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Author Archives: Comics Forum

Reviews: March 2014

Elisabeth El Refaie, Autobiographical Comics: Life Writing in Pictures, Jackson, University Press of Mississippi, 2012, 273pp, ISBN: 978-1-61703-613-2, $55

Reviewed by Louisa Parker

An overview of North American and European life writing in comics form, Autobiographical Comics: Life Writing in Pictures covers 85 works from Europe and the US and engages with a range of interdisciplinary academic fields. Clearly written in an accessible style this is an informative text of use to comics scholars generally. The breadth of comics work and theory covered means that depth is inevitably relinquished and some readers may find this unsatisfying, however El Refaie herself acknowledges the lack of detail and includes copious notes, bibliographies, references and a helpful index for those who wish to study the content in more depth.

The comprehensive bibliography serves as a stimulating resource in itself, with sources from social science, cultural studies, linguistics, narratology, philosophy, psychoanalysis and of course comics studies. This interdisciplinarity is, as stated in the introduction, in part a response to the tendency towards English Literature in North American comics scholarship. El Refaie refers to a range of theory from sources including Brecht, Barthes, Bakhtin, Bal, Berger, Butler, Bergson, Sontag, Mulvey and C.S. Pierce as well as the established comics scholars like Witek, Carrier, Sabin, Hatfield and Chute. This eclecticism helps El Refaie show the scope of comics scholarship and its relevance to interdisciplinary academic realms.

The explicitly stated purpose of the book is to investigate the phenomenon of autobiographical comics and to discern general patterns and trends. El Refaie restricts her research to comics in book format and so web comics and zines are omitted from this process. While all the chapters are theoretically informed, the focus is on the nature of life writing in comics, presenting the reader with examples and analysis which the author employs to identify formal and stylistic properties she perceives as common to the comics. There are five chapters organized around themes of marginality, embodiment, temporality, authenticity and readership, each chapter containing a consideration of a number of graphic works and drawing from a range of theory. The illustrations are chosen well but should be around twice the size that they have been reproduced in the book; many of them are too small to enjoy or too small to read easily, which is frustrating for the reader.

There is enough variety in the graphic works included in the book for this reviewer to make new discoveries (that will shortly fill my bookshelves) however many of the comics El Refaie analyses are the usual suspects. This is probably unavoidable when mining such a fledgling field, but it would be interesting to see the difference made to the text if for example self published zines and web-comics had been included, especially as this is an area in which women and other under represented groups are publishing more. I’m thinking particularly of ‘perzines’, personal stories in zine form, which predate the new trend for women’s life writing in comics by a couple of decades. This is no disadvantage to the book however, as a line must be drawn in the research somewhere.

Autobiographical Comics will be useful to many scholars and students and as a sourcebook and speculative exploration of a number of theoretical points it is a valuable contribution to the field. For El Refaie, the nature of life writing has shifted due to the recent surge in autobiographical comics, as have audiences for this type of work establishing an area worthy of serious analysis. This thought provoking, useful, wide ranging book, from a UK based academic is perhaps a little overdue, but it is very welcome, a sight for sore eyes as they say.

Autobiographical Comics is published by the University of Mississippi, a North American press which has made a major contribution to the body of work in comics scholarship, but was conceived by a European scholar during research supported by Cardiff University.

ISSUE #ONE CCA Glasgow 17th March 2014

Reviewed by Damon Herd

Over 150 people involved in comics converged on the Centre for Contemporary Arts (CCA) in Glasgow on Monday 17th March for an event where most of the audience were unsure of what was actually going to happen. The listing on the CCA’s website for ISSUE #ONE gave a little information but many people were left in the dark by the enigmatic announcement.

