"WITH GREAT POWER THERE MUST ALSO COME -- GREAT RESPONSIBILITY!"

Stan Lee, "Spider-Man!" Amazing Fantasy No. 15 (Sept. 1962)

Showing posts with label Pedagogy. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Pedagogy. Show all posts

Tuesday, August 23, 2022

CFP International Comic Arts Forum (9/23/2022; Vancouver 4/20-22/2023)

CALL FOR PAPERS:
International Comic Arts Forum

University of British Columbia, Vancouver
APRIL 20-22, 2023


​ICAF invites proposals for scholarly presentations for its twentieth meeting, to be held on the Vancouver campus of the University of British Columbia on the Northwest Coast of Canada.

ICAF welcomes original proposals from diverse disciplines and theoretical perspectives on any aspect of comics or cartooning, particularly studies that reflect international perspectives. Studies of aesthetics, production, distribution, reception, and social, ideological, and historical significance are equally welcome, as are studies that address larger theoretical issues linked to comics or cartooning, for example in image/text studies or new media theory.

In addition to the general call for papers, we hope to offer panels and programming on the following subjects:

  • Comics and Indigeneity, including but not limited to comics by Indigenous artists and comics on Indigenous issues, such as decolonization, Indigenous activism, sovereignty, language revitalization, and survivance
  • Comics theory in the reading of early modern texts (and, generally, Shakespeare and comics)
  • Comics pedagogy and comics in human rights education, including but not limited to comics on forced migration, the Holocaust, and genocide
Submissions in these areas are particularly encouraged but not required.

Moreover, this year’s ICAF will also invite accepted participants to take part in roundtables and seminars on current works in progress, comics pedagogy, and issues in comics studies scholarship.

The deadline to submit proposals is Friday, September 23, 2022.

PROPOSAL GUIDELINES: 

ICAF prefers argumentative, thesis-driven presentations that are clearly linked to larger critical, artistic, or cultural issues; we avoid those that are survey-like in character. We accept original 20-minute presentations that have not been presented or accepted for publication elsewhere and prefer those accompanied by images that illustrate the arguments made. Presenters can assume an audience versed in comics and the fundamentals of comics studies. Proposals should not exceed 300 words.

SEND ABSTRACTS by Friday, September 23, 2022, to Biz Nijdam, ICAF Academic Director, at icafcomic@gmail.com. The body of the email should include: contact information, a short bio, title of the proposal, and 3-5 keywords. Abstracts should be anonymized, as all proposals will be subject to blind review.

Receipt of all proposals will be acknowledged. Applicants can expect to receive confirmation of acceptance or rejection by Friday, October 7, 2022.

LENT AWARD: ICAF also sponsors the John A. Lent Scholarship in Comics Studies. The Lent Scholarship, named for pioneering teacher and researcher Dr. John Lent, is offered to encourage student research into comic art. Applications for this scholarship are due by December 1, 2022. For more details, please visit our website.

To help defray the cost of attendance for international guests (outside of the US and Canada), a limited number of registration waivers may be granted at the discretion of the Executive Committee. More information will be made available upon acceptance of proposals.

Tuesday, March 3, 2020

NeMLA Update

Here are the full details of the Saving the Day roundtable for NeMLA later this week. 




Northeast Modern Language Association 51st Annual Convention, 5-8 March 2020
Marriott Copley Place, Boston, Massachusetts

Saturday, Mar 7, Track 18, 04:45-06:00        
Location: HYANNIS (Media Equipped)



18.17 Saving the Day: Accessing Comics in the 21st Century (Roundtable)
Organized by Michael A. Torregrossa, Independent Scholar, and Carl B. Sell, Oklahoma Panhandle State University. 

Chair: Michael Torregrossa, Independent Scholar
Cultural Studies and Media Studies & Pedagogy & Professional

"Krazy in the Klassroom: Teaching Early Newspaper Comics" Jonathan Najarian, Boston University
Teaching early twentieth-century newspaper comics presents a unique challenge: not only is there an incredible wealth of content to sift through, many of the most famous cartoon characters of the period—Krazy Kat, the Yellow Kid, the Katzenjammer Kids—were products of a material print culture that is quickly disappearing. This talk will sample some of the excellent online resources available for instructors wishing to introduce newspaper comics into their classroom, including the Billy Ireland Cartoon Library and Museum website, digitalcomicmuseum.com, and the excellent Yellow Kid website hosted by the University of Virginia. I also plan to contrast online resources with traditional print resources such as those published by Sunday Press and Taschen, with an eye towards understanding how the internet has at once facilitated and complicated how we introduce early comics to our students. For while the internet has democratized access to many comics that would be otherwise forgotten, it has also further removed us from the print and material context in which this work was originally received.

