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Hansen, Jared M.; Wilson, Paul – Marketing Education Review, 2023
The practice of "memes" -- taking an image from pop culture and adding humorous or inspiring text to it -- are an opportunity for marketing practice. We posit that memes also provide an innovative technique to help students become more engaged in marketing classes. We propose requiring students to submit one or more graded homework…
Descriptors: Learner Engagement, Popular Culture, Humor, Internet
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Robinson, Stacey A.; Jennings, John I. – Journal of Curriculum and Pedagogy, 2021
"Teaching Black Masculinity through The Uncanny Black Kirby" will examine Marvel Comics's and Netflix's Luke Cage: Hero for Higher through the last 48 years of unstably grounded imaginings. The exhibition is an illustrated syllabus with a bibliography and contextualizing imagery that educators can use in a 10-16 week unit. Creating…
Descriptors: Masculinity, Cartoons, Popular Culture, African American History
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Hollman, Deirdre Lynn – Journal of Curriculum and Pedagogy, 2021
This article seeks to explore the complexities of Black subjectivities as written and illustrated by comic book creators of color who wrestle with the enigmatic qualities of blackness as they write within and beyond racial imaginaries and social realities. I call these works "critical race comics" to highlight their explicit engagement…
Descriptors: Critical Theory, Race, Cartoons, Illustrations
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Corson, Jordan; Dauphinais, Jennifer; Friedrich, Daniel – New Educator, 2020
This paper explores a historical analysis of the comic book character Robin to illuminate how different understandings of youth at different historical points intersect with notions of pedagogy to make certain forms of childhood intelligible to educators and researchers. We analyze different configurations of Robin's identity, taking up questions…
Descriptors: Teacher Education, Cartoons, Educational History, Interpersonal Relationship
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Duruel Erkiliç, Senem; Budak, Goncagül – Turkish Online Journal of Educational Technology - TOJET, 2021
The act of laughing, which is thought to be related with the body rather than the mind and identified with rudeness, has been attributed to outcast segments of society, such as women, children, slaves, or the common-people, while humor requiring supremacy of the mind is believed to be associated with the ruling elite class of society, and mostly…
Descriptors: Females, Humor, Gender Differences, Power Structure
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Ashley K. Dallacqua; David E. Low – English Journal, 2019
Located in the suburbs of a large midwestern city, Trail Middle School serves a predominantly middle-class population. The data the authors feature in this article include group discussions and interviews with students, as well as recordings of in-class lessons, student work, and fieldnotes. The authors focus on the theme of gender as it emerged…
Descriptors: Cartoons, Gender Issues, Gender Bias, Student Attitudes
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Balis, Andrea; Aman, Michael – Teaching in Higher Education, 2013
Can race and assimilation be taught? Interdisciplinary pedagogy provides a methodology, context, and use of nontraditional texts culled from American cultural history such as from, theater and historical texts. This approach and these texts prove useful for an examination of race and assimilation in America. The paper describes a course that while…
Descriptors: Higher Education, Urban Universities, Race, Popular Culture
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Griffith, Paula E. – Journal of Adolescent & Adult Literacy, 2010
The author examines the rise in popularity of graphic novels, the sales of which have steadily increased as their influence expands into adolescent culture. This article also includes an overview of current research results supporting the use of graphic novels within the classroom and school library; graphic novels support English-language…
Descriptors: Reading Difficulties, School Libraries, Novels, Cartoons
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Moffatt, Lyndsay; Norton, Bonny – Critical Inquiry in Language Studies, 2005
Reading teachers concerned with gender equity have struggled to find ways in which to critically engage with students' popular culture. Traditionally, feminist reading teachers have seen popular texts as mechanisms for the reproduction of dysfunctional gender relations. However, this perspective is often met with resistance by young readers. In…
Descriptors: Feminism, Popular Culture, Cartoons, Criticism
Kerns, Dan – 1993
Photocopy humor is defined as any facsimile, photocopy, or wire-copy line drawing, iconography, or textual material that was drawn or written for distribution to a larger select audience using the available technology to disperse material intended to be humorous. Professional humor is excluded from this consideration. The content of photocopy…
Descriptors: Age Differences, Cartoons, Coding, Cultural Images