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[Commlist] Literature/Film Quarterly 49.4 published (Special Issue: 'Watchmen, From Co-Mix to Remix')
Sun Oct 31 18:24:09 GMT 2021
We are delighted to announce the publication of the newest issue of
/Literature/Film Quarterly/, a special issue dedicated to moving image
adaptations of /Watchmen. /The full open-access issue is available here:
https://lfq.salisbury.edu/index.html <https://lfq.salisbury.edu/index.html>
/
/The recent successes of HBO’s 2019 limited series adaptation of
/Watchmen/ (1986-87) have reignited interest in the adaptability of the
path-breaking original comics series by Alan Moore and Dave Gibbons,
which to this day is routinely regarded as an ‘unfilmable’,
‘unadaptable’ work. The perceived failures of Zack Snyder’s widely
disparaged feature film adaptation in 2009—justified or not—are well
documented. And the official /Watchmen/ motion comic (2008-2009), which
was a curtain opener of sorts to Snyder’s film, now seems all but
forgotten. By stark contrast, Damon Lindelof (a long-time self-professed
fan) has gone to great lengths to devise and position his limited series
to not be a direct adaptation of /Watchmen/. In 2018, the showrunner
took to Instagram to share an impassioned five-page open letter in which
he assured fans of the original comics that /his/ version—much as it
might be seen as a remake, sequel, or even a requel—is best considered
as a ‘remix’. And critical consensus is that Lindelof’s version does
just that: pre-existent motifs and meanings are thrown together in a new
context, a new set of relations, a new recipe that has spoken in
profound ways to the current political climate in the U.S. and the world.
Lindelof’s remix as the latest chapter in the moving image afterlives of
Watchmen—in film, fan video, and television—raises a range of questions
addressed by this special issue of /Literature/Film Quarterly/. How far
can we push the notion of Lindelof’s version (or any adaptation for that
matter) as a “remix?” What does his invocation of remix suggest about
the broader transmedial ecology of Watchmen? How might Moore and
Gibbons’ comics have reflexively anticipated, or even actively summoned,
the idea of them being remixed? What are the experiential affordances of
such a moving image remix for its audience? And, importantly, what are
the political stakes of Lindelof’s Watchmen remix and its reception?
With five incisive essays from Joshua Wille, Eduardo Navas, Aaron
Taylor, Andrew Hoberek, and Sheila Nayar, this issue wants to drive home
that there is a lot more to be said, in addition to Lindelof’s
particular remix, for remixing as an evocative image for the kind of
adaptive work that we find in his television series, and beyond.
/Literature/Film Quarterly/
ISSN 2573-7597
FALL 2021 VOL.49, NO. 4
Special Issue: "/Watchmen/, From Co-Mix to Remix"
Guest Editorial:
/Watchmen/, From Co-Mix to Remix
<https://lfq.salisbury.edu/_issues/49_4/watchmen_from_comix_to_remix.html>
Martin P. Rossouw (University of the Free State)
Nothing Ever Ends: /Watchmen/, Fan Edits, and the Persistence of
Revision
<https://lfq.salisbury.edu/_issues/49_4/nothing_ever_ends_watchmen_fan_edits_and_the_persistence_of_revision.html>
Joshua Wille (Independent Scholar)
Damon Lindelof’s /Watchmen/ Remix: Creativity and Allegory
<https://lfq.salisbury.edu/_issues/49_4/damon_lindelofs_watchmen_remix_creativity_and_allegory.html>
Eduardo Navas (Pennsylvania State University)
/Watchmen/ Remembered and Remixed: Memory and Performance in Complex
Transmedia Television
<https://lfq.salisbury.edu/_issues/49_4/watchmen_remembered_and_remixed_memory_and_performance_in_complex_transmedia_television.html>
Aaron Taylor (University of Lethbridge)
Of /Watchmen/ and Great Men: The Graphic Novel, the Television Series,
and the Police
<https://lfq.salisbury.edu/_issues/49_4/of_watchment_and_great_men_the_graphic_novel_the_television_series_and_the_police.html>
Andrew Hoberek (University of Missouri)
Who Watches /Watchmen/—and How? Shifting Epistemic Registers in the
Comics and Television Series
<https://lfq.salisbury.edu/_issues/49_4/of_watchmen_and_how_shifting_epistemic_registers_in_the_comics_and_television_series.html>
Sheila J. Nayar (University of Utah)
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