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E-grāmata: Retcon Game: Retroactive Continuity and the Hyperlinking of America

  • Formāts: 194 pages
  • Izdošanas datums: 03-Apr-2017
  • Izdevniecība: University Press of Mississippi
  • Valoda: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9781496811332
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  • Formāts: 194 pages
  • Izdošanas datums: 03-Apr-2017
  • Izdevniecība: University Press of Mississippi
  • Valoda: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9781496811332

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The superhero Wolverine time travels and changes storylines. On Torchwood, there's a pill popped to alter memories of the past. The narrative technique of retroactive continuity seems rife lately, given all the world-building in comics. Andrew J. Friedenthal deems retroactive continuity, or ""retconning,"" as a force with many implications for how Americans view history and culture.

Friedenthal examines this phenomenon in a range of media, from its beginnings in comic books and now its widespread shift into television, film, and digital media. Retconning has reached its present form as a result of the complicated workings of superhero comics. In comic books and other narratives, retconning often seems utilized to literally rewrite some aspect of a character's past, either to keep that character more contemporary, to erase stories from continuity that no longer fit, or to create future story potential.

From comics, retconning has spread extensively, to long-form, continuity-rich dramas on television, such as Buffy the Vampire Slayer, Lost, and beyond. Friedenthal explains that in a culture saturated by editable media, where interest groups argue over Wikipedia pages and politicians can immediately delete questionable tweets, the retcon serves as a perfect metaphor for the ways in which history, and our access to information overall, has become endlessly malleable.

In the first book to focus on this subject, Friedenthal regards the editable Internet hyperlink, rather than the stable printed footnote, as the de facto source of information in America today. To embrace retroactive continuity in fictional media means accepting that the past itself is not a stable element, but rather something constantly in contentious flux. Due to retconning's ubiquity within our media, we have grown familiar with narratives as inherently unstable, a realization that deeply affects how we understand the world.
Acknowledgments ix
Introduction: A Hyperlinked Past: Theorizing Retroactive Continuity 3(12)
1 A Brief Prehistory Of Retroactive Continuity
15(18)
2 High Society: Historical Revisionism In Justice Society Comics
33(38)
3 Crisis Control: Crisis On Infinite Earths And The Creation Of A Unified Comic Book Universe
71(36)
4 Moving Images, Moving History: Retroactive Continuity In Television And Film
107(20)
5 Putting It All Together: Retroactive Parody And Play
127(18)
6 Citation Needed: Wikipedia And The Mutability Of The Past
145(14)
Conclusion Playing The Retcon Game 159(4)
Notes 163(6)
Works Cited 169(8)
Index 177
Andrew J. Friedenthal is a writer, editor, and independent scholar. His work has been published in ImageText: Interdisciplinary Comics Studies and the Journal of Comics and Culture.