Jon Najarian received his PhD from Boston University in 2019. He is currently at work on a book manuscript titled The Intermedial Era: Literary and Pictorial Narrative from Modernism to Comics, which proposes a new context for understanding the rise of the graphic novel by linking the development of comics as a form to the multimedia experiments of modernist writing. He has published articles on Thomas Pynchon, the philosophy of Stanly Cavell, and the current state of comics studies.


"Finding Frankensteins (and Other Illustrated Classics): Resources for Research and Teaching" Michael Torregrossa, Independent Scholar
In 2012, I took a graduate-level seminar at Rhode Island College devoted to Mary Shelley’s Frankenstein and its afterlife in popular culture. We were assigned to do a short research paper, and, being a life-long, reader of comics I eventually settled on a paper looking at how the text has been adapted onto the comics page. Eight years, four conference papers, and one on-campus address later, I am still fascinated by the vitality of Shelley’s characters in the comics medium and the variety of forms her story has taken in comics over the course of the twentieth and early twenty-first centuries. The focus of this presentation will be on the various online tools (such as The Grand Comics Database, Comics Vine, the catalog of Lone Star Comics, and fan-made comics resources) available for locating and cataloging representations of Frankenstein in the comics as well new ways (like comiXology, Marvel Unlimited, and DC Universe) to access these texts. I’ll also comment on some of the ways I’ve used these material in my research and teaching and additional resources for tracking discussions of these works. All of these approaches can be applied to any literary text that has been adapted into the comics medium.

Michael A. Torregrossa is a graduate of the Medieval Studies program at the University of Connecticut (Storrs) and works as an adjunct instructor in English in both Rhode Island and Massachusetts. His research interests include adaptation, comics and comic art, Frankensteiniana, monsters, and science fiction. Michael has presented papers on these topics at regional, national, and international conferences. He is also active in the Northeast Popular Culture/American Culture Association and is currently its Monsters and the Monstrous Area Chair, but he previously served as its Fantastic (Fantasy, Science Fiction, and Horror) Area Chair, a position he held from 2009-2018.


"Pirate Booty: Scholars and Scanned Comics" Charles Henebry, Boston University
In the late 1990s and early 2000s, fan culture embraced digitization, with the result that a wealth of rare comics became widely available, from Action Comics 1 to the full run of Alan Moore's Miracleman in Eclipse. This has been a boon to scholarship, since the original issues were generally scanned complete with letters pages, editor's notes and vintage advertisements for plastic soldiers, all elements of the historical original that tend to be left out from reprints—as well as from official Marvel and DC online editions. This leaves scholars in a quandary, dependent on pirated intellectual property. 

Charles W. Henebry received his doctorate in English literature from New York University in 2003. Originally a student of emblems — Elizabethan comic-books, roughly speaking — he has for the past ten years focused his scholarship on the four-color world of superheroes, from the genesis of Superman’s costume change to the impact of the 1960s antiwar movement on Iron Man. He is the author of seven articles in Greenwood Publishing Group’s 2014 Comics Through Time encyclopedia and long-form essays in The Ages of Iron Man, The Ages of the Justice League, and The Ages of the Flash—as well as the forthcoming Ages of the Black Panther.


"Affordability, Access, & Flexibility in Teaching Comics in the 21st Century" Lance Eaton, University of Massachusetts Boston
This contribution will explore and discuss a different approach to considering access and pedagogy when teaching courses on comics and other similar courses where costs to learning materials can easily skyrocket.  The approach recenters the focus of what is being taught about comics while offering up a playlist of readings that students can choose from to read in preparation for any given class along with clear identification of what materials are attainable through the library.  Leveraging such communal resources means that students come to class having to demonstrate how they take course concepts and learnings and apply them to individual readings. While initially, it has the potential to look a bit chaotic, it also gives students lots of opportunities to provide something unique and distinct about their learning pathway and what they get to read and analyze, thereby increasing their interest and development throughout the course.  

