives have come under fire in the media and been banned by schools and libraries, Dahlstrom’s resource seeks to empower educators to teach these works confidently, and speaks to their essential role in the education of future generations.

We are so proud of the resource that Maggie has built, and her important work caught the attention of 10TV news who interviewed her in June! You can watch the video here:

To create her digital project, Maggie used Scalar, a free open-source authoring and publishing platform for digital scholarship. If you are an undergraduate student at The Ohio State University interested in applying for an Undergraduate Research Library Fellowship, look for application information in early spring!

New exhibit: MAN SAVES COMICS! Bill Blackbeard’s Treasure of 20th Century Newspapers

MAN SAVES COMICS!
Bill Blackbeard’s Treasure of 20th Century Newspapers

On display at The Billy Ireland Cartoon Library & Museum November 12, 2022 – May 7, 2023

For immediate release:  September 28, 2022

(Columbus, OH) – MAN SAVES COMICS! Bill Blackbeard’s Treasure of 20th Century Newspapers, which mines the staggering 2.5 million items in the San Francisco Academy of Comic Art Collection, is on view Nov.12, 2022-May 7, 2023 at the Billy Ireland Cartoon Library & Museum. Admission is free.

Twenty-five years ago, six semi-trucks arrived at The Ohio State University. They contained the world’s most comprehensive collection of newspaper comic strips and cartoons, totaling 75 tons of material. Bill Blackbeard, a comics historian and collector, had amassed this vast and unparalleled collection in his San Francisco home starting in 1967.

Libraries around the world had begun discarding their bound volumes of newspapers and replacing them with microfilmed versions in the mid-1900s, asserting that newsprint was too bulky and prone to deterioration to retain. Realizing the limitations of black and white microfilm for preserving our cultural heritage, Blackbeard founded a non-profit called the San Francisco Academy of Comic Art in order to collect discarded newspapers from libraries around the country and to save the comics and illustrations they contained.

These invaluable historical documents provide a unique view of popular graphic art at the start of the 20th century, when illustrated newspaper pages and comic strips were at the heart of visual culture and communication. Pre-dating radio, cinema and television, the impact of the daily newspaper as a tool for information and entertainment cannot be overstated, and the cartoonists whose imagery and ideas filled the pages entered the homes of millions of Americans. Art Spiegelman, Pulitzer prize-winning creator of Maus, called the collection “the most important endangered archive left on our planet since the destruction of the Royal Library of Alexandria.”

Alongside an immersive display of richly colorful early 20th century Sunday pages are highlights from the sections of a newspaper itself, ranging from Winsor McCay and Nell Brinkley’s editorial cartoons to Rube Goldberg and Kate Carew’s cartoon coverage of sporting events. Obscure and forgotten cartoonists are celebrated alongside the canon works of comic strip history, such as Polly and Her PalsFlash GordonAlley Oop, and Gasoline Alley. Artists featured include George Herriman, Tad Dorgan, Rose O’Neill, Johnny Gruelle, Elsie Robinson, and countless more. The exhibit also features subsets of Blackbeard’s collecting vision, including penny dreadfuls, science fiction fanzines, pulp magazines such as Weird Tales, dime novels and illustrated story papers.

Blackbeard’s heroic efforts to rescue and preserve this material are celebrated in this exhibition, which also features an exploration of the process for printing turn-of-the-century newspapers. Molds known as “flongs,” metal plates, archival video clips from printing plants and additional artifacts will be on display.

This exhibit is curated by Ann Lennon and Caitlin McGurk.
The Art of the News: Comics Journalism is also on view in the galleries starting November 12.

Naughty Pete by Charles Forbell, August 17, 1913

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