Wednesday, November 26, 2008

Comic Books and Graphic Novels

During a recent conversation a friend asked me about the difference between a 'Comic Book' and a 'Graphic Novel'. This was not the first time I had heard the question. Usually people wanted to know what I mean by 'graphic novel'. One gentleman wanted to know if I was using the phrase graphic novel to cover up the fact that I read comic books.

I'll take the second question first. I was surprised that someone would consider an adult reading comic books as unusual (unbecoming?). Perhaps I shouldn't have been so surprised given that I was talking to someone in the software industry, but I digress. In any case I was not trying to "cover up" my reading tastes by using the phrase. I buy and read graphic novels and comics openly; I don't hide my copies of Watchmen, V for Vendetta or Asterix, to name a few. I rank some of them among the best books I have read.

Why then distinguish between comic books and graphic novels? In my mind the distinction is not so much between children's and adults' reading but between the content and presentation. Take for example the 2005 movie Batman Begins. Contrast it with the 1985 vintage Batman. Both are based on the same comic book superhero and narrate similar stories. In spite of their similarities they both are significantly different products. The former is the movie equivalent of a graphic novel while the latter is firmly rooted in the comic book tradition. 'Begins' gained a far wider audience for the reason that it was a very enjoyable movie that happened to be based on a superhero. 'Batman' on the other hand was a movie that played mostly to the crowd already familiar with the story and were in the theater to watch a film adaptation.

The distinction is arguably subjective. I will list below the factors I use to differentiate a comic book from a graphic novel.
  1. Non-traditional characters. Where traditional comic books have mostly focused on superheroes (with or without superpowers) graphic novels have told the stories of such mold-breaking characters like the Swamp Thing and John Constantine.
  2. Different treatment of existing characters. This is most vividly illustrated by the success of recent movies like The Dark Knight. These movies were inspired by various graphic novels which told vastly new tales featuring familiar characters, sometimes casting them in an entirely new light.
  3. Shorter, non-serial story arcs. Comic books typically use recurring characters and story lines that extend across lengthy arcs. Graphic novels are closer to traditional novels in that their story arcs are shorter. Classic examples include Alan Moore's V for Vendetta and Watchmen. This is not always true though; Neil Gaiman's Sandman spans multiple episodes, as do graphic novels featuring Batman.
  4. Non-uniform presentation. Traditional comic books tend to have a relatively uniform look even when created by different artists. Graphic novels are known for using different artists with pronouncedly different styles in the same volume. The Sandman series is a good example.
  5. Stylized depiction. This is related to the point mentioned above. Many Graphic novels use fantastically stylized depictions of characters. Frank Miller's Dark Knight, Sin City and 300 come to mind.
  6. Reading experience comparable to traditional novels. This is quite subjective. I find the experience of reading graphic novels more comparable to reading traditional literature. Take for instance the character Death from Neil Gaiman's Sandman universe. I found that the two spin-off volumes featuring Death read like engrossing short stories.

4 comments:

Dysfunctionally Mild said...

Interesting arguments. Of course, a major distinction could be that comic books traditionally deal with a quintessentially American super-powered hero (or even a non super-powered one) in a fairly conventional way, while graphic novels could ostensibly be about anything at all ... even the most mundane true stories, n not contain ur "hero" at all ... case in point persepoils, maus (not that those are mundane), or the buddha series of graphic novels (though that is more of manga, another level there...) No one could claim these to be anything other than serious(if pop) literature.
'Course the interesting thing is that I remember reading that Neil Gaiman dislikes the term "graphic novel", and would prefer to call them all just comic books.

Manoj Govindan said...

Akshay,
Thanks for your comment.

The difference in focus - arbitrary characters as opposed to super heroes - is right at the top of my list ('Non-traditional characters').

The examples you suggested - Maus and Persepolis - brought Indian comic books to mind. Take the various Amar Chitra Katha titles. They focus on unique, definitely non-Western stories. Are they comic books or graphic novels?

Manoj

Dysfunctionally Mild said...

Well thats true ... I did consider that, but I guess I got the impression from the examples you quoted that you looked at mostly mainstream American comics to consider the differences... even 'Swamp Thing' and 'Constantine', or for that matter 'Watchmen' is very much a mainstrean American comic, dealing very much with real issues in what you could call almost a surrealistic setting... so I quoted the other works as examples of comic books (or graphic novels) set in a more realistic world (actually THE real world, since both are representations of real stories).
I suppose you could categorise Amar Chitra Katha as 'comic books' since they are mainstream Indian comics ... albeit dealing with myths and existing material, they do have your regular dose of mighty feats and usual heroes :)
I think the only real criteria to differentiate would be a publishing one - consider the cheaper slimmer paperback versions as comic books, and the thicker slightly more costly, collected versions as graphic novels.
So V for Vendetta was a comic book in the initial run, and is now a graphic novel :)
Btw, apropos that "surprised that someone would consider an adult reading comic books as unusual", Neil Gaiman stated in an interview that once comic books transformed into respectable mainstream 'graphic novels', he was quite disappointed since he liked being a cool outcaste 'comic book' reader :)

Anonymous said...

Writer Alan Moore believes, "It's a marketing term ... that I never had any sympathy with. The term 'comic' does just as well for me. ... The problem is that 'graphic novel' just came to mean 'expensive comic book' and so what you'd get is people like DC Comics or Marvel comics — because 'graphic novels' were getting some attention, they'd stick six issues of whatever worthless piece of crap they happened to be publishing lately under a glossy cover and call it The She-Hulk Graphic Novel...."