Lance Eaton is an Instructional Designer and Faculty Development Specialist at Brandeis University.  He teaches literature, popular culture, comics, and other interdisciplinary courses at North Shore Community College and Southern New Hampshire University.  He also is the Executive Secretary for the Northeast Popular Culture Association.  He has presented at local, regional, and national conferences on teaching and learning in online environments, hybrid flexible pedagogy, universal design for learning, OER, and open pedagogy.  He writes for several magazines and websites.  He is currently working on his PhD in Higher Education with a focus on academic piracy of research literature.


"Graphic Medicine Online" A. David Lewis, MCPHS University
Publications, lectures, classes, and conferences on Graphic Medicine (i.e. the study and use of comics in terms of medical, health, or patient experience) are amassing monthly, but less known are the number of digital resources also growing in frequency and accessibility. First, there is the Graphic Medicine site itself, largely the origin point for the Anglophone contingent of these scholars, followed by the Annals of Graphic Medicine, original health-related comics hosted by the Annals of Internal Medicine and the American College of Physicians. Independent online magazine The Nib produces award-winning non-fiction comics on the state of healthcare in America, and numerous Graphic Medicine creators (e.g. Rachel Lindsay, Dr. Mike Natter, etc.) work in digital-first channels.
Beyond the scholarship, reportage, and new art, software utilizing Graphic Medicine is now on the rise, with apps like Jumo Health AR (and Medikidz), ‘Flo, and the numerous print comics repurposed (and sometimes augmented) for smartphone and computer monitors. Gatekeepers and barriers are becoming all the more reduced with these digital and online options; moreover, perhaps unlike other moments in Comics Studies, the field of Graphic Medicine appears particularly welcoming of such tech among its discourse and implementation.

A. David Lewis is an Instructor and Program Coordinator in the School of Healthcare Business at MCPHS University. In addition to being an established comics writer, editor, and comics studies scholar, he is also the founder of the Graphic Medicine library collection at his university and a national lecturer on the topic of comics and healthcare, medical education, and patient narratives. His 2014 book on the superhero genre and audience negotiation of personal of identity & selfhood was nominated for that year's Eisner Awards in "Best Scholarly/Academic Work," and his co-edited book Digital Death with Christopher M. Moreman received the 2015 Ray and Pat Browne Award for Best Edited Collection in Popular and American Culture.


"Educating the Total Nerd: Resources for Using the Products of Fandom in the Classroom" Michael Dittman, Butler County Community College
While the popularity of comic book movies has largely reinforced the dichotomy of the creator/reader passive relationship, educators can enrich their classrooms by examining and integrating the active role fans take in producing material which runs parallel in canon but sometimes surpasses in quality.  With the expansion of the comic fan base beyond the traditional white male coded perception and the latency of the comic corporations in diversifying their products and characters, fans have taken it upon themselves to create representation.  This idea of finding and situating one’s identity into the larger culture through its products is a useful one to explore, especially in the composition classroom.  Educators who familiarize themselves with the word of fan product can use these tools to help to move their classrooms beyond the more passive classroom reading and discussion of comics to a higher level of cognition including synthesis and creation. 
This brief, informal presentation focuses on both finding and identifying repositories of fan product to be used in the classroom and the resources available to incorporate the creation of fandom texts into the classroom.  Among other resources, gathering models from repositories such as CBR’s “Comic Book Idol” and Comic Art Network, the vast collection of fanfilms on both YouTube and Vimeo, and the collections of fanfic on Movellas and wattpad will be highlighted.  The use of how-to guides like “FanFiction for Literacy” and “Popculture Classroom” as well as others in curriculum planning will be presented. 

Michael Dittman is an associate professor of English at Butler County Community College.  His comic book and comic art reviews have appeared in CBR, International Journal of Comic Art, and others.  His comic fandom scholarship has appeared in Works and Days and other journals.  His books include Jack Kerouac, The Beat Generation, Three Days in Pittsburgh, and the novel Small Brutal Incidents. 





Wednesday, October 2, 2019

EXTENDED DEADLINE CFP Saving the Day: Accessing Comics in the Twenty-first Century (A Roundtable) (10/7/19; NeMLA Boston 3/5-8/2020)


Call for Papers for Saving the Day: Accessing Comics in the Twenty-first Century (A Roundtable)

51st Annual Convention of the Northeast Modern Language Association
Boston Marriott Copley Place, in Boston, Massachusetts, from 5-8 March 2020
DEADLINE EXTENDED: Paper abstracts are due by 7 October 2019
Session organized by Michael A. Torregrossa, The Medieval Comics Project, and Carl B. Sell, Oklahoma Panhandle State University

Although the presence of physical comics has declined, the plethora of comics-based movies and television shows available to contemporary audiences has made it almost impossible for an individual not to have acquired a familiarity with the comics medium and some of its most recognizable characters. Even more so than past generations, our students are especially responsive to superheroes and related tropes of comics, but what are the best ways to bring this material into the classroom to illustrate both where the comics are today and where they’ve come from?

