![]() ![]() (19)Ī visual language, as I understand it, is a way of communicating through images without words (because words themselves can be taken as images, as we discussed today in class–the Japanese characters seem to “fit” better in some of the images than the English letters/words because of their shape).Ĭohn and Ehly (2016) go on to talk about something like words in visual language: The answer to filling this gap is a ‘‘visual language” …. However, there is a terminological gap between these modalities with regards to the system employed in this process: we speak in a spoken language, but we draw in _?_. Just what is meant by ‘‘visual language’’? Humans use patterned ways of communicating in the visual-graphic form (i.e., drawing) just as they do in the verbal form (i.e., speaking). ![]() 1 is what Cohn & Ehly (2016) call “visual language”: One thing I focused on this week while reading Buddha Vol. ![]() ![]() Not so great when you’re writing about manga, where the images matter a lot and I might not remember all aspects of them. The problem is that I left my book in my office and am now trying to write a blog post over the weekend with just my notes. In Arts One this week we read Osamu Tezuka’s Buddha: Kapilavastu, which is the first volume in Tezuka’s Buddha series.Īs usual for Arts One, there was so much to talk about and I wanted to raise some issues and questions that we didn’t get time to discuss. ![]()
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