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Showing posts with label Journal of Graphic Novels and Comics. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Journal of Graphic Novels and Comics. Show all posts

Friday, 9 December 2011

British Comics Rock! Conference announced for June 2012

After a successful two years at Manchester Metropolitan University, the next International Comics Conference is heading to the seaside next year and the call for papers has just been announced

The Third International Comics Conference: 'Comics Rock!' will take place at Bournemouth University on 28-29th June 2012. Organised by Studies in Comics and the Journal of Graphic Novels and Comics, the team are now inviting proposals for papers, posters and workshops on:

• Comics and Education (Thursday 28th June 2012) 
Including the first UK screening of Todd Kent's film Comic Book Literacy (which was Best Documentary Winner at Phoenix Comicon 2010) and additional speakers tbc.

There is an increased interest in using and teaching the comics medium in schools, colleges and universities.  There is also an increasing use of comics in support of other areas of the school curriculum.  However, there are also many challenges for teachers regarding how to use and teach comics in the context of schools and they often have to contend with continuing perceptions of the medium as problematic.  Reading for pleasure is a key aspect of the increased use of the medium in school settings and libraries are often instrumental in initiating reading groups.

Papers are invited that discuss any aspect of comics in education, including but not limited to the following:
  • teaching comics at various levels and within different disciplines, e.g. issues, theories, effects, current debates
  • using comics to support specific elements of the curriculum (e.g. Raymond Briggs' Ethel and Ernest in relation to English history)
  • comics, graphic novels and manga used laterally e.g. manga as a way of learning about elements of Japanese culture, or superheroes in PSHE; or using titles in a range of languages to encourage reading for pleasure; or Bryan Talbot's Alice in Sunderland as local history
  •  using comics to support literacy development (history, practice and controversies)
  • comics in school libraries and classroom collections e.g. wider reading, reading for pleasure
  • school and library manga and graphic novel reading groups
  • children and young peoples' awards for graphic novels and manga run through schools and libraries e.g. the Stan Lee Excelsior award
  • creating comics, e.g. as assessment (formative or summative), or elsewhere in the curriculum (from short strips to publications like Fool's Gold, a school project from Dearne High Specialist Humanities College in Rotherham that produced a book available for purchase - see review here)
  • the use of comics-related software in the classroom e.g. Comic Life
  • Studying comics as comics, e.g. approaches to graphic novels and manga, illustration, writing, the practice/theory crossover, history, notions of canon and so forth
  • educational and online resources, e.g. availability, usefulness, other associated issues (The Maryland Comic Book Initiative, S.A.N.E., Comics in the Classroom)
  • associations and forums, e.g. their structure, purpose, strategies (America's National Association of Comic Art Educators, The Comix Scholars List, The UK Comics Scholars List)

Comics and Multi-Modal Adaptation (Friday 29th June 2012) 
Keynote industry speakers tbc.

Adaptations seem to saturate the mass media and this conference will examine recent debates focusing on comics.  The most prevalent comics adaptations are those of the superhero; whose emphasis on spectacle and special effects seem especially attractive to film and television companies.
However, in her Theory of Adaptation, Linda Hutcheon proposes we think beyond the originality of an adaptation and instead regard adaptation as a central issue within storytelling.  The adaptation can then be located within the contexts of its production, reception, and the constraints and possibilities of media forms.
This conference aims to take the debate beyond superhero movies by focusing on other genres and media and examining some of the more unusual aspects of adaptation.

Suggested topics include:
  • comics and film, e.g. autobiography (American Splendor, Persepolis), drama (A History of Violence), history, documentary, biography
  • adaptations of comics from and to other media, e.g. comic to video game
  • historic adaptations, e.g. the output of Gold Key and Dell
  • fairytale adaptations, e.g. Fables, The Unwritten
  • new ways of promoting or pitching a story, e.g. the use of comics as a way into film and television (30 Days of Night)
  • audience experiences of the adapted text, e.g. the effects of primacy and familiarity, experiencing the adaptation before or after the source text
  • adaptation as a creative act
  • responses to an adaptation, e.g. fans, creators (Alan Moore and Neil Gaiman's criticisms of Hollywood adaptations), writers, artists
  • tropes and devices incorporated into comics, e.g. Choose your own Adventure, pop-ups
  • use of a comics aesthetic in other media
  •  comparative studies, e.g. in contrasting representations of icons (Walk the Line versus Johnny Cash: I See a Darkness)
Please contact comicsconference@gmail.com with expressions of interest (initial deadline for paper proposals is 31 December 2011). Visit the conference website at www.comics.bujournalism.info for details of deadlines, updates, early bird ticket prices, keynote speakers, journal subscription offers, and much much more...

Monday, 27 September 2010

Journal of Graphic Novels and Comics plans Superhero Issue

Wonder Woman 2010
- designed by Jim Lee
The academic comics publication Journal of Graphic Novels and Comics has issued a call for papers for a special issue of the twice-yearly title that will focus on 'Gender and Superheroes'.

"The superhero genre dominates the comics industry with representations of hypermuscular action men or sexy women wearing costumes that show off their near naked bodies," editors Dave Huxley and Joan Ormrod note in their appeal.