On the night the attending comics creators, retailers, reviewers, bloggers, publishers, fans, and academics only knew for certain that the event had been organised by the Scottish Independent Comic Book Alliance (SICBA), Black Hearted Press, and the Stirling Maxwell Centre. As it turned out the panel included Dr Laurence Grove, Director of the Stirling Maxwell centre, as well as other academics Dr Chris Murray, Senior Lecturer and head of the MLitt in Comic Studies, University of Dundee and Phillip Vaughan, Course Director, Duncan of Jordanstone College of Art. Publishers were represented by Sha Nazir, Art Director & Publisher, Black Hearted Press Ltd (Nazir is also a founder of SICBA) and Maria Welch, Publisher (Children’s Entertainment), DC Thomson Ltd. The panel was completed by Jenny Niven, Portfolio Manager for Literature, Publishing and Languages, Creative Scotland and Peter Watson of Forbidden Planet International, Glasgow.

The two hour symposium took the form of six questions pitched to the panel in a ‘Question Time’ style format, with time for audience questions after each topic had been discussed, and then a more in depth discussion at the end. The questions looked at themes of collaboration and mutual benefit in the industry, comics and education, the relationship between publishers (including small press) and retailers, digital comics, funding, and finished with a discussion on whether Scotland should have a National Comics Academy and Gallery.

Much of the discussion related around many positives in comics; Grove, Murray and Vaughan all noted that it had not been problematic at all to introduce comics courses into their respective educational establishments. Indeed, as a comics PhD student in Dundee myself I have noticed no resistance, and in fact benefit from the departments and courses that they have established. There was some discussion about comics and schools and how it seemed easier to get comics teaching into primary schools than secondary. In a discussion I had afterwards with a high school English teacher (who teaches comics) we debated whether high schools would take the lead from universities, and offer a Higher in comics if it lead to an undergraduate course in comics.

Both Nazir and Welch emphasized the importance of individual branding when promoting your work and Vaughan explained that a good press release makes a huge difference. Nazir also noted how advances in printing technology mean that no work should look unprofessional. The topic of funding was raised and Niven pointed out that Creative Scotland are very open to comics creators submitting a proposal and that changes to their funding procedures should now make this easier. I did feel that the focus of the discussions was ‘breaking into the industry’ and didn’t necessarily take into account the fanzine/small press scene who often make comics just for the sake of making comics.

Once you have created your comics what is the next step? When asked about getting small press comics into shops Watson asked creators to come and talk to them as Forbidden Planet were very happy to push home grown talent, with tourists being a particular market for them. A woman in the audience raised a point about a bad experience she had in FP where both staff and other customers had been far from welcoming. Watson could only apologise profusely and suggest that she speak to him or the managers in the shop but seemed slightly baffled that this could have happened. Other panelists noted that the increasing number of female creators and attendance of women at conventions was helping to improve situations such as these. The audience for ISSUE #ONE was approximately a 50:50 gender split although it was noted that the panel of seven (counting the host Gareth K. Vile) contained only two women.

The whole evening seemed to be building towards the question of whether Scotland should have a National Academy of Comics and whether Glasgow should become the new Angoulême. There seemed to be a slight bias towards Glasgow due to the organisers earmarking the nearby McLellan galleries as a potential venue for an Academy. However, the panel were keen to emphasise the strong ties between the comics scenes of Glasgow and Dundee; in fact the next ISSUE #ONE event is planned for Dundee. There seemed to be a general consensus that an Academy in Scotland was a good idea but less enthusiasm for an Angoulême in Scotland perhaps because this is something the Lakes International Comic Art Festival is working towards and Cumbria is right next door.

Overall the reaction to the symposium was very positive and there were some animated discussions in the bar afterwards. While an Academy may be a distant prospect at the moment it is exciting to see that projects such as these are being discussed. This first ISSUE #ONE symposium was positively reviewed in The Herald, a national newspaper in Scotland, so hopefully the second event will move on from just ‘preaching to the converted’ and involve the wider society in the debates. If Scotland is to have a National Academy then there will need to be work from inside and outside the comics community. I look forward to continuing the conversation at the second ISSUE #ONE.

The event was liveblogged by the organisers and you can see details here.

