Archive for February, 2013

Smart is a Super Power: My So Called Secret Identity Web Comic Launches Today

February 18, 2013

mscsi facebook2

Will Brooker, who has written extensively about  modern pop culture and fandom, launches a new web comic at midnight on 17th February, featuring a female superhero, Catherine Abigail Daniels, who is very different to female depictions and stereotypes we have seen before in comics. Not only is she a PhD student, but intelligence is her super power. Will Brooker has written the series, and designed and produced it with an almost entirely female creative team. We really recommend you go and take a look at this vibrant and exciting first issue!

Their website, where you can read the comic and see behind the scenes sketches is:
http://www.mysocalledsecretidentity.com/

They also have a Facebook page
(https://www.facebook.com/MySoCalledSecretIdentity)
and Twitter account (@cat_abi_daniels).

Issue 1 will be online permanently for free, in full colour, on its dedicated website, including sketches, designs and behind-the-scenes notes. Subsequent issues will be funded by donations through the site (suggested $5 minimum, with original art and other rewards for larger gifts). The money pays for the artists’ fees and a proportion is then donated to a women’s charity — for issue 2, they are funding
http://www.awayout.co.uk‘.

 

Fan Pilgrimages and Media Tourism Summer Course in London, Summer 2013

February 14, 2013

George Washington University have just announced this new course:

Fan Pilgrimages & Media Tourism (UW2020W)

What?
Tourists have a bad reputation. We are encouraged to look at their experience as necessarily inauthentic, doomed to superficiality at best, and at worst as an ongoing opportunity to insult other cultures. Fans of popular culture also have a bad reputation. Even though the media assures us that we are in the middle of a “Geek Revolution,” that same media is also quick to characterize fans as over invested, sometimes creepy, but more often just sad people who still need to “get a life”.

What then do we make of tourist/fans?
In this course we will examine the growing phenomenon of fan pilgrimage (growing in the sense that the tourism industry is now catering specifically to this market). We will consider fan pilgrims themselves – why do they go and what do they gain from the experience? Does fan pilgrimage, with its religious connotations, accurately capture that experience? How does fan pilgrimage differ from media tourism? We will also consider how key sites are presented to the public. How are they curated? What sorts of narratives are constructed? What constitutes an “authentic” experience for the fan tourist?

Our presence on-site will raise some fundamental questions about the research process and how we construct meaning around these sites. A research librarian will accompany us for a portion of the course, allowing for expanded discussion of on-site research methods.

Although based in London, the course will include group trips to Cardiff (Doctor Who) and Liverpool (The Beatles), with optional days out (sites to be determined). In London will we go on the Warner Brothers Studio tour of the Harry Potter sets as well as a tour of sites of filming in London. We will also go on a Sherlock Holmes walking tour of sites significant in both the short stories and recent films/television productions.

Students will have weekends free to visit other sites of their choosing in London and throughout the UK. These sites can range from the homes of literary figures to rock stars, libraries to cemeteries to football stadiums, theatres to churches to concert venues – in short any places that hold significance to the student based on their own fannish interests. This research will form the basis of students’ final papers.

Who?
This course is open to both undergraduates and graduate students. No previous knowledge of fan studies is needed for undergraduates.

Application Deadline: March 1, 2013
On-Line Dates: June 3-6, 2013
Overseas Dates: June 9-July 5, 2013

For more information on this course please go to the George Washington University Study Abroad Office

Or contact Katherine Larsen
klarsen@gwu.edu

Doctor Who 50th Anniversary Colloquium – DePaul University, USA, 4th May 2013

February 10, 2013

The Media and Cinema Studies program and the Cinema and Interactive Media school at DePaul University are hosting a one-day celebratory colloquium for the 50th Anniversary of Doctor Who on Saturday, May 04, from 9-6. This event will feature roundtable discussions of scholars and fans to speak about the impact of the show in various arenas as well as screenings that span the half-century history of Doctor Who. The emphasis of the colloquium will be the cultural importance of Doctor Who.

The audience for this event is both graduate and undergraduate students, both fans and scholars, and the focus should be on informed and enlightening discussion rather than formal academic papers. “The Celebration of Doctor Who” will take place on DePaul’s Loop campus.

If you’re interested in speaking on a round table, please send a 250 word abstract of your topic and a CV or resume to Paul Booth (pbooth@depaul.edu) by Mar 15. Also please email Dr. Booth with any questions. We hope that you will be able to join in the discussion and celebration!

For more information, please contact Paul Booth at pbooth@depaul.edu