Danny Fingeroth: Foreword
Derek Parker Royal: Introduction: Visualizing Jewish narrative
Lan Dong: Picturing Jewish identity. Thinly disguised (autobio)graphical stories: Will Eisner's Life, in pictures
Tahneer Oksman: "Not a word for little girls!": knowledge, word, and image in Leela Corman's Unterzakhn
Matt Reingold: Jewish sexualities in J.T. Waldman's Megillat Esther
Nicole Wilkes Goldberg and James Goldberg: "You wouldn't shoot your fellow Jews": Jewish identity and nostalgia in Joann Sfar's Klezmer
Ira Nadel: Feiffer's Jewish voice
Derek Parker Royal: There goes the neighborhood: cycling ethnoracial tensions in Will Eisner's Dropsie Avenue
Eli Valley: "Jews and superheroes"
Robert G. Weiner: Jewish engagements with comic genres. The servant: Marvel Comics and the golem legend
Brannon Costello: "America makes strange Jews": superheroes, Jewish masculinity, and Howard Chaykin's Dominic Fortune
Daniel M. Bronstein: Converting schmaltz into chicken fat: Will Elder and the Judaization of American comedy
Ofer Berenstein: The third temple: alternative realities' depiction of Israel in Israeli comics and what it tells us about political consensus in Israeli society
Wendy Stallard Flory: Jewish comics, the Holocaust, and trauma. The search: a graphic narrative for beginning to teach about the Holocaust
Samantha Baskind: Picturing "The Holiest Thing": Joe Kubert's children of the Warsaw Ghetto
Ellen Rosner Feig: Trauma in Gaza: the Israeli-Palestinian conflict through the eyes of the graphic novelist
Jean-Philippe Marcoux: "To night the ensilenced word": intervocality and postmemorial representation in the graphic novel about the Holocaust
Al Wiesner: "How Shaloman was born"
Chantal Catherine Michel: Representation of Israel, biblical text, and legend. The art of persuasion and propaganda: the Israeli-Palestinian conflict in comic books and graphic novels
Stephen E. Tabachnick: Strange encounters in Rutu Modan's Exit wounds and "Jamilti"
Cyril Camus: The "outsider": Neil Gaiman and the Old Testament
Tof Eklund.: Jewish giants: Nephilim, Rephaim, and the IDF
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