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Dear all,

Happy new year and apologies for cross-posting.

Please find below the call for papers for a special issue of *Slayage. *

*“A Part of Something Bigger”: Critical Approaches to Agents of
S.H.I.E.L.D. and The Avengers*

*A Special Issue of Slayage: The Journal of the Whedon Studies Association*

*Co-Editors: Erin Giannini and Eve Bennett*

*Agents of S.H.I.E.L.D.*/*The Avengers* represent something of an anomaly
in the Whedonverse/Mutant Enemy canon; while each Whedonverse series is a
co-production (eg: *Angel*: Mutant Enemy/Greenwalt Productions; *Buffy the
Vampire Slayer*: Mutant Enemy/Kuzui Enterprises), only the properties
co-produced with Marvel primarily feature characters neither created nor
developed by Whedon and company; indeed, many come with massive (and
occasionally contradictory) backstories developed by numerous writers over
decades and across media. Given the films’ and series’ status as the most
recent output from Mutant Enemy, as well as the series’ status as a Mutant
Enemy—but not Joss Whedon—production, there are numerous, and thus far
untapped, directions through which both the film and series can be
examined. This includes the particular differences in “vision” between the
collaborative but unified styles and narratives of Mutant Enemy and more
diffuse and multiply-authored, but not always collaborative, Marvel Studio
productions (despite attempts at said unification through the creation of
the Marvel Cinematic Universe).

Proposals may include, but are not restricted to:



   - The positioning (or not) of the film and the series as part of the
   Whedonverse
   - *Agents of S.H.I.E.L.D.* as a “family affair”: Jed Whedon, and
   Maurissa and Kevin Tancharoen; the “absence” of Joss Whedon
   - “A lot of filing, giving things names”: The power of names in *Agents
   of S.H.I.E.L.D.*/*The Avengers*; Alphonsus MacKenzie as “namer” of
   humans (Fitz as “Turbo”) and Inhumans (“Tremors”/”Yo-Yo”).
   - The ethics of war
   - Ethics/responsibility of science and technology
   - The use of artificial intelligence and technology in sustaining or
   creating life
   - Modes of leadership: The Avengers/Nick Fury, Coulson vs. Gonzales
   (season 2)
   - Adaptation: from comics to film and television (eg, Daisy
   Johnson/Quake; Calvin Zabo/Mr. Hyde)
   - Who owns the show? Questions of auteurship and authoring within the
   MCU/*Agents of S.H.I.E.L.D.*
   - Narrative and visual styles/visions of Mutant Enemy and Marvel (see,
   as per example: Hammer studios/Universal for horror in the early 20th
   century; AIP as the B-movie studio).
   - The Framework arc (season 4) as contemporary political commentary
   - *Agents of S.H.I.E.L.D.* and *The Avengers* positioning with science
   fiction film and television
   - Issues of gender and representation with the film and the series
   - Transmediality and transmedia texts in *Agents of S.H.I.E.L.D.* (e.g.,
   “Slingshot” web series/references to the Marvel Cinematic Universe)
   - The existence (or lack) of Whedon tropes—dialogue, chosen families,
   etc.—within *The Avengers* or *Agents of S.H.I.E.L.D.*
   - Intersections between Marvel and Mutant Enemy
   - References in character and narrative in Mutant Enemy’s earlier series
   to Marvel properties (e.g., Kitty Pryde as inspiration for Buffy, Xander’s
   reference to the gathering of the Scoobies as “Avengers Assemble” [“The
   Freshman” 4.1])
   - A bigger canvas? Whedon’s shift (return) to film
   - The limitations/benefits of *Agents of S.H.I.E.L.D.*’s positioning on
   a “Big Three” network (ABC), in relation to both earlier Mutant Enemy
   series (on netlets and Fox) as well as the broader Marvel television
   universe (on Netflix)
   - *Agents of S.H.I.E.L.D.* and the broader Marvel television
   universe/MCU compared with DC’s dominance of the CW/DCU
   - *Agents of S.H.I.E.L.D.* as adjunct to the MCU; e.g., season 4 as
   expansion of *Age of Ultron*’s storyline
   - Marvel’s treatment of writers/directors (Edgar Wright/Jon Favreau/Joss
   Whedon) compared or contrasted with Mutant Enemy (Jane Espenson/Marti
   Noxon, Drew Goddard, etc)

Please send a 200-300 word proposal and a short bio by July 15, 2018 to
Erin Giannini (*[log in to unmask] <[log in to unmask]>*) and Eve
Bennett (*[log in to unmask] <[log in to unmask]>*).
Decisions will be made, and everyone will be notified, by August 1, 2018.
If your proposal is accepted please note that a first draft will be due by
September 30, 2018.

Best wishes,

Eve

Dr Eve Bennett
Attaché Temporaire d'Enseignement et de Recherche
UFR Arts et Médias
Université Sorbonne Nouvelle, Paris 3


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