ASSESSMENT 3 21ST CENTUAY LITERATURE
Do you want to know the difference between doodle fiction, manga, and graphic novels? What are the elements and similarities? You've arrived to an excellent article. Let's go right to the point and address the primary matter, but first, what are the definitions of these terms?
• Doodle fiction is a type of literary work in which the author uses doodle drawings and handwritten visuals instead of regular typography. Drawings add to the text by often including witty bits that would otherwise be absent if the pictures were not included.
• Manga is a Japanese term for comic books or graphic novels. Although the art from has a long history in previous Japanese art, most manga adhere to a style developed in Japan in the late nineteenth century. Manga is a Japanese term that refers to both comics and cartooning.
•A graphic novel is a book that is entirely made up of comics. Although the term "NOVEL" is usually used to refer to long fictional works, the term "GRAPHIC NOVEL" is used to refer to fiction, non-fiction, and anthologized works.
Literary modernism, often known as modernist literature, emerged in the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries, mostly in Europe and North America, and is marked by an intentional departure with previous writing styles in both poetry and prose fiction. Manga, doodle fiction, and graphic novels are all examples of modern literacy genres. Let's take a closer look at the differences in elements and structure.
The distinction in terms of ingredients is that manga is the Japanese word for comics, and they are usually, although not always, published in English in the form of a graphic novel. You can get them in the shape of a comic book or a regular magazine. Manga is almost always black and white in Japan. In place of regular font, doodle fiction uses doodle writing, drawing, and hard written visuals. Humorous aspects are frequently incorporated, resulting in lighter laughter and delight.
A graphic novel is a comic book that has a spine rather than staples. It's also released as a book rather than a magazine.
It's easy to see how it differs from one another in terms of structure. In terms of structure, comics, manga, and doodle fiction are all types of graphic novels, much as Supreme, Pepperoni, and Cheese are all types of pizza.
Doodle Fiction looks like a traditional novel, but its art and typography are mainly hand-drawn, whereas the other two start with hand-drawn visuals and then complete with shortcuts like tone and digital editing.
Manga is created in a highly stylized style and is normally read from left to right, as opposed to right to left in the United States.
This can be misleading because graphic novels is also shorthand for a compilation of single-issue comics or a longer American-comic-style work in the United States.
While I'm sure doodle fiction employs it too, American comics and manga appear to use them more frequently, aiming for a more sophisticated style. Some argue that Manga is solely Japanese, created by Japanese authors for a Japanese audience. That's a load of nonsense. "Well, if a Japanese artist draws Batman in an American style, with left-to-right reading, is the 20 page full?" I ask.
Their Similarities: These three use drawings, photographs, and pictures to better illustrate their context, and they are essentially the same.
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