Archive for 2013

CFP: The Adventures of Tintin symposium, London, 10 January 2014

August 12, 2013

CFP: The Adventures of Tintin (symposium)

Abstracts are now being accepted for a symposium on “The Adventures of Tintin” at University College London on 10 January 2014 in celebration of Tintin’s 85th birthday. Proposed essay topics should creatively engage with the critical, philosophical, cultural, or social issues explored in the Tintin universe. All presentations will be considered for publication in a book of proceedings.

Possible topics include, but are not limited to:

  • Tintin and Hergé
  • Tintin and comic book history
  • Tintin and detective fiction
  • Tintin and the adventure story
  • Tintin in translation
  • Censorship of Tintin
  • Tintin’s spinoffs
  • Tintin in adaptations
  • Tintin in films
  • Tintin fan culture
  • Tintin and geography
  • Tintin and travel
  • Tintin as cultural phenomenon
  • Travel and colonialism
  • Treatment of race in Tintin
  • Snowy as sidekick
  • Animal welfare
  • EcoTintin
  • Tintin and gender
  • Tintin and masculinity; homosocial relations
  • Tintin in criticism

Submission Guidelines:

  1. Submission deadline for abstracts (400 words) and a short biography (150 words) for your 20-minute presentation: 31 October 2013.
  2. Please do not send documents as attachments.

Kindly submit abstracts to the organizers at tintinat85@outlook.com

CFP: K-Pop and K-Drama Fandoms, Journal of Fandom Studies special issue

August 9, 2013

CFP: K-POP AND K-DRAMA FANDOMS

Special issue of Journal of Fandom Studies 
Guest Editors: Crystal S. Anderson and Doobo Shim

This special issue responds to the well-established and global subculture of fans of Korean popular music (K-pop) and Korean television drama (K-drama). K-pop and K-drama are the products of Hallyu, a cultural movement from Korea directed towards the global stage that originated in the late 1990s.  Recent global successes of Korean artists such as Psy, Girls Generation, 2NE1 and BigBang as well as K-drama actors such as Lee Min Ho and Jang Geun Suk represent only a portion of the vibrant and diverse fandom.  This special issue seeks to examine the uniqueness of K-pop and K-drama fandoms and their contribution to global fandom scholarship. 
K-pop and K-drama represent hybridized modes of cultural production aimed at global audiences that emerged from Korea in the 1990s. Initially, K-pop fandoms were centered in Korea and locales in East Asia.  As a result of technological advances in digital music and social media such as Twitter and YouTube, the fandom has grown to more international locations. Similarly, K-drama saw popularity in Korea and East Asia, and increased international access through online streaming sites and satellite options contributed to the rise of more global K-drama fandoms, with some variants.  Unlike the U.S. television drama production, K-drama fans participate in the creation of the show through feedback to the drama series up to the point that the writers have to change their story lines.  This is a very unique “strength” of K-drama in that this practice allows continuous communication between producers and audiences. Overwhelmingly female, the fandoms for both K-drama and K-pop are poised to provide gendered renditions of cultural production and consumption. The possible polysemy embedded in Hallyu cultural products may produce a dynamically interesting consumption according to a different specificity and locality. 
The spread of K-pop and K-drama fandoms has spurred scholarship on the subject.  While K-pop and its fandom represent one of the most visible aspects of Hallyu, they receive the least critical attention from academia. Two groundbreaking collections, East Asian Popular Culture: Analyzing the Korean Wave (2008), and Hallyu: Influence of Korean Popular Culture in Asia and Beyond (2011) do not feature any submissions on K-pop.  Studies of K-drama fandom are more plentiful, but tend to focus on the attitudes of fans in East Asia.  Moreover, the theoretical approaches to the fandoms tend to revolve around notions of hybridity and globalization that de-emphasize the multiple cultures in play.  For example, the coverage of fans in Korean Masculinities and Transcultural Consumption: Yonsama, Rain, Oldboy, K-Pop Idols (2010) is largely limited to the cases in Southeast Asia.

