Tuesday, July 02, 2013

CFP: The Comics of Hergé / essay collection (Jan. 1, 2014)

As posted on the Comics Scholars' list...
 
Call for Papers
The Comics of Hergé

The Comics of Hergé is a proposed volume in a new book series, Critical Approaches to Comics Artists, at the University Press of Mississippi. This volume will contain 12-16 new critical essays on Hergé, ranging from his work in advertising, illustrations for others' writings, and comics to film and television adaptations of his work. Essays from many disciplinary perspectives are welcome, including critical approaches from comics studies, art history, cultural studies, religious and ethical studies, literary studies, linguistics, history, political science, gender theory, postcolonial studies, and adaptation theory.

Essays (in English) might address the following questions:
  • What important connections can be made between Hergé's non-comics work—for example, his illustrations for Léon Degrelle and his work in advertising—and the work for which he became famous?
  • Although analysis of Hergé's work has focused almost exclusively on Tintin, how would our understanding of his masterpiece benefit from better attention to his lesser-known comics? How has the previous focus on Tintin denied important insights on these works?
  • How did Hergé's growing interest in modern art change the work he did in comics?
  • How has Hergé's ligne claire influenced or been challenged by subsequent artists, including those with whom he worked over his long career?
  • How do Hergé's ideas of eastern religions come through in his interviews and/or art? To what extent were these ideas accurate, and how do those ideas illuminate other aspects of his life and art?
  • To what extent does Tintin's nationality, increasingly obscured over the course of the series, matter? To what extent does his status as a citizen of Brussels signify in the ongoing internal tensions of Belgium?
  • Some important comics creators—such as Edgar Jacobs and Jacques Van Melkebeke—benefitted from and have been overshadowed by Hergé. What new research can shed light on Hergé’s relationship with these creators and how that relationship affected comics?
  • How does Hergé obscure sexual desire in his works, and where does it appear despite his efforts? Is there a difference between his treatment of desire in his works for different audiences?
  • What other absences does Hergé enforce in his comics, and to what effect?
  • Numa Sadoul’s book of interviews with Hergé—interviews Hergé edited before they saw print—remains pivotal to the study of Hergé long after its publication. What arguments, revisions, insights, expansions, or even corrections are now necessary?
  • Other topics are also very welcome.
Please send a 500-word abstract along with CV and contact information to Joe Sutliff Sanders at joess@k-state.edu by January 1, 2014.

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Monday, December 13, 2010

CFP: Independent Comics Worldwide. Drawing a Line / Establishing Connections (University of Liege, Belgium) (March 15; November 16-18)

INDEPENDENT
COMICS WORLDWIDE
DRAWING A LINE /
ESTABLISHING CONNECTIONS


SUMMARY

The comics research group ACME (University of Liege) is pleased to present their forthcoming conference entitled “Independent Comics Worldwide. Drawing a Line / Establishing Connections”. Held at the University of Liege, Belgium, from Wed 16 to Fri 18 November 2011, the conference seeks to discuss comics (including graphic novels) from all over the world in their most innovative, subversive or dissident manifestations by focusing on the publishing structures – independent or claiming to be – hosting them.

DISCUSSION

As a consequence of the rationalizing of means in the publishing business, in concert with the emergence of new participants in the sector (heavy industry, communication groups, investment banks), a more profit-oriented mentality has severely changed the principles governing the production and distribution of cultural goods in the last quarter of the twentieth century. The demand for economic guarantees now underpins harsher editorial gatekeeping practices and has created a threshold for works that are deemed less likely to bring in the financial revenues the publisher counts upon.


Reacting against such economic strategies, new structures have surfaced in order to challenge the existing system. Whether they are called “independent”, “alternative”, “underground” or “avant-garde”, these initiatives share a common goal in their activities. They are dedicated to the development of an original catalogue, in which thematic and aesthetic otherness is considered a plus. Moreover, they firmly believe in the “small is beautiful” approach to publishing. Following the examples set by painting, cinema and music, the publishing business, in its broadest sense, thus seems to have reached a point of self-contradiction.

