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Tuesday, Oct. 1
The Indiana Daily Student


The Indiana Daily Student

Unpacking possibility in the graphic novel

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I must confess that at the beginning of the semester, when one of my English professors assigned a graphic novel as required reading, I was a little bit nervous. Weren’t graphic novels just elongated comic strips? Doesn’t the position of illustrators on the artistic fringe suggest something about the level of high art that might be limited in such a medium?If I were to associate myself with a graphic novel, would I become subject to connotations of weird science fiction and other longtime disregarded genres of literature? These were the questions that made me realize the many problems each question imposes on sub-mainstream artistic genres. And as I discovered the many fallacies in each supposition, I was able to understand the importance of the medium’s contributions to visual and literary art.The novel, Alison Bechdel’s “Fun Home: A Family Tragicomic,” is, first of all, unlinked to any elements of science fiction, which threw off my original conception of the graphic novel medium.Furthermore, I realized it delved into very deep literary waters, as the style narrates a highly complex and realistic tale – much unlike the idea of the comic book hero’s supernatural, episodic adventures. These disparities caused me to reevaluate my prejudiced stance on graphic novels and, in the true fashion of artistic deconstruction, go to the history of the graphic novel as my primary resource.Around the 1920s and 1930s, a revival of the medieval woodcut tradition in Northern Europe occurred, which led to developing American techniques in comic illustration. As a result, long-form comic narratives emerged in newsprint, predating the modern comic book that became an enormous form of popular entertainment by the 1950s.The graphic novel diverged from the comic book around this time as a means of creating a more complex, mature narrative style and character development that sets it apart from comic books from an art history perspective. However, this taxonomic distinction should not be seen as an illegitimacy imposed on the comic book.In its modern form, the graphic novel covers the gamut of genres and subgenres, including the increasingly popular novels “Maus” and “V for Vendetta.”In this evolution of an artistic medium, we see the typical melding of multimedia that is responsible for the emergence of great art. The graphic novel fuses popular American literary and visual traditions and has brought about a new way of looking at a form associated inappropriately with “low art” of science fiction and mass print. This association is not inappropriate, because the graphic novel is not connected to science fiction, but rather because this connection between fine art and popular entertainment speaks for the devalued cultural feats accomplished by the medium’s origins.



The Indiana Daily Student

Free lecture, concert to take place next week

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Colombian musicologist Egberto Bermudez has joined with the Ensemble Fénix de los Ingenios, a Bloomington-based ensemble specializing in Iberian-American early music, for a series of concerts in Indiana.

The Indiana Daily Student

Breaking down Chrismahanukwanzakah

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Ever since Virgin Mobile USA launched its Chrismahanukwanzakah ad campaign, where characters such as a Hindu Santa and a gay elf sing a happy song; people of all creeds sing along with the commercials and buy the ringtones during the winter holiday season.


The Indiana Daily Student

Watch out Perez, I am coming for you

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I just spent the last hour and a half thinking of something to write about. Sure, I love arts and entertainment. I could write about my love for small, unknown bands on YouTube such as the Florida-based band Boyce Avenue (I own the CD, and I have played all of its videos on YouTube at least 40 times each). I could talk about the passion I hold inside for Brad Pitt and his ever-changing facial hair (sorry Brad, the stach must go).



The Indiana Daily Student

How the West was won and French culture was forgotten

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PARIS – During the course of the past 11 and a half weeks living in Paris, there are a few things I have learned Parisians simply cannot live without. The most crucial being cigarettes, dark-colored clothing and sitting at a cafe having drinks with a friend.



The Indiana Daily Student

Post turkey: The sound of settling

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PARIS – It’s funny how returning to a place can make it feel like home. I hadn’t considered Paris a home the entire time I’ve been studying here. But when I returned from Amsterdam last weekend, I felt something I couldn’t recognize until now.





The Indiana Daily Student

VIDA to be 1st to perform in Indy theater festival

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IU Spanish theater group Vision, Identity, Drama, and Art performed a one-act play in Indianapolis this past weekend. VIDA took the one-act “Las nuevas tamaleras” (The New Tamaleras) to IndyFringe Friday, a theater festival in Indianapolis.


The Indiana Daily Student

Vox Lumiere brings silent movies to life

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Performance group Vox Lumiere’s signature shows are rock concerts built around silent movies, and Friday night’s “The Hunchback of Notre Dame” at the Buskirk-Chumley Theater was no exception.






The Indiana Daily Student

Warm up with wool, cashmere sweaters

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In case you haven’t noticed, winter is upon us. Sure, officially it’s still fall, but with the temperature routinely dipping into the 30s, it’s safe to say a warmer form of clothing is greatly needed.