Louisa Parker is a PhD Candidate at Loughborough University. She is an artist and comics creator making work relating to lived experience and story telling and using a variety of visual forms including drawing, performance, installation, sound work, artists books and comics. She has been included in exhibitions and festivals in the UK, US and Singapore. Her self-published graphic narratives based on lived experience have covered themes such as nursing, disability, psychosis, and violence against women. Her first novel length comics work will be published in 2015.

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Damon Herd is a researcher and artist, currently working towards a PhD in Fine Art at Duncan of Jordanstone College of Art and Design, University of Dundee. His research area is life narratives told in the comics medium, with a particular interest in the games authors play with truth. He has recently presented papers at The International Graphic Novel & International Bande Dessinée Society Conference in Glasgow and Comics & The Multimodal World Conference in Vancouver. He has been published in Studies in Comics, and on The Comics Grid, and is a contributor to the comics blog Graphixia.

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Reviews editor: Hattie Kennedy (comicsforumreviews@outlook.com)

Click here to see the Reviews archive.

Queries relating to reviews can be sent to Hattie Kennedy at the email address above.

 
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Posted by on 2014/03/28 in Reviews

 

The Future Art of the Past? An e-panel on comics and archaeology – Part 2, edited by John Swogger

Featuring: Chloe Brown, Peter Connelly, Troy Lovata, Hannah Sackett, John Swogger and Al B. Wesolowsky

Click here to read part 1 of this panel.

Ancient artefacts, lost archaeological expeditions and ruins long hidden in jungles and deserts have long been part of comics heritage. From the EC Comics clichés of lost pyramids and ancient curses through to the Phantom and Adele Blanc-Sec, archaeology has long served as an inspiration for comics writers and illustrators.

It is only relatively recently that archaeologists themselves, however, have begun to use comics in a professional context. The list of published examples is not long, but includes works like Archaeology: The Comic (Johannes Loubser, 2003) and the archaeological comic ‘zine Shovel Bum (Trent DeBoer, ed., 1997 – present; collected edition, 2004).

This e-panel brings together six archaeologists, all of whom are making comics about archaeology, aimed at a wide range of audiences. Their work explores new ways of using comics as a medium for science communication.

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Read the rest of this entry »

 
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Posted by on 2014/03/13 in Guest Writers

 

The Future Art of the Past? An e-panel on comics and archaeology – Part 1, edited by John Swogger

Featuring: Chloe Brown, Peter Connelly, Troy Lovata, Hannah Sackett, John Swogger and Al B. Wesolowsky

Ancient artefacts, lost archaeological expeditions and ruins long hidden in jungles and deserts have long been part of comics heritage. From the EC Comics clichés of lost pyramids and ancient curses through to the Phantom and Adele Blanc-Sec, archaeology has long served as an inspiration for comics writers and illustrators.

It is only relatively recently that archaeologists themselves, however, have begun to use comics in a professional context. The list of published examples is not long, but includes works like Archaeology: The Comic (Johannes Loubser, 2003) and the archaeological comic ‘zine Shovel Bum (Trent DeBoer, ed., 1997 – present; collected edition, 2004).

This e-panel brings together six archaeologists, all of whom are making comics about archaeology, aimed at a wide range of audiences. Their work explores new ways of using comics as a medium for science communication.

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Read the rest of this entry »

 
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Posted by on 2014/03/11 in Guest Writers

 

News Review: February 2014

Americas

Canada

Education

There is a PhD scholarship available at the University of Calgary to pursue a doctoral study in comics in the Department of English. The proposed study will be supervised under Bart Beaty. Link (10/02/2014, English, WG)

Research

There is a call for papers for a proposed panel on Comics and Memory, to take place at the next Modern Language Association (MLA) convention, to be held in Vancouver in January 2015. Abstracts are due by the 10th March. Link (18/02/2014, English, WG)

There is a call for papers for a proposed panel on Comics and Immigration, to take place at the the next MLA convention (Vancouver, January 2015). Abstracts are due by the 8th March. Link (19/02/2014, English, WG)