In response to these questions, this session will introduce and instruct participants in the use of various online tools (such as comics companies’ websites, comics sellers’ store sites, databases of comics, fan wikias, and repositories) to successfully find and access comics and information about them of value to our teaching and research. This objective is especially vital, as resources like the Grand Comics Database and its various search options, can be invaluable when looking for resources (particularly when paired with repositories of comics, like Comic Book +, comiXology, DC Universe, and Marvel Unlimited). Furthermore, instruction on the various forms of the comiXology, DC Universe, and Marvel Unlimited platforms are of great importance as they stand to revolutionize access to and distribution of comics in the twenty-first century by providing affordable digital editions of books from all eras of the medium’s history. Additionally, fans of the comics have produced important resources essential in any quest to track and understand the larger contexts involved in how comics have developed and their characters evolved; these include various wikis devoted to specific publishers (like the DC Database and the Marvel Database) and sites like The Appendix to the Official Handbook of the Marvel Universe. Finally, Comics Studies is a thriving field of scholarship with many print and online resources available. Unfortunately, all of these new resources appear foreign to most educators. We hope that this session will change that and promote a greater awareness of the resources available to successfully integrate comics into our academic lives.

This session is a roundtable, in which 3-10 participants give brief, informal presentations (5-10 minutes) and the session is open to conversation and debate between participants and the audience. The direct link for this session is https://www.cfplist.com/nemla/Home/S/18042. Please contact the organizers at SavingtheDay2020@gmail.com with any questions or concerns.

Abstract submissions must be made through NeMLA’s official site. Applicants will need to login or create an account at https://www.cfplist.com/nemla/Home/login. Submissions must begin with a paper title of not more than 100 characters (including spaces) and adhering to the following: capitalize titles by MLA formatting rules unless the title is in a language other than English; do not use quotation marks in the session title or abstract title itself but please use only single quotation marks around titles of short stories, poems, and similar short works; italicize the titles of long works mentioned in the paper title; and do not place a period at the end of the title. Submissions should also include an academic biography (usually transferred from your NeMLA profile) and a paper abstract of not more than 300 words; be sure to italicize or use quotation marks around titles according to MLA guidelines. Please be aware that NeMLA membership is not required to submit abstracts, but it is required to present at the convention. In addition, note that it is permissible to present on (1) a panel (or seminar) and (2) a roundtable or a creative session, but it is not permissible to present on a panel and a seminar (because both are paper-based), on two panels or two roundtables (because both would be the same type). Further information on these and other policies can be accessed at http://www.buffalo.edu/nemla/convention/callforpapers/submit.html. Chairs will confirm the acceptance of abstracts before 15 October 2019. At that time, applicants must confirm the panel on which they wish to participate. Convention registration/membership for 2019-2020 must be paid by 1 December 2019.

Saturday, July 13, 2019

CFP Comics and Education (Spec Issue of Studies in Comics) (11/1/19)

Studies in Comics - Special Issue on Comics and Education
https://call-for-papers.sas.upenn.edu/cfp/2019/06/27/studies-in-comics-special-issue-on-comics-and-education

deadline for submissions: November 1, 2019
full name / name of organization: Studies in Comics
contact email: studiesincomics@googlemail.com


Special Issue 11.1: Comics and Education

Articles are invited for a special issue of Studies in Comics (11.1) on the theme of Comics and Education. Comics have enjoyed a resurgence in the classroom as educators, creators, and scholars have come to recognise the diverse ways in which the medium can be used to support literacy, communication skills, and creativity. Significantly, the use of comics for and as education also promotes cross-medial learning, as readers may use the form as a starting point for further reading, but also to enhance and supplement other pedagogical materials. As Syma and Weiner argue, “it is no longer a question of whether sequential art should be used in educational settings, but rather how to use it and for what purpose” (2013, 1). Comics present an immersive, engaging, and memorable tool for communication because they require the reader to actively participate in the meaning-making process by utilising verbal, visual, spatial, and gestural modes of understanding among others (Bakis 2008). Indeed, comics can help readers of all ages understand complex ideas through these means and allow teachers and learners to explore, stimulate, and enhance educational outcomes.

