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  2. Visual journalism - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Visual_journalism

    The scholarly father of this visual form of communication is Robert Horn, Ph.D., a fellow at Stanford University and author of the book Visual Language. Visual journalism is not a series of symbols with precise meanings but rather images that suggest complex meanings and, in the Egyptian tradition of the cartouche, contain words. The symbols do ...

  3. Photo-essay - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Photo-essay

    A photographic essay or photo-essay for short is a form of visual storytelling, a way to present a narrative through a series of images. A photo essay delivers a story using a series of photographs and brings the viewer along a narrative journey.

  4. Comics journalism - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Comics_journalism

    "The Menace of the Hour" by George Luks, published in The Verdict magazine, 30 Jan. 1899.. Antecedents to comics journalism included printmakers like Currier and Ives, who illustrated American Civil War battles; political cartoonists like Thomas Nast; and George Luks, who was dubbed a "war artist" for his work from the front lines of the Spanish–American War. [9]

  5. Visual narrative - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Visual_narrative

    A visual narrative (also visual storytelling) [1] is a story told primarily through the use of visual media. This can be images in the mind, digital, and traditional media. [ 2 ] The story may be told using still photography , illustration , or video , and can be enhanced with graphics , music, voice and other audio.

  6. Storytelling - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Storytelling

    Facts can be understood as smaller versions of a larger story, thus storytelling can supplement analytical thinking. Because storytelling requires auditory and visual senses from listeners, one can learn to organize their mental representation of a story, recognize structure of language and express his or her thoughts. [25]

  7. Narrative - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Narrative

    In Storytelling Rights: The uses of oral and written texts by urban adolescents, author Amy Shuman offers the following definition of storytelling rights: "the important and precarious relationship between narrative and event and, specifically, between the participants in an event and the reporters who claim the right to talk about what happened."

  8. Graphic Storytelling and Visual Narrative - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Graphic_Storytelling_and...

    Graphic Storytelling and Visual Narrative is a 1996 book by American cartoonist Will Eisner that provides a formal overview of comics. It is a companion to his earlier book Comics and Sequential Art (1985).

  9. Visual rhetoric and composition - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Visual_rhetoric_and...

    Visual rhetoric or “visual modes of representation” has been present in composition (college writing) courses for decades but only as a complementary component “for writing assignments and instructions” since it was considered as “a less sophisticated, less precise mode of conveying semiotic content than written language.” [3] Nevertheless, many experts in composition studies ...