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[ecrea] CFP: GSA Comics Series
Sat Dec 20 00:38:24 GMT 2014
German Studies Association Conference, October 1-4, 2015, Washington, DC
Panel Series: The German Graphic Novel
This Announcement contains Calls for Papers for the Three Panels in the
Series
· T The German Graphic Novel I: History ((bsterli /at/ uark.edu))
· The German Graphic Novel II: Adaptations ((kutch /at/ kutztown.edu))
· ?The German Graphic Novel III: Pedagogy ((enijdam /at/ umich.edu))
The German Graphic Novel I: History
The medium of comics provides unique opportunities for exploring the
concepts of time and history. Within comics, history can be a central
concern of the narrative or serve as background to more personal
stories; it can be investigated, augmented, challenged, or reimagined
both visually and textually. Historical comics approach and represent
history in a number of modes – from non-fiction to fantastical – and
across genres – (auto)biography, comedy, historical fiction, alternative
history, crime and war fiction, science fiction, etc.. In recent years,
historical comics have grown to constitute a large subset of German
comics production, most notably in conjunction with major anniversaries
of the Fall of the Berlin Wall (2009, 2014). The flood of largely
critical works on the GDR, but also the near absence of German comics on
the Holocaust, raises questions about the function of history for the
German comics scene and individual artists. This panel invites
submissions on a range of topics related to the role of history in
German comics today. The panel will focus primarily on recent
production, but papers that address history as a concept in earlier
works will also be considered.
Possible topics include:
· -Representations of Germany/Austria/Switzerland’s history in comics
· -Interpretations of key historical events (World Wars I and II, the
Holocaust, 1968, the Wende, etc.)
· -Depictions of historical figures
· -The importance of perspective/ Alternative perspectives (feminist,
queer, multicultural)
· -Reimagining/Reframing/Retelling/Reinventing history
· - History as a construction
· - Time in comics
· - Nostalgia
· - Memory (falllibity and /or reliability), accuracy, accountability,
honesty, truth
· -Myth
Please send abstract submissions of 350 words as well as a short bio to
Brett Sterling ((bsterli /at/ uark.edu)) by January 19, 2015.
The German Graphic Novel II: Adaptations
Over the past decade in Germany, several independent, and more recently
larger publishing houses, have produced an astonishing number of graphic
novel titles, as is evident from their increasing presence at venues
like the Frankfurter Buchmesse. In fact, comic adaptations of literary
works have comprised an impressively diverse sub-genre, encompassing
works by ETA Hoffmann, Franz Kafka, Thomas Bernhard and Arthur
Schnitzler, to name a few.
Various angles of debate have often accompanied adaptations of classic
or literary works, including their fidelity to the source text, the
artistic liberties that the new authors take, and the aesthetic
implications of these creative decisions. However, these arguments have
largely structured the study of film adaptation; and only a minimal
amount of scholarship has appeared to date on graphic or comic adaptation.
Research in the field of German-language comic adaptation is even more
limited, yet the increasing prevalence of these adaptations on the
German comics scene and their aesthetic innovations merit serious
critical inquiry. This panel seeks to establish an analytical framework
for discussing comic adaptations and to strengthen and expand this field
of scholarship.
Possible topics may include but are not limited to:
· -Literary Criticism and the Comic Adaptation
· -Illustration versus Adaptation
· -The artistic merits of graphic adaptations of classic or literary
German-language texts
· -The artistic challenges of graphic adaptations of classic or literary
German-language texts
· -The role of interpretation in creating adaptations
· -Comic adaptation as a form of literary translation
· -Reevaluating the German-language literary canon
· -Graphic adaptations of German film
· -The role of graphic novel adaptations in German visual culture
Please send abstract submissions of 350 words as well as a short bio to
Lynn M. Kutch ((kutch /at/ kutztown.edu)) by January 19, 2015.
The German Graphic Novel III: Pedagogy
While commenting on the sequential art of Rodolphe Töpffer, the Swiss
father of modern comics, Johann Wolfgang von Goethe made an insightful
observation on the potential of the medium. He reflected that“[i]f
Töpffer did not have such an insignificant text before him, he would
invent things which would surpass all our expectations”. Since that
fateful remark in 1830, Goethe’s prediction has become a reality, and
comics have developed into a well-respected medium that is becoming
established within the Academy. However, while scholarship continues to
illustrate the pedagogical value of integrating comics in literature,
history and language syllabi, the role of graphic narrative in the
contemporary university classroom is still contested, and German Studies
is slow to adopt pedagogical trends in Comics Studies. This panel seeks
to incite conversation on this lacuna in our discipline and interrogate
the emergent role of Comics Studies in teaching German history, culture,
literature and language. With a specific emphasis on pedagogy, we are
soliciting papers that engage debates on the merits and challenges of
integrating comics into the German Studies classroom.
Possible topics may include but are not limited to:
· -Comics Studies in German Studies: interrogating the position of
Comics Studies in the Academy and advocating for its place in German Studies
· -Methods of Reading: strategies for reading and analyzing graphic
narrative
· -The past, present and future of graphic novel scholarship
· -Teaching Language with Comics: integrating comics into the language
classroom, L2 success stories and syllabus suggestions
· -Teaching History with Comics: using graphic novels to teach German
history
· -Using Comics to Teach German Classics (Faust, Im Westen nichts neues,
Flughunde)
· -Teaching Medium Specificity: cross-comparisons with comics,
literature and film (Die Welle, Die Wolke)
Please send abstract submissions of 350 words as well as a short CV to
Elizabeth (Biz) Nijdam ((enijdam /at/ umich.edu)) by January 19, 2015.
Please note that presenters must be members of the German Studies
Association (see www.thegsa.org for membership information), and no one
individual may give more than one paper or participate in more than two
public roles.
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