In recognition of the foregoing, we invite papers that focus on one or more of the following topics, although the list is not exhaustive:


  • Case studies of education comics/comics as education
  • Teaching and learning with published comics
  • Teaching and learning by creating comics
  • Comics and literacy
  • Public information comics
  • Comics as pedagogy
  • Comics and embodied learning
  • Comics and emotional development
  • Comics and learner-based outcomes
  • Comics and adult education
  • The educational mission of networks like Graphic Medicine and Graphic Justice



Submissions

Please send complete articles for consideration, along with any queries to studiesincomics@googlemail.com with SIC 11.1 in the subject heading. When you send the article the words SIC 11.1 ARTICLE in the subject heading. Articles should be 4000 – 6000 words long and must be received by 1st November 2019 along with a biographical note of up to 150 words. All submissions will be peer-reviewed. Papers must be submitted in English. All articles submitted should be original work and must not be under consideration by other publications. This special issue will be published mid-2020.

We also welcome reviews of new publications and exhibits and short pieces of creative work (1-5 pages in length). Creative work should be relevant to the theme of the special issue. Reviews of publications and conferences and exhibitions: please include the words SIC 11.1 REVIEW PUBLICATION or SIC 11.1 REVIEW CONFERENCE or SIC 11.1 REVIEW EXHIBITION in the subject heading. Creative submissions should include the words SIC 11.1 CREATIVE should be in the subject heading.

Guest Editors: Dr Damon Herd, Professor Divya Jindal-Snape and Megan Sinclair (University of Dundee).


Last updated June 28, 2019

Saturday, July 6, 2019

CFP Saving the Day: Accessing Comics in the Twentieth-First Century (A Roundtable) (9/30/2019; NeMLA Boston 3/5-8/2020)

I'm pleased to announce our first call for papers related to our general efforts in comics outreach. Details follow.



Call for Papers for Saving the Day: Accessing Comics in the Twentieth-First Century (A Roundtable)

51st Annual Convention of the Northeast Modern Language Association

Boston Marriott Copley Place, in Boston, Massachusetts, from 5-8 March 2020

Paper abstracts are due by 30 September 2019

Session organized by Michael A. Torregrossa, The Medieval Comics Project, and Carl P. Sell, Indiana University of Pennsylvania


Although the presence of physical comics has declined, the plethora of comics-based movies and television shows available to contemporary audiences has made it almost impossible for an individual not to have acquired a familiarity with the comics medium and some of its most recognizable characters. Even more so than past generations, our students are especially responsive to superheroes and related tropes of comics, but what are the best ways to bring this material into the classroom to illustrate both where the comics are today and where they’ve come from?

In response to these questions, this session will introduce and instruct participants in the use of various online tools (such as comics companies’ websites, comics sellers’ store sites, databases of comics, fan wikias, and repositories) to successfully find and access comics and information about them of value to our teaching and research. This objective is especially vital, as resources like the Grand Comics Database and its various search options, can be invaluable when looking for resources (particularly when paired with repositories of comics, like Comic Book +, comiXology, DC Universe, and Marvel Unlimited). Furthermore, instruction on the various forms of the comiXology, DC Universe, and Marvel Unlimited platforms are of great importance as they stand to revolutionize access to and distribution of comics in the twenty-first century by providing affordable digital editions of books from all eras of the medium’s history. Additionally, fans of the comics have produced important resources essential in any quest to track and understand the larger contexts involved in how comics have developed and their characters evolved; these include various wikis devoted to specific publishers (like the DC Database and the Marvel Database) and sites like The Appendix to the Official Handbook of the Marvel Universe. Finally, Comics Studies is a thriving field of scholarship with many print and online resources available. Unfortunately, all of these new resources appear foreign to most educators. We hope that this session will change that and promote a greater awareness of the resources available to successfully integrate comics into our academic lives.

This session is a roundtable, in which 3-10 participants give brief, informal presentations (5-10 minutes) and the session is open to conversation and debate between participants and the audience.
The direct link for this session is https://www.cfplist.com/nemla/Home/S/18042. Please contact the organizers at SavingtheDay2020@gmail.com with any questions or concerns.