 
In response to this void, this special issue solicits innovative examinations of all aspects of K-pop and K-drama fandoms. Papers on the topic could relate to specific ideas given below but are not restricted to:
– New critical and theoretical approaches to the study of K-pop and K-drama fandoms or reimagined critical interventions associated with theories of hybridity, cultural proximity and globalization·    
-Comparative approaches to the global spread of K-pop and K-drama fandoms, especially comparisons between fandoms based in East Asia and other parts of the world, such as the Middle East, Europe, Latin America and the United States·    
-Interplay between fans and artists/actors·    
-Fan activities and cultural production, including fan art, blogs, mashup videos, cover dance groups·    
-Fan discourse and commentary, such as comments on social media and forums·    
-Economic impact of fan activity, including impact on sales of music and merchandise as well as advertising revenue·    
-Fan philanthropy·    
-Fan backlash, including the formation of anti-fan clubs, anti-fan movements, negative/erroneous portrayal of fans·    
-Analysis of the demographic of K-pop and K-drama fandom, particularly with attention to age, nationality and race/ethnicity·    
-In-depth examination of specific fandoms as well as fandoms in specific countries

Details of the publication are on the Intellect website: http://www.intellectbooks.co.uk/journals/view-Journal,id=213/view,page=0/
Deadline for submission of Abstracts: 31 October 2013.

Please submit an Abstract (200 words) and keywords (five) and profile of author/s (50 words)

Deadline for submission of Full Papers: 15 January 2014.Please submit a full paper (6,000-9,000 words, including references and tables).
Please send Abstracts and Full Papers to: Dr. Crystal S. Anderson (canderson14@elon.edu).
For any further queries, please write to: Dr. Crystal S. Anderson (canderson14@elon.edu), Associate Professor, Dept of English, Elon University
OR
Dr. Doobo Shim (mediapoet@gmail.com), Professor, Dept of Media & Communication, Sungshin Women’s University

CFP: Doctor Who/Torchwood, SW Popular Culture and American Culture Association conference, New Mexico, 19-22 February 2014

August 8, 2013

The Science Fiction & Fantasy Area of the Southwest Popular/American Culture Association invites paper or panel proposals on

 

CFP: Doctor Who and/or Torchwood

 

at the 35th annual meeting of the Southwest Popular/American Culture Association in Albuquerque, New Mexico.

 

February 19-22, 2014 

Any and all topics will be considered, although we especially encourage proposals on:

  • genre (comedy, horror, mystery, science fiction, fantasy, etc.)
  • reception/transmission of either series internationally (past or present)
  • Doctor Who as brand
  • regeneration(s) of the series
  • gender
  • Use/misuse of technology
  • Perspectives on the 50th anniversary of Doctor Who
  • Queer readings and/or presentations of LGBQT characters
  • auteur-ship
  • fandom and fanwork
  • Intersections of Doctor Who and/or Torchwood with this year’s theme “Yesterday, Today, and Tomorrow”

 

                                      Proposals Due: November 1, 2013 

Submit 250-word paper or full panel (title & 250-wd abstract for each panelist) proposals at: http://conference2014.southwestpca.org

Database opens July 1

 Submit in category Science Fiction & Fantasy—Doctor Who

 Questions: Erin Giannini (egiannini37@gmail.com) 

For more details on the conference, please visit the Southwest Popular/American Culture Association: http://southwestpca.org or follow us on Facebook & Twitter at www.facebook.com/facebook.com/southwestsff  or @southwestsff

More about the SF&F Area:

With an average of 70+ presenters annually, The Science Fiction and Fantasy Area of the Southwest and Texas Popular Culture and American Culture Association is one of the most dynamic and well attended areas at the conference. Numerous book and article publications have originated from our panels.

