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[ecrea] Joint Conference of Graphic Novels, Bande Dessinées and Comics 2011
Fri Oct 08 13:30:46 GMT 2010
>The Graphic Novels and Comics Conference
>Manchester Metropolitan University: 5th and 6th July 2011
>Audiences and Readership / In(ter)dependence: readers-turned-creators
>
>Audiences and Readership
>At the Graphic Novels and Comics Conference
>2010, a major issue identified by the plenary
>panel as crucial for future directions regarding
>comics research was that of audiences and
>readership. Martin Barker, who pioneered and
>championed comics research when it was
>unfashionable reinforced this issue when
>reviewing the conference in the Journal of
>Graphic Novels and Comics noting, â¬Üit is
>striking to me&that no-one is ccurrently
>following through to ask any of the questions we
>can and should, about readers, collectors,
>reviewers, circuits of reception, or even the
>longer-term shifting public status of comics.â¬"
>Whilst there has been some excellent work
>researching comics audiences and readership,
>this is currently, as Martin suggests, a largely
>neglected area. In summarising work in this
>area, Barkerâ¬"s works on ideology (1989),
>readers (1993, 1997) and censorship (1984)
>examine the ways audiences consume such texts.
>Gibsonâ¬"s work on female comics readers (2003a
>&b) demonstrates the ways comics influence
>identity construction and the transgressive
>reading practices of some female fans. She has
>also written on historical childrenâ¬"s comic
>collecting in Britain (2008) and tentatively
>begun work on British manga audiences (2007). In
>addition, Wrightâ¬"s work on the development of
>the comics industry and distribution practices
>shows how audiences are influenced by but also
>influence comics creation and production
>(2001). However, as Martin suggested there is
>scope for many more sustained explorations of comics audiences and readership.
>
>The aim of this conference, therefore, is to
>open up debates in comics audiences and
>readership. A longer term aim is to produce a
>special themed issue of The Journal of Graphic
>Novels and Comics on these topics, and a themed
>issue of Studies in Comics focusing on
>underground and independent texts. Accordingly
>we are looking for papers in (but not confined
>to) the following areas surrounding audiences and readership:
>
>Fandom, niche markets and subcultures
>" Gendered identities (fanboys, women
>comics readers, encoded rreadership, manga readership)
>" Subcultural reception and consumption
>e.g. fractureured identities, responses and
>poaching of specific texts, slash, cosplay, comicons
>" Comics shops and their clientele
>" Online comics production and production
>" Comics collecting and collections
>" Children, childhood and comics
>" Library collections
>Censorship
>" Children perceived as a problematic audience
>" Moral panics (e.g. horror comics,
>underground comics such as the work of Crumb)
>" Specific case studies e.g. Mike Diana and the Boileiled Angel case
>" National and local collection policies
>for library and other collections
>
>Globalization, localities
>" Hybrid identities
>" Relationship between dominant Americanised texts vs localisedd texts
>" Localities and small press comics production
>" Subcultures on the internet
>" Local responses to global texts
>Readership
>" Embodied readership
>" Encoded readership and negotiated identities
>" Reading practices
>We are also interested in papers on research
>methods and theories in audiences and readership including:
>" Assessing the effectiveness of
>qualitative and quantitative mmethods (focus
>groups, interview methods, snowballing, internet rhetoric, etc)
>" Ideological, rhetorical, discursive analytical methods
>" Reception theory e.g. encoding/decoding
>g
>
>In(ter)dependence
>Readers in the comics industry are frequently
>also creators, a point that underpins a lot of
>independent and small press publishing, as well
>as mainstream texts. This conference also seeks
>to explore the status of these
>readers-turned-creators and analyse their
>work. We want to consider the movement from fan
>to creator, the cultural status attached to the
>same, and to engage in analyses of relevant
>texts, exploring the relationship between the
>roles of creator and reader in comics.
>
>Accordingly we also welcome papers in (but not
>confined to) the following areas:
>
>" Underground, independent and small press comics
>" Fanzines and letter pages
>" Shared language and iconography
>" The movement from independent to mainstream
>" The material product printing, format,
>Methods of cf capturing the present
>" Continuity and reader response
>" The roles of creator and reader
>" Collaborative creation and the auteur
>Please send abstracts of 250 words to
>(comicsconference /at/ gmail.com) to reach us by
>December 31st 2010. Proposals for panels are
>also welcomed. Please indicate in the heading
>of your email whether your submission deals with
>â¬SAUDIENCE⬠or â¬SIN(TER)DEPENDENCEâ¬.
>
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