There is a call for papers for a proposed panel on Global Comics and Nationalism, to take place at the next MLA convention. Abstracts are due by the 12th March. Link (21/02/2014, English, WG)

United States 

Business

DC Comics holds the top two spots for the top selling comics in January 2014, according to Diamond Comic Distributors. Scott Synder’s Batman #27, the over sized Detective Comics #27, and Avengers World #1 (Marvel) rounded out the top three spots. Link (English, MB)

Saga Volume 1 (Image), The Walking Dead Volume 1: Days Gone Bye (Image), and All-New X-Men Volume 1: Yesterday’s X-Men (Marvel) took the top three positions on the Top 100 Graphic Novels as reported by Diamond Comic Distributors. The numbers are based on total unit sales invoiced during the month of January 2014. Link (English, MB)

Culture

WonderCon 2014 is returning to Anaheim, California, between the 18th and 20th April. This year badges will only be sold online at their website. The Comics Arts Conference also returns to the convention to host a series of seminars about comics, and the schedule has been published online. Link (26/02/2014, English, MB)

There is a crowd funding campaign for the documentary, She Makes Comics, by Sequart Research & Literacy Organization. Link (English, WG)

Scholars behind the Comics Art Council have put together a crowd funding campaign to produce a documentary about Bill Finger. The documentary aims to shed light on Finger in lieu of his family’s upcoming bid to get the writer officially recognised as co-creator of Batman. Link (English, WG)

Education

The family of Dick Tracy creator, Chester Gould, have donated his comics work to Ohio State University’s Billy Ireland Cartoon Library & Museum. Link (04/02/2014, English, WG)

Obituaries

Artist, illustrator, teacher, and cartoonist, Bhob Stewart, passed away in late February. Known as the person who coined the phrase “Underground Comix”, Stewart worked with DC Comics and Topps’ Wacky Packages. Link (26/02/2014, English, MB)

Research

The Northeast Popular/American Culture Association has put out a call out for proposals which focus upon mainstream/independent comics, web/strip comics, and/or graphic novels. Papers are expected to analyse their sources with a theoretical framework that results in discussions about the role of comics in a broader cultural and critical context. The deadline to submit proposals is the 19th May, for the conference to be held in late October at Providence College, Rhode Island. Link (English, MB)

The works of Golden Age artist and classic illustrator, George Carlson, has been released by independent comics publisher Fantagraphics and edited by Daniel Yezbick titled Perfect Nonsense: The Chaotic Comics and Goofy Games of George Carlson. The book includes a career retrospective, critical analysis, biographical timeline, and many illustrations, some rare and not published before. Link (English, MB)

Southeast Asian Cartoon Art: History, Trends and Problems has recently been published by McFarland Publishing. Edited by John A. Lent, the anthology includes essays examining overarching themes of historical/contemporary overviews and socio-cultural/political issues. Link (English, MB)

There is a call for papers for the Rocky Mountain Conference on Comics and Graphic Novels 2014 (13th-15th June), which is now attached to the Denver Comic Con. The deadline for proposals is the 15th March. Link (02/02/2014, English, WG)

There is a call for papers for a collection to be published through McFarland entitled The Punk Aesthetic in Comics. Abstracts are due by the 2nd June. Link (20/02/2014, English, WG)

The collection, It Happens at Comic-Con: Ethnographic Essays on a Pop Culture Phenomenon, edited by Ben Bolling and Matthew J. Smith, has been published through McFarland. The collection  covers a range of topics associated with Comic-Con International, from issues of identity, gender, and communicative performance. Link (English, WG)

Asia

Japan

Culture

Kyoto International Manga Museum is hosting the third edition of the Kyoto MaGiC Exhibition, featuring fashion from manga titles. The exhibition runs from the 23rd March to the 8th June. This year the fashion designs are based on the manga titles, Mairunovitch, by Zakuri Sato, and Kimi ni todoke, by Karuho Shiina. Link (English, JBS)