 The Area was founded in 1995 by Prof. Richard Tuerk of the Texas A&M University-Commerce (formerly East Texas State University) and author of Oz in Perspective (McFarland, 2007). The Area is currently chaired by Ximena Gallardo C. of the City University of New York-LaGuardia and co-author of Alien Woman: The Making of Lt. Ellen Ripley (Continuum: 2004); Rikk Mulligan of Longwood University, author of “Zombie Apocalypse: Plague and the End of the World in Popular Culture” (End of Days, McFarland 2009); Tamy Burnett of the University of Nebraska-Lincoln, co-editor of The Literary Angel (McFarland, 2010); Brian Cowlishaw of Northeastern State University, author of “No Future Shock Here: The Jetsons, Happy Tech, and the Patriarchy” (The Galaxy is Rated G, McFarland: 2011); Erin Giannini, independent scholar, who has presented and published work on series such as Dollhouse, Supernatural, and Mystery Science Theater 3000; and Susan Fanetti, Associate Professor at California State University Sacramento.

 

Call for Papers – Participations: International Journal of Audience Research: “Masters of the Universe: World-Building and World-Exploring”

August 7, 2013

Call for Papers – Participations: International Journal of Audience Research:  “Masters of the Universe: World-Building and World-Exploring”

 Editors: William Proctor (Centre for Research in Media & Cultural Studies, University of Sunderland, UK) & Dan-Hassler Forest (Amsterdam School of Cultural Analysis, University of Amsterdam).

The publication of Mark J.P Wolf’s Building Imaginary Worlds: The History and Theory of Subcreation (2012) is a landmark event in academia. ‘Imaginary worlds,’ writes Wolf, ‘rank among the most elaborate mediated entities [and] have been largely overlooked in Media Studies despite a history spanning three millennia’ (ibid:2). Indeed, the study of world-building is an important field of enquiry given the wealth of people who explore these ‘geographies of the imagination’ as a fundamental feature of their daily lives (Saler, 2012:4). As New York Times film critic, A.O Scott observes, ‘today there are hundreds of thousands of people, perhaps millions of people whose grasp of the history, politics and mythological traditions of entirely imaginative places could surely qualify them for an advanced degree’ (2002). It is important therefore to recognize that popular entertainment ‘is moving more and more in the direction of subcreational world-building’ and thus warrants close scrutiny and scholarly examination (Wolf, 2012: 13).

In literary studies, Michael Saler’s As If: Modern Enchantment and the Literary Prehistory of Virtual Reality (Oxford, 2012) explores the world-building adventures of J.R.R Tolkien, Arthur Conan-Doyle and H.P Lovecraft. Taken alongside Wolf’s work, the two studies complement one another and open up a wider debate about world-building and narrative transmedia in important directions.

While Wolf and Sader raise many important issues and analyses, this call for papers seeks to bring the audience into the conversation to explore world-building from theirperspective: what is important to the reader? Is it true, as Wolf and Sader both argue, that the story-world must make sense? How do audiences traverse the fictional realm of imaginary worlds in practice? Does world-consistency matter, and if so, for what reasons? Is a sense of saturation ‘the goal,’ as Wolf puts it, and to what extent is this even possible? Do audiences ‘rummage for micro-data,’ as David Bordwell argues, and if so, what do they search for? What is the main rationale for their engagement and in what ways do they engage? How do audiences negotiate ‘counter-factual’ texts that can destabilize the ontology of a story-system?

In short, this special section will focus above all on questions that are crucially important for the world-explorers themselves?

This special section of ‘Participations: Journal of International Audience Research’ invites scholars to contribute to the burgeoning field of world-building. Firstly, the work must engage with audiences as opposed to textual analyses while, secondly, providing an original contribution to the field. Speculative accounts about audience engagement are not the aim here – what we are interested in here is a mapping of specific communities and their rich relationships with world-building. How this may be measured is of interest here, too, but the speculation is to be avoided. Materials in circulation, as in web forums and the like, can be utilized, as can audience research conducted by the researcher. If building an argument about how audiences might respond, researchers should consider how to test and verify their claims.

