Tap cover to enlarge

The Color of Paper: Representing Race in the Comics Medium

Published
Feb 2026
Main Genre
Graphic Novel Graphic Novel
Pages
296

About This Book

How does a comics reader understand that a certain race is assigned to a character? In The Color of Paper, Chris Gavaler establishes a formal approach for analyzing racial representations in comics, demonstrating that the ink-on-paper materiality of comics reveals the illogic of metaphorical colors as racial categorizations. Analyzing images by a wide range of comics artists and colorists, including Emilee Denich, Jaime Hernandez, George Herriman, Jack Kirby, and Ben Passmore, Gavaler goes beyond pigment and gradient to explore the formal and material elements of page backgrounds and the negative space of gutters that literally frame race in comics. He surveys major and independent publishers to assess how industry trends and evolving coloring techniques affect racial representation. And, breaking from subjective and overgeneralized analytical norms, Gavaler grounds his analysis in quantitative research on viewers’ responses. The centuries-old relationships between drawn racial markers and assumptions about their meanings continue in a white-dominated culture that benefits from and therefore preserves illusions of their natural accuracy. Denaturalizing racial depictions through formal visual analysis potentially alters racial thinking in ways that extend beyond works on paper and into daily lives.

Genres & Themes

Buy This Book

Formats & Editions

Browse the different covers, formats, and publication history for this title.

Paperback

Paperback edition cover
Trade Paperback
First Edition Feb 2026 Ohio State University Press ISBN 0814259707
Buy

Hardcover

Hardcover edition cover
Hardcover
Feb 2026 Ohio State University Press ISBN 0814216048
Buy

eBook

eBook edition cover
eBook
Feb 2026 -- Not Selected ISBN B0G9MR3BFY
Buy