Abstract submissions must be made through NeMLA’s official site. Applicants will need to login or create an account at https://www.cfplist.com/nemla/Home/login. Submissions must begin with a paper title of not more than 100 characters (including spaces) and adhering to the following: capitalize titles by MLA formatting rules unless the title is in a language other than English; do not use quotation marks in the session title or abstract title itself but please use only single quotation marks around titles of short stories, poems, and similar short works; italicize the titles of long works mentioned in the paper title; and do not place a period at the end of the title. Submissions should also include an academic biography (usually transferred from your NeMLA profile) and a paper abstract of not more than 300 words; be sure to italicize or use quotation marks around titles according to MLA guidelines.

Please be aware that NeMLA membership is not required to submit abstracts, but it is required to present at the convention. In addition, note that it is permissible to present on (1) a panel (or seminar) and (2) a roundtable or a creative session, but it is not permissible to present on a panel and a seminar (because both are paper-based), on two panels or two roundtables (because both would be the same type). Further information on these and other policies can be accessed at http://www.buffalo.edu/nemla/convention/callforpapers/submit.html.

Chairs will confirm the acceptance of abstracts before 15 October 2019. At that time, applicants must confirm the panel on which they wish to participate. Convention registration/membership for 2019-2020 must be paid by 1 December 2019.



Monday, July 2, 2018

CFP Edited Collection: BOOM! #*@&! Splat: Comics and Violence (expired)

Sorry. Yet another missed call.

Edited Collection: BOOM! #*@&! Splat: Comics and Violence
https://call-for-papers.sas.upenn.edu/cfp/2018/04/11/edited-collection-boom-splat-comics-and-violence

deadline for submissions:
May 31, 2018

full name / name of organization:
Jo Davis-McElligatt, PhD & Jim Coby, PhD

contact email:
joannacdavis@gmail.com



BOOM! #*@&! Splat: Comics and Violence

In the introduction to Seduction of the Innocent, Frederic Wertham suggested that “chronic stimulation, temptation and seduction by comic books [...] are contributing factors to many children’s maladjustment” (10). Anxious that children would be forever corrupted by the content of comics, Wertham identified representations and structures of violence as among his primary objections to comics narrative: “Here is violence galore, violence in the beginning, in the middle, and at the end” (8). Though anxieties regarding representations of violence in comics have largely fallen to the wayside, thematic and symbolic visual depictions of violence remain central to the comics form. From Captain America punching his way into the American consciousness to Phoebe Gloeckner’s depictions of sexual abuse, violence is an integral aspect of the comic medium. Though scholars such as Hillary Chute, Harriet Earle, and Martin Barker have addressed specific trends and/or themes related to violence in comics, such as war, trauma, horror comics, no sustained scholarly inquiry has yet to address this issue.

Our collection, in taking an inclusive and wide-ranging approach to both violence and comics, seeks to understand how the confluence of words and images might ask readers to consider violence in ways unique to the medium. We welcome scholarship from academics of comics and other fields alike. A notable academic press has expressed enthusiastic interest in this project.

Potential avenues for exploration include:

  • Form and structure elements (i.e., symbolia, jagged speech balloons, emanata)
  • Receptions of violence in comics genres (e.g., horror, superhero, war, and adventure)
  • Cultural production and contexts
  • Cartoon and slapstick violence (e.g., Krazy Kat, Calvin and Hobbes)
  • Comics and war/witness (e.g., Joe Sacco, Marjane Satrapi, Art Spiegelman)
  • Physical and psychological family violence (e.g. Alison Bechdel, Craig Thompson, Will Eisner)
  • Sexual violence (e.g., Phoebe Gloeckner, Justin Green)
  • Superhero violence (e.g., Alan Moore, Frank Miller, Jack Kirby, Marvel/DC)
  • History and violence (e.g., John Lewis, Andrew Aydin, & Nate Powell, Keiji Nakazawa, Chester Brown)
  • The grotesque and/or bizarre (e.g., Daniel Clowes, Jason, Charles Burns)
  • Pedagogical approaches to teaching violence in comics

Interested parties should submit bio of 150-200 words and an abstract of approximately 300-500 words to Joanna Davis-McElligatt (jcdmce@louisiana.edu) and Jim Coby (james.coby@uah.edu) by May 31. Contributors will be notified no later than July 30. Completed essay drafts (4000-5000 words) will be due December 15th, 2018.