Subjects may vary considerably – this list is not exhaustive and the editors welcome proposals that fit within the widest possible purview of this project. Similarly, this should not indicate any single medium but any medium (or combination thereof) that engages with story-worlds and world-building: examples include prose fiction, comic books, TV, film, theme parks, and any other that meets the requirements of this special section.

 

Audiences and Imaginary Worlds.

Saturation, Immersion and Absorption.

World-Building and World-Dwelling.

Consistency, Cohesion and Causality.

Seriality.

Narrative Braiding

Proposals will be considered depending upon their validity for audience studies. There are many imaginary world systems that exist in a wider range of media windows including (but not limited to):

The World of Prometheus and Alien

Game of ThronesA Song of Ice and Fire

Stephen King’s The Dark Tower

The Novels of Michael Moorcock

Dr. Who

Blade Runner

The Whedon-Verse

Pacific Rim

Star Trek

Star Wars

Twilight

Frank L. Baum and Oz

True Blood

Buffy the Vampire Slayer

Comic Book Universes (DC/ Marvel/ Image/ IDW)

The Marvel Cinematic Universe

Harry Potter

China Miéville’s Bas-Lag

While Wolf and Sader (2012), among others, do not count soap operas within the imaginary world schemata due to its similarity with the Primary World (that is, the ‘real world’), we believe that this does not take into account the audience members who visit ‘hyperreal’ settings such as The Rovers Return pub that is an iconic feature of Coronation Street. In 1981, Christine Geraghty claimed that viewers of Coronation Street demand consistency from the text even going so far to employ a programme historian to ensure facts are adhered to. This practice mirrors the so-called ‘series bibles’ of imaginary worlds from Star Trek to Star Wars which have served as templates for many other organized world-building exercises. Thus, all fictional worlds are imaginary worlds. This will hopefully attract a larger range of projects than is commonly the case. The following may be considered although these lists are not exhaustive but offer an example of the range of story-systems available for study:

Coronation Street

Eastenders

The Killing

The Sopranos

The Wire

Sex and the City

Dexter

Breaking Bad

Charles Dickens

William Shakespeare

All proposals will be considered provided they meet the purview of this special issue.

As an online journal Participations does not work with strict word-limits, but instead encourages authors to show their materials, methods of investigation and analysis and theoretical frames explicitly, for the readers’ benefit, without being unnecessarily prolix.  The Journal also does not insist on one style of formatting for references and bibliography, but asks authors to ensure that they are internally clear, consistent and complete.

Abstracts of 350 words are to be forwarded to both William Proctor (billyproctor@hotmail.co.uk) and Dan Hassler-Forest (D.A.Hassler-forest@uva.nl) by October 31st, 2013. For any queries or suggestions, please contact both parties also. Successful scholars will be expected to submit first drafts by February 1st 2014. The special section is planned for publication in November 2014.

CFP: Stardom and Fandom, SW Popular Culture and American Culture Association conference, New Mexico, 19-22 February 2014

August 6, 2013

CFP: Stardom and Fandom, SW PACA (11/1/13; 2/19-22/14)

The Southwest Popular Culture and American Culture Association (http://southwestpca.org) invites paper or panel proposals on any aspect of stardom or fandom for their annual Conference, February 19 – 22, 2014 at the Hyatt Regency in beautiful Albuquerque, New Mexico. This is a great conference for fan studies scholars, grad students, and researchers from other disciplines doing related research to share their thoughts and inspire each other. All topics will be considered, although we especially encourage proposals on:

The reciprocal relationship between stars and fans

Impact of celebrity and fame on identity construction, reconstruction and sense of self

The impact of social media on celebrity/fan interaction

Children and stardom (Little Rascals to Toddlers and Tiaras)

Celebrity/fame addiction as cultural change

The intersection of stardom and fandom in virtual and physical spaces

Celebrity and the construction of persona

Pedagogical approaches to teaching stardom and fandom

Straddling the stardom/fandom line: big name fans, bloggers and aca-fans

Anti-fans and ‘haters’

Fan shame

Gendered constructions of stars and fans

Studies of individual celebrities and their fans

Studies focused on specific fandoms

Historical studies of fandom and fan/celebrity interaction

 

If you have an idea that is not listed, please suggest the new topic. We encourage submissions from multiple perspectives and disciplines. Come join us – we always have a blast!