There will be an exhibition on the Nouvelle Bande Dessinée at Kyoto International Manga Museum, from the 15th March until the 25th May. The exhibiting artists are A-li-ce, Fumio Obata, Freddy Nadolny Poustochkine, Gaëlle Duhazé, 
Jérôme Boulbès, and José Parrondo. Link (English, JBS)

On the 29th March, at Yonezawa Yoshihiro Memorial Library (Meiji University), Hosei Iwashita and Kentaro Miwa, with Go Ito as a facilitator, will hold a talk on “expressive structure in shojo manga” and “manga and film”. Link (Japanese, JBS)

Research

The 14th annual convention of the Japanese Society for Studies in Cartoon and Comics (JSSCC) will be held between the 28th and 29th June, at Kyoto Seika University and Kyoto International Manga Museum. The call for presentations is open until the 1st April. Link (Japanese, JBS)

Europe 

Belgium

Research

Pascal Lefèvre has set up a webpage “Tools for analyzing Graphic Narratives and Case Studies”, which summarises his last 20 years of work on the formal aspects of comics. The site can serve as a quick theoretical and practical introduction (for both students and fans) in ways to analyse comics. Link (English, WG)

France

Culture

Art Ludique in Paris will host a major Marvel Comics exhibition from the 22nd March until the 31st August. Link 1 (21/02/2014, French, LTa), Link 2 (English, LTa)

Bill Watterson, author of Calvin and Hobbes, has been awarded the Grand Prix at the 2014 Angoulême festival. Link 1 (02/02/2014, French, LTa), Link 2 (03/02/2014, English, LTa)

Obituary

François Cavanna, one of the founders of satirical bande dessinée publications Hara-Kiri and Charlie Hebdo, has died aged 91. Link (30/01/2014, French, LTa)

Germany

Culture

Comics Atlas Finnland has just been published by Reprodukt (2014). This publication is a German-language collection of Finish comics, including the work of Roope Eronen, Matti Hagelberg, Jarno Latva-Nikkola, Mika Lietzén, and Hanneriina Moisseinen (amongst many others). The volume reflects complementary themes of this year’s Frankfurt Book Fair, which has Finland as its theme; and the Helsinki Comics Festival, for which Germany is the theme country. Link 1 (24/02/2014, German, KBF), Link 2 (21/11/2013, English, KBF), Link 3 (English, KBF)

Journalist Andreas Platthaus has put together a collection of recent German-language comics that are going to be shown at book fairs around the world. Link (04/02/2014, German, MdlI)

An exhibition of comic artist Peter Eickmeyer is shown in Melle until the 24th February, and in Osnabrück from the 27th April. Link (06/02/2014, German, MdlI)

Comic magazine Reddition turns 30 this year; there is going to be an anniversary exhibition at Comic-Salon Erlangen in June. Link (10/02/2014, German, MdlI)

The convention Comic-Salon Erlangen is going to take place from the 19th – 22nd June this year. Link (12/02/2014, German, MdlI)

The convention, Comiciade, is going to take place in Aachen on the 4th and 5th April; guests include Roger Langridge and Hermann. Link (20/02/2014, German, MdlI)

A talk on web comics given by comic artist Sarah Burrini at Heinrich Heine University Düsseldorf in January has been made available online. Link (24/02/2014, German, MdlI)

Research

A workshop on “comic studies and media studies” is going to take place at Ruhr-Universität Bochum on the 25th and 26th April. Link (12/02/2014, German, MdlI)

Greece

Culture

There is a crowd funding campaign, organised by scholar Lida Tsene (amongst others), for a short story by French author, Marguerite Yourcenar, to be adapted into a Greek language graphic novel. Link (English/French, LTs)

Ireland

Business

There is a new online comic shop set up in Ireland. Link (English, SC)

Culture

Shelley Culbertson interviews Uproar Comics Danny McLaughlin. Link (English, SC)

