Panel: Visualizing Diversity in Children's Literature
full name / name of organization:
Diversity Committee, Children's Literature Association
contact email:
lara.saguisag@csi.cuny.edu; mary.couzelis@morgan.edu
Call for Papers
Visualizing Diversity in Children’s Literature
Panel Sponsored by Children’s Literature Association Diversity Committee
2016 Children’s Literature Association Conference
The ChLA Diversity Committee seeks paper proposals for a panel on diversity and visual representation in children’s literature. Scholarship has increasingly become invested in examining and interrogating the ways the institution of children’s literature defines and practices diversity. This panel will specifically investigate how visual elements in children’s literature have been utilized in such definitions and practices. Papers may examine how visual-verbal narratives such as picturebooks, comics, graphic novels, photographic books, cartoons, and animated films define, approach, promote, conceal and/or ignore diversity; how tensions between visual and verbal modes create possibilities and problems in representing minority groups; how children's literature has attempted to make the marginalized and “invisible” visible; and how texts appropriate, complicate and/or repudiate visual caricatures of minority groups.
The Children’s Literature Association Conference will be held at Columbus, OH from June 9 to June 11, 2016.
For queries, please contact Mary Henderson Couzelis (mary.couzelis@morgan.edu) or Lara Saguisag (lara.saguisag@csi.cuny.edu). Email a 500-word abstract and a 2-page CV to Mary Henderson Couzelis (mary.couzelis@morgan.edu) by September 15, 2015.
By web submission at 07/20/2015 - 15:55
Originating in 2010, Saving the Day: Accessing Comics in the Twenty-first Century is designed as a aid to furthering studies of the comics, comic art, and translations of comics into/from other media. The blog is associated with both The Arthur of the Comics Project, an effort of the Alliance for the Promotion of Research on the Matter of Britain, and The Medieval Comics Project, an effort of the Association for the Advancement of Scholarship and Teaching of the Medieval in Popular Culture.
"WITH GREAT POWER THERE MUST ALSO COME -- GREAT RESPONSIBILITY!"
Stan Lee, "Spider-Man!" Amazing Fantasy No. 15 (Sept. 1962)
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
No comments:
Post a Comment