 

Submit 250 word paper proposals – or proposals for full panels – to: http://conference2014.southwestpca.org/ . Choose the area “Special Topics – Stardom and Fandom.”
Proposal submission deadline: November 1, 2013.

 

Questions? Contact Lynn Zubernis, lzubernis@wcupa.edu

 

CFP: Cult Cinema and Technological Change Conference, Aberystwyth, UK, 15-16 April 2014

July 24, 2013

CONFERENCE: CULT CINEMA AND TECHNOLOGICAL CHANGE

An AHRC Global Cult Cinema in the Age of Convergence Network Conference Aberystwyth University, UK, Tuesday 15th – Wednesday 16th April 2014

 

Keynote speaker: Professor Barbara Klinger, Indiana University, USA

 

While academic study of cult cinema can be traced back to the 1980s, there has recently been a surge of scholarly interest in – alongside an increasing popular awareness of – the field. In particular, the advent and development of digital networks has led to an increasing awareness of a variety of cult followings and access to unprecedented cult films from around the world. Research addressing the changes wrought by increased digitization and global connectivity has, however, been relatively scant, as have sustained attempts to discuss and debate these issues. The aim of this conference (organised in association with the AHRC Global Cult Cinema in the Age of Convergence Network) is to bring together scholars to engage in a sustained dialogue addressing the role of technologies in different areas of cult film culture. Whilst technological change is the main theme of the conference, we welcome submissions that place such change within broader socio-historical contexts, and which reflect on the changing nature of cult cinema in relation to a range of technological developments, and the extent to which digital connectivity impacts upon understandings of cult film.

 

Possible topics could include:

 

  • Exhibiting cult: How changing technologies have impacted upon the ways in which films are screened/viewed and how this has led to new cultist patterns.
  • Promoting cult: New modes of marketing and promotion and how these can facilitate cult reputations.
  • Transmedia cult: How altered boundaries between distinct media have led to increasing cross-media content and the extent to which these feed into cult promotion, exhibition and reception.
  • Funding: How the web has enabled new forms of funding films, such as Kickstarter, and the implications for this on cultism.
  • Informal and formal distribution cultures: New modes of distributing films (such as streaming services), incorporating ‘informal’ networks of file traders and bootleggers, etc.
  • Digital Aesthetics: Have cult films made with digital technologies instituted new aesthetic avenues?
  • Cult Criticism: The importance of ezines, blogs and similar platforms for cult criticism.
  • Fandom: Changing patterns of cult fandom in relation to emerging technologies and platforms.
  • Social Media and Cult: The importance of social media to cult film research.
  • Public and Private spaces: how have technological developments contributed to the spaces in which cult films are consumed, and how have relations between private/public been reconfigured?
  • Techno-cults: Analyses of representations of technology within particular cult films.
  • Residual cultism: The role of residual media, or ‘old technologies’ in cultism: for example, fans dedicated to collecting video tapes.
  • Historical case studies: Cult films/figures and historical uses of technologies (e.g. William Castle and Percepto and Emergo; 3D and cult, etc.)

 

Proposals for individual papers or pre-constituted panels should be sent to jamie.sexton@northumbria.ac.ukkte@aber.ac.uk andmjh35@aber.ac.uk by 12th December 2013.  Proposals should be sent in a word document email attachment, and include the paper title, abstract (350 words), along with the name of the presenter and their institutional affiliation. Panel organizers are asked to submit panel proposals including a panel title, a short description of the panel (150 words) and information on each paper following the guidelines listed above. Panels should consist of three speakers with a maximum of 20 minutes speaking time each.

