Examining the Cold War in the 1980s with Comic Books

Jeremiah C. Clabough, Caroline C. Sheffield
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Abstract

Abstract The role of literacy in social studies education has been greatly elevated over the last decade. The National Council for the Social Studies (NCSS) models through the indicators of its C3 Framework how to strengthen K-12 students’ disciplinary thinking, literacy, and argumentation skills in the four core social studies disciplines: civics, history, geography, and economics. One resource that social studies teachers can use to address the indicators within the C3 Framework is comic books. Comic books employ both visual and textual modalities to convey meaning, through text boxes, people’s facial expressions, and imagery to capture the author’s arguments. The various modes of communication utilized in comic books allow students to construct meaning. In this article, we discuss how to use two comic books, Batman: Ten Nights of the Beast, and Suicide Squad: Trial by Fire, to teach about the Cold War in the 1980s. We start by giving a brief historical overview of the Cold War in the 1980s. Then, the focus of the article shifts to provide an examination of the potential benefits of utilizing comic books. This section also discusses how popular culture reflects the issues, values, and beliefs of an historical era. Two activities are given that scaffold how high school social studies teachers can employ these comic books to analyze important components of the Cold War in the 1980s. The steps and resources needed to implement our activities are provided.
用漫画书审视20世纪80年代的冷战
在过去的十年中,读写能力在社会研究教育中的作用得到了极大的提升。国家社会研究委员会(NCSS)通过其C3框架的指标来模拟如何加强K-12学生在四个核心社会研究学科(公民、历史、地理和经济学)中的学科思维、素养和论证技能。社会研究教师可以利用漫画书来解决C3框架内的指标问题。漫画书采用视觉和文本两种方式来传达意义,通过文本框、人物的面部表情和图像来捕捉作者的论点。漫画书中使用的各种交流模式使学生能够构建意义。在这篇文章中,我们将讨论如何使用《蝙蝠侠:野兽的十个夜晚》和《自杀小队:火的审判》这两本漫画书来教授20世纪80年代的冷战。我们首先对20世纪80年代的冷战进行简要的历史回顾。然后,文章的重点转移到提供使用漫画书的潜在好处的检查。本节还讨论了流行文化如何反映一个历史时代的问题、价值观和信仰。有两项活动可以支撑高中社会研究教师如何利用这些漫画书来分析20世纪80年代冷战的重要组成部分。提供了执行我们的活动所需的步骤和资源。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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