Detail from Louis Riel: A Comic Strip Biography (2003) by Chester Brown.
...comics are a medium of extremes. They often simplify and stereotype their subjects, partly in an attempt to make our complex world understandable, partly as a means of efficient short-form communication. In the process, of course, they also highlight their surrounding societies' trends and attitudes, making them easily available for observation and study.
— Fredrik Strömberg, Black Images in the Comics: A Visual History
This page contains material on the history of comics, as well as theory and criticism of the art form. For researchers looking for an accessible overview of both the history and theory of the medium, we recommend pairing Fred Van Lente and Ryan Dunlavey's Comic Book History of Comics with Scott McCloud's Understanding Comics.
Founded in 1976, The Comics Journal is an American magazine of news and criticism pertaining to comic art and graphic novels, featuring interviews, editorials and reviews.
Seeks to advance the academic study of an emerging and diverse canon of imagetexts. Chief among these are comic books, comic strips, and animations, but also represented are illustrated fiction, children’s picture books, digital-concrete poetic forms and visual rhetoric.
Aims to describe the nature of comics, to identify the medium as a distinct art form and to address the medium's formal properties. The emerging field of comics studies is a model for interdisciplinary research and this peer-reviewed journal welcomes all approaches and methodologies. Its specific goal, however, is to expand the relationship between comics and theory and to seek to articulate a 'theory of comics'.