With best wishes,

Jamie Sexton, Matt Hills and Kate Egan

 

CFP: Fan Studies Network 2013 Symposium, 30 November, University of East Anglia, Norwich, UK

July 15, 2013

We are delighted to announce the very first Fan Studies Network symposium.

It will take place on Saturday 30th November 2013 at the School of Political, Social and International Studies, University of East Anglia, Norwich, UK.

The keynote speaker will be Professor Matt Hills.

Please see the event page for full details:

http://www.uea.ac.uk/politics-international-media/events/fan-studies-network-symposium

CFP: One-Day Symposium on Arthur Conan Doyle’s Professor Challenger Narratives, London, December 2013

July 9, 2013
CFP: One-Day Symposium on Arthur Conan Doyle’s Professor Challenger Narratives
Challenger Unbound
Department of English, UCL
9 December 2013
A century has passed since the publication of Arthur Conan Doyle’s The Lost World. This one-day symposium offers an ideal opportunity to take stock of the Professor Challenger narratives and to reassess what these three novels and two short stories can offer to new generations of scholars, students, and enthusiasts.
 
Introduction:
 
Professor John Sutherland
Lord Northcliffe Professor Emeritus of Modern English Literature
Department of English Language and Literature
UCL
 
Keynote Speakers:
 
Professor Ian Duncan
Professor and Florence Green Bixby Chair in English
Department of English
University of California, Berkeley
 
Professor Michael Saler
Professor of History
Department of History
University of California, Davis
 
Professor Jeremy Tambling
Professor of Literature
School of Arts, Languages and Cultures
University of Manchester
 
The organizer is soliciting abstracts of 200-300 words or completed articles of 6,000-8,000 words. Potential topics might include:
·      The Twentieth-Century Quest Romance.
·      Arthur Conan Doyle: Low Modernist.
·      Arthur Conan Doyle’s Contribution to Science-Fiction and/or Speculative Fiction
·      Modernity and the State in Early Twentieth-Century Popular Fiction.
·      Science and the Popular Press, 1912-1930.
·      Science as a Public Discourse, 1912-1930.
·      Science as State-Craft, 1912-1930.
·      Spiritual vs. Material Science.
·      Grief, Trauma, Mourning and Science during and after the Great War.
·      Twentieth-Century Medievalism/Primitivism.
·      Spiritualism, Science and the Great War.
·      The Strand Magazine in the Twentieth-Century.
·      The Twentieth-Century Afterlife of “Victorian” Ideology/Thought/Literary Forms.
·      Weapons of Mass Destruction, 1912-1930.
·      Heroism, Chivalry and Masculinity after the Great War.
·      Science, Technology and European Competition, 1912-1930.
·      The Twentieth-Century Legacy of Arthur Conan Doyle in Europe.
·      Machines, Weapons, Products, Commodities.
·      Conan Doyle’s Non-Fiction, 1912-1930.
·      The Endurance of Professor Challenger in Critical Theory (Deleuze & Guattari, Jon McKenzie etc…).
·      Early Treatments of Capitalist/Communist Confrontations in Popular Fiction.
 
 
Any inquiries should be directed to Tom Ue (ue_tom@hotmail.com).
Abstracts should be submitted by 14 October 2013

CFP: Cold War and Entertainment Television, Paris, June 2014

July 3, 2013

We are inviting abstracts for papers to be presented at a conference on the Cold War and Entertainment Television, to be held at the University of Paris 8, on June 5-7, 2014.

An essential dimension of the Cold War took place in the realm of ideas and culture. A great deal of work, for example, has been done on cinema, especially with regard to the United States although other nations, both East and West, have received increasing attention.  But with certain noteworthy exceptions (primarily in the areas of science fiction and espionage series) relatively little has been done on this subject in relation to television. Yet, television was a technology and popular cultural form that emerged during the Cold War.