There has been an updated list published for guests attending Dublin Comic Con, which takes place between the 9th and 10th August. Link (English, SC)

Portugal

Culture

The municipality of Setúbal is organising an exhibition titled “Fernão Mendes Pinto e a sua Peregrinação” (Fernão Mendes Pinto and his peregrination). The exhibition focuses on the work of the Portuguese Comic author, José Ruy, published in the magazine, Cavaleiro Andante, from December 1957 until June 1959. The exhibition will run until the 11th March in Casa da Cultura de Setúbal. Link (03/02/2014, Portuguese, RR)

The Art Center of São João da Madeira is organising a course on comics. It will take place from March until May in the Oliva Creative Factory. Link (26/02/2014, Portuguese, RR)

Sweden

Culture

The Stockholm International Comics Festival has confirmed its first guest, Olivier Martin, co-creator (with Sylvain Runberg) of Den Mörka Sidan (The Dark Side). Link (22/01/2014, Swedish, KBF)

UK

Business

Downthetubes has updated its figures for UK comic sales, which list sales up until December 2013. Link (English, WG)

Culture

As part of the forthcoming Eisner Week, there will be a  Round Table Symposium on the 5th March, at the Gilchrist Club, University of Glasgow. Academic staff and postgraduate students, alongside members of the comics industry will present good graphic novels that they have recently discovered. Link (English, WG)

Scott McCloud has been announced as a guest for the 2014 Lakes International Comic Art Festival, which takes place in Kendal between the 17th and 19th October. Link (07/02/2014, English, WG)

Education

Bournemouth University’s Media School is now inviting applications for the MA courses in Adaptation, and also Literary Media. Taught in part by Dr Julia Round, these courses will include the study of comics. There is also funding available (see Link 2). Link 1 (English, WG), Link 2 (English, WG)

Research

European Comic Art Volume 6, Issue 2, has recently been published. Link (English, WG)

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News Editor: Will Grady (comicsforumnews@hotmail.co.uk)

Correspondents: Jessica Bauwens-Sugimoto (JBS, Japan), Michele Brittany (MB, North America), Shelley Culbertson (SC, Ireland), Kristy Beers Fägersten (KBF, Germany, Sweden), William Grady (WG, UK), Martin de la Iglesia (MdlI, Germany), Renatta Rafaella (RR, Portugal) Lida Tsene (LTs, Greece), Lise Tannahill (LTa, France).

Click here for News Review correspondent biographies.

Click here to see the News Review archive.

Suggestions for articles to be included in the News Review can be sent to Will Grady at the email address above.

 
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Posted by on 2014/03/04 in News Review

 

Graphixia at Comics Forum 2013

Comics Forum is pleased to feature five videos today by the team from Graphixia. The first four videos, under the collected title of ‘Small is the New Big: The Comics Criticism Blog as Small Press Analogue’ comprise the Graphixia panel from the 2013 conference, including in-person presentations from Peter Wilkins, Hattie Kennedy, Damon Herd and Paddy Johnston, as well as off-site videos from Brenna Clarke Gray and David N. Wright. The fifth video ‘Graphixia interviews at Comics Forum 2013’ includes interviews with many of the presenters who participated in Comics Forum 2013. For more from the Graphixia team be sure to check out their website. Many thanks to the team for making these videos available for publication here.

IH

Small is the New Big: The Comics Criticism Blog as Small Press Analogue

Video 1 – Graphixia Comics Forum Conference Panel from Digital Cultures Lab on Vimeo.

Video 2- Graphixia Comics Forum Conference Panel from Digital Cultures Lab on Vimeo.

Video 3 – Graphixia Comics Forum Conference Panel from Digital Cultures Lab on Vimeo.

Video 4 – Graphixia Comics Forum Conference Panel from Digital Cultures Lab on Vimeo.

Graphixia interviews at Comics Forum 2013

Graphixia interviews at Comics Forum 2013 from Digital Cultures Lab on Vimeo.