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Dear all

Please find attached and below a reissued CFP for this event, whose dates have now changed.  We would be grateful if you could spread the word!

Many apologies for the confusion and for cross-posting.

Julia Round, Chris Murray, Dave Huxley and Joan Ormrod
(Editors, Studies in Comics and Journal of Graphic Novels and Comics)
www.comics.bujournalism.info

 

 

The Third International Comics Conference: ‘Comics Rock!’

Bournemouth University, 28-29 June 2012

After a successful two years at Manchester Metropolitan University, the next International Comics Conference (organised by Studies in Comics and the Journal of Graphic Novels and Comics) is heading to the seaside!  We now invite proposals for papers, posters and workshops on:

 

Comics and Education (Thursday 28 June 2012)

Including the first UK screening of Todd Kent’s film Comic Book Literacy (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. 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 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 Excelsior award

           creating comics, e.g. as assessment (formative or summative), or elsewhere in the curriculum (from short strips to publications like Fools Gold, a school project that produced a book available for purchase)

           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 (National Association of Comic Art Educators, The Comix Scholars List, The UK Comics Scholars List)

Comics and Multi-Modal Adaptation (Friday 29 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 [log in to unmask] 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…