This project hopes to rectify that absence by providing a forum for examining the impact of the Cold War on entertainment television. We intend to underline the comparative aspect by studying programs from both blocs – without forgetting, of course, the outsize impact of American television
We would welcome submissions that treat a variety of regions and genres, including (but not limited to) the following topics:

·         Analyses of the reflection of the Cold War in particular genres

·         A close reading of particular episodes or series

·         The presentation of the “other side,” both its elites and the lives of ordinary citizens

·         Depictions of social class and ideologies in Cold War entertainment television

·         The uses of race and gender in depictions of the “other side” or in celebrations of one’s own side

·         Exporting television series to other cultures

·         How audiences received and used a variety of Cold War television series

·         The space race, the military industrial complex, the national security state, and nuclear weapons in Cold War television

·         Cold War discourses in children’s television

·         The impact of censorship, whether official or self-imposed

·         Commercials, public service announcements, documentaries, and Cold War subtexts

·         Changes in Cold War discourses in entertainment television through 1991

The languages of the conference will be English and French, and we anticipate that the conference proceedings will be published in English.

Please email a 250-word proposal, a one-page c.v., and contact information to Prof. Lori Maguire at coldwartv@gmail.com by Sept. 15, 2013.

Notification of accepted proposals will be made by Oct. 15, 2013.

Email inquiries are preferred, especially over the summer, to coldwartv@gmail.com

Organizing committee: Prof. Lori MAGUIRE (Département d’Etudes des Pays Anglophones, Université de Paris 8, St. Denis, France); Dr. Janice LIEDL (Dept. of History, Laurentian University, Canada); Dr. Joseph DAROWSKI (Dept. of English, Brigham Young University Idaho); Dr. Nancy REAGIN (Dept. of Women’s and Gender Studies, Pace University, New York); Dr; André FILLER (Département d’Etudes Slaves, Université de Paris 8, St Denis, France) ; Prof. Cécile VAISSIÉ (Département de Russe, Université de Rennes II, France)

The CFP and other details can also be found in English and French here:

 

http://www.ea-anglais.univ-paris8.fr/spip.php?article1231

CFP: Transitions Comics Symposium 2013 at Birkbeck, London

July 1, 2013

Transitions is a one-day symposium promoting new research and multi-disciplinary academic study of comics/ comix/ manga/ bande dessinée and other forms of sequential art, now in its fourth year.

Saturday the 26th of October 2013

School of Arts, Birkbeck, University of London, London WC1E 7HX

Keynote: Dr. Ann Miller (University of Leicester, joint editor of European Comic Art)

Respondent: Dr. Roger Sabin (Central St. Martins, University of the Arts London)

Transitions is currently the only regular academic comics event based in London, and is part of Comica – The London International Comics Festival.  The symposium offers a platform where different perspectives and methodologies can be brought together and shared.  As an event devoted to promoting new research into comics in all their forms the symposium provides a forum for research from postgraduate students and early career lecturers.

Comics studies occupy a unique multi-disciplinary middle-space, one that encourages cross-disciplinary pollination and a convergence of distinct knowledges: literary and cultural studies, visual arts and media, modern languages, sociology, geography and more. By thinking about comics across different disciplines, we hope to stimulate and provoke debate and to address a wide spectrum of questions, to map new trends and provide a space for dialogue and further collaboration to emerge.

 

We welcome abstracts for twenty minute papers of 250 – 300 words.

Possible topics include, but are not limited to:

 International iterations: manga, bande dessinée , fumetti etc. – children’s comics – superheroes – non-fiction comics – the (im)materiality of comics – formalist approaches – cultural histories –adaptation/ remediation – autographics – early comics – comic strips – small press –alternative comics/ underground commix – comics narratologies – political comics – comics and cultural theory – contexts of production and circulation – audiences – comics and the archive – subjectivity in comics – graphic medicine – fan subcultures – comics as historiography – key creators…

 

Proposals for papers should be sent as Word documents, with a short biography appended. Abstracts should be submitted by the 30th of July 2013 to Hallvard, Tony and Nina at transitions.symposium@gmail.com.

 


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