CANADA COMICS OPEN LIBRARY – Filling a gap in the cultural landscape.

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CANADA COMICS OPEN LIBRARY – Filling a gap in the cultural landscape.

The Canada Comics Open Library (CCOL), located in Regent Park in the Centre for Social Innovation (CSI), at the Daniels Spectrum building, is a novel undertaking combining both traditional and innovative approaches to comics, their presentation, preservation, and promotion. In the world of comics, keeping alive the past is just as important as making way for the new. While the past may have been characterised by male dominated worldview, the present and the future are anything but that.

In what is commonly known as the Golden Age of comics (the 1930s and 1940s in the US), a pantheon of superheroes Superman, Batman, Spiderman, Captain America, and Wonder Woman, is conjured up to save the lot of mankind, from say, the devastation of the Great Depression. Parallel to this, and no less important, in Europe and in Japan for instance, comics are also flourishing, TinTin, Asterix, Manga and Anime emerge as ground-breaking examples of storytelling and world making - reshaping the very essence of what the comic strip can be.

The President and Librarian of CCOL, explains that today comics are framed by inclusivity, incorporating the work of Black, Indigenous and People of Color, LGBTQ+, and other marginalized comic creators, stories, and art. Comics today, nurture the participation of all ages and do not discriminate based on formal skills. The CCOL acts both as a repository (housing a collection) of comic books, and as an educational and training centre. The library, has established a progressive and innovative workplace, working with open-source software, a malleable cataloguing and call number system, mindful of subject displays with book facings to promote intersectionality, and knowledgeable reference services.

Promoting this new inclusive and expanded vision of what comics can be through education and locating the CCOL project in Regent Park, an area of Toronto that is culturally diverse– has the potential of reaching a much broader following and impact.

In this video, RPTV interviewed the CCOL President and Librarian, and Jordan Reg. Aelick, a resident comics creator, about the library and the work they do.  Both the CCOL President and Jordan are involved in the creation of comics as illustrators and authors.

By
Dimitrije Martinovic
Dimitrije is a staff at FOCUS MEDIA ARTS CENTRE

 

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Video Upload Date: February 24, 2020

FOCUS Media Arts Centre (FOCUS) is a not-for-profit organization that was established in 1990 to counter negative media stereotypes of low income communities and provide relevant information to residents living in the Regent Park area and surrounding communities.

We seek to empower marginalized individuals and under represented communities to have a voice, through the  use of professional training, mentorships and participatory based media practices that enable the sharing of stories, experiences and perspectives on relevant matters and issues. In brief our mandate is to empower marginalized individuals and under-serviced communities to have a voice and tell their own stories.

 

Ontario
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Regent Park (TO)

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