"There are examples of more diverse approaches to both creating and analysing these figures but they remain, as yet, in the minority.

"Much of this work is produced by mainly male creators for similarly constructed audiences. Superheroes pervade all contemporary mass media and there has been a plethora of publication in this genre in recent years.

"We are, therefore, proposing a special issue in which this topic can be examined in a more sustained manner."

Trina Robbins work on women superheroes uncovers a rich history of characters and creators, while Angela Ndalianis’s two edited collections of essays (Super/Heroes and The Contemporary Comic Book Superhero, published by Routledge last year), the latter contains essays by Karen Healey and Clare Pitkethly on female superhero fans ("fangirls") and on Wonder Woman, respectively.

The editors of the magazine feel Lillian Robinson's book Wonder Women: Feminisms and Superheroes is certainly relevant to the continued debate, and Wonder Woman is also the focus of Jennifer K Stuller’s survey of popular cultural representations of strong women, Ink-Stained Amazons and Cinematic Warriors, published by I B Tauris earlier this year as might be Roz Kaveney's Superheroes!: Capes and Crusaders in Comics and Films.

"Clearly, given the continuing fascination with superheroes, there is rich potential in discussing gender and superheroes as evidenced by a significant proportion of papers submitted to the journal in recent months," say the editors.

The Journal of Graphic Novels and Comics is a peer reviewed journal covering all aspects of the graphic novel, comic strip and comic book, with the emphasis on comics in their cultural, institutional and creative contexts. Its scope is international, covering not only English language comics but also worldwide comic culture. The journal reflects interdisciplinary research in comics and aims to establish a dialogue between academics, historians, theoreticians and practitioners of comics. It therefore examines the production and consumption of comics within the contexts of culture: art, cinema, television and new media technologies.

Submissions are invited of papers 5000-7000 words by 15th December 2011 relating but not limited to the following topics:

Wonder Woman revamped - 1968.
The cover of Wonder Woman #178.
Art by Mike Sekowsky (pencils) and
Dick Giordano (inks).
© DC Comics
• Representation

- Representing gender: masculinity, femininity, gay, transvestite superheroes – transgression or queer readings)
- The superhero/ine body (Superheroes in other nations, for example, British, Indian or Latin American superheroes and how they hail transnational and national identities)
- Representing superheroes in comics (for example, Love and Rockets, Kim Dietch’s The Cat)
- Revisioning of the character (for instance, the reworking of Catwoman)

• Theoretical issues

- Feminist theory and gendered identities – Judith Butler
- Gaze and psychoanalytic
- Class and the superhero

• Audiences

- Manga superheroes and their audiences
- Girls reading superheroes
- Fan production – slash fiction, changing gendered identities for instance www.buzzfeed.com/mathieus/if-super-heroes-were-women-8q4

• History and Industry

 
- Online comics – fan production or industrial production
- Tracing specific characters within an industrial context
- Creators representations of gender (for example, Alan Moore's Promethea or Grant Morrison's The Invisibles)

Read the full call for papers for more information or download the PDF using this link

If you are submitting an article please remember to check the Journal's format guidelines and obtain agreement from copyright holders for any images you plan to use. If you have queries about this then contact the Journal of Graphic Novels and Comics website for clarification. The magazine can publish black and white or colour images.

• Any queries about the issue should be sent to either Dave Huxley d.huxleyATmmu.ac.uk or Joan Ormrod j.ormrodATmmu.ac.uk.

Friday, 30 July 2010

Manchester Uni to put bande dessinees under microscope for 2011 event

(updated 1 Augsut 2010): Manchester Metropolitan University will play host to an academic conference on bande dessines next year - and the call is out for papers.

The International Bande Dessinee Society and the peer-reviewed Journal of Graphic Novels and Comics and Intellect's Journal of Comics Studies are hosting a joint conference focusing mainly on two areas of research - Space and Time, and audiences and readership.

The organisers say they also welcome submissions from other areas of research such as manga, African, Latin American, Asian, Eastern European comics; and the connections between comics and other media.

Abstracts of approximately 250 words should be submitted in English (French is acceptable for articles submitted to the International Bande Dessinee Society) and sent to Matthew Screech (m.screechATmmu.ac.uk), a Senior Lecturer in French at the University, David Huxley (d.huxleyATmmu.ac.uk), comics writer and artist, Senior Lecturer in Film and Media Studies and joint editor of Routledge's Journal of Graphic Novels and Comics; and Joan Ormrod (j.ormrodATmmu.ac.uk), also a Senior Lecturer in Film and Media Studies, by 1st December 2010.

Papers will be considered for publication in Journal of Graphic Novels and Comics and Liverpool University Press's European Comic Art.

• The Joint International Conference of Graphic Novels, Bandes Dessinees and Comics will be held at Manchester Metropolitan University, Manchester. Graphic Novels and Comics will take place 5-6th July and the International Sande Dessinee Society event on 7th - 8th July 2011.

You can read the first issue of Journal of Graphic Novels and Comics free online here

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