Similarities and differences of Doodle Fiction, Manga, and Graphic Novel

     There are many Modern Literary Genres that presently used by 21st Century writers. Including Illustrated Novel, Digi-Fiction, Graphic Novel, Manga, Doodle Fiction, Text-Talk Novels, Chick Lit (Chick Literature), Flash Fiction, Six-Word Flash Fiction, Creative Non-Fiction, Science Fiction, Blog and Hyper Poetry.

     These 13 mentioned genres has a differences and similarities in structure and elements. But I listed three common Modern Literary Genres. Doodle Fiction, Manga and Graphic Novel.



Differences in Terms of Structure


     Doodle Fiction. Literary presentation where the author incorporates doodle writing, drawings and handwritten graphics in place of the traditional font.


     Manga. It is used in the English–speaking word as a generic term for all comic books and graphic novels originally published in Japan.


     Graphic Novel. Narrative work in which the story is conveyed to the reader using a comic form.



Differences in Terms of Elements


     Doodle Fiction. Drawing enhances the story, often adding humorous elements. Example include "The Diary of a Wimpy Kid" by Jeff Kinney and "Timmy Failure" by Stephan Pastis.


     Manga. Considered as an artistic and storytelling style. Ameri-manga sometimes used to refer to comics created by American artists in manga style. Shonen- Boys Manga (Naruto, Bleach, One Piece). Shojo- Girl's Manga (Sailormoon). Seinen- Men's Manga (Akira). Josei- Women's Manga (Loveless, Paradise Kiss). Kodomo- Children's Manga (Doraemon, Hello Kitty).


     Graphic Novel. The term is employed in broadly manner, encompassing non-fiction works and thematically linked short stories as well as fictional stories across a number of genres. "Archie Comics" by John Goldwater and illustrator, Bob Montana, is a good example.


Similarities


    Same thing, Doodle Fiction, Manga, and Graphic Novel has a storytelling style, and uses English style. Picture book.

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