Running through the Who, Where, and When: A Cross-cultural Analysis of Situational Changes in Comics

Bien Klomberg*, Irmak Hacımusaoğlu, Neil Cohn

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticleScientificpeer-review

7 Citations (Scopus)
138 Downloads (Pure)

Abstract

Understanding visual narratives requires readers to track dimensions of time, spatial location, and characters across a sequence. Previous work has found situational changes across adjacent panels differ cross-culturally, but few works have examined such situational dimensions across extended sequences. We therefore investigated situational "runs" - uninterrupted sequences of the situational dimensions (time, space, characters) - in a corpus of 300+ annotated comics from the United States, Europe, and Asia. We compared runs' proportion and average lengths and found that across books, semantic information changed frequently and run length correlated with proportion. Yet, cross-cultural patterns arose, with American and European comics using more continuous runs than Asian comics. American and European comics also used more and longer temporal and character continuity, while Asian comics used more spatial continuity. These findings raise questions about comprehenders' processing strategies of visual narratives across cultures and how general frameworks of visual narrative comprehension account for variations in situational (dis)continuity.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)669-684
Number of pages16
JournalDiscourse Processes
Volume59
Issue number9
Early online date5 Aug 2022
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 21 Oct 2022

Keywords

  • EVENT PERCEPTION
  • LANGUAGE
  • FILM
  • MODELS
  • ROLES

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