Part and parcel of the publishing industry, comics have likewise undergone the effects of the janus-headed couple commercialization/rebellion and the fracturing of allegiance it entails. In the Franco-Belgian scene of the 1990s, a wave of independent publishing houses such as L’Association, Cornelius, Amok, Fréon, ego comme x or Les Requins Marteaux, defended the possibility of a “different” kind of comics. Assuredly, these publishing structures had their precursors, one thinks for instance of Futuropolis, les Éditions du Fromage, Audie or Artefact and their attempts at contravening a status quo established by an order all too intent on defending its own premises. Unprecedented in the 1990s was the emergence of a group of self-conscious publishers whose raison d’être was, and still is, a willingness to counterbalance the massive industrialization of comics. This group — or should we call it a generation — drew a line under standardized business practice, under traditions and codes of mainstream comics, but also established its own connections with chosen predecessors, local peers or similar enterprises abroad.

Straddling all frontiers, similar reactions against the norm have emerged elsewhere. The underground movement that developed in the U.S. at the end of the 1960s, for example, has given rise to important publishers such as Kitchen Sink Press or (a little later) Fantagraphics Books. From the 1980s onwards, these publishers were home to “alternative” comics. The authors of these comics went on to become key figures of the “graphic novel”. But apart from new authors, this new kind of publishers also reprinted and rehabilitated chosen predecessors. Moreover, professional self-publishing and a vivid scene of “minicomics” — either xeroxed or published online — have extended the field of possibilities for American cartoonists who wanted to make comics without resorting to the ubiquitous studio system.

Without denying the particularities of each geographic area, it can nevertheless be affirmed that the independent movement in comics is currently a worldwide phenomenon, in the Dutch speaking part of Belgium, in Italy or Switzerland and, outside Europe as well, in Asia, America or even South Africa.

Inspired by this creative rebirth, the conference “Independent Comics Worldwide. Drawing a Line / Establishing Connections” seeks to discuss comics and graphic novels from all over the world in their most innovative, subversive or dissident manifestations by focusing on the publishing structures – independent or claiming to be – hosting them.

A first panel of the conference will discuss the concepts that are called upon to make sense of this new aesthetic vitality in comics. However interchangeable they may seem to be, the terms “independent”, “alternative” “underground” or “avant-garde” (often set in contradistinction with “mainstream” or the French “BD”) are not devoid of connotations or prejudices in certain types of discourse. Unravelling the complexities of this terminological profusion and the agenda behind its uses becomes therefore an urgent task.

A second panel will analyse the stylistic and thematic similarities and contrasts that can be observed among countries and regions, as well as independents in distinct publishing houses. On a formal level, possible points of comparison include the increased page count, the preference for black and white and/or for pictorial or minimalist drawing styles, and so on. On a thematic level, the tendency towards introspection, the exploration of unfamiliar types of realism, the inclination towards political activism or towards gender-related themes are possible angles from which to approach the production of both authors and publishing houses.

A third panel will tackle the socioeconomic and political aspects of independent comics worldwide. Possible topics are the nature of the independent character in relation, for instance, to a powerful industry, an insecure market or an intrusive authority, the diversity of technical methods used by the publishing structures (production, distribution and commercialization), the appreciation of and support for these structures by public institutions (if any), the collaborative efforts made by these structures (if any), the possibilities of contacts abroad (translation or others: rights markets, festivals, informal contacts) or the ways to legitimize and collect their aesthetic experimentations (targeted anthologies, book fairs and festivals or thematic exhibitions).

Please e-mail anonymous abstracts of about 300 words (in English or French) to acme2011@ulg.ac.be before March 15th, 2011. Please send one file (MS Word or pdf) with the abstract on one page and the contact details on another.
Notification of acceptance: May 1st, 2011.
Conference languages: English and French.

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Saturday, August 01, 2009

Tintin in a Station of the Metro


The apparition of these figures on the walls;
Bas-reliefs on long, white surfaces.

I've been to Brussels several times, but I don't believe I ever rode the metro. Which means that I missed the opportunity to see the giant Tintin murals in the Stockel metro station! Sob. (Surely, finding out this information was an omen: I must get back to Brussels soon, one way or another.)

But the next best thing might be to visit the station virtually, thanks to BrusselsPictures.com. Check out their exhaustive photo set of the 140 characters from Hergé's Tintin books appearing in the murals. As Captain Haddock might exclaim, "Ten thousand thundering typhoons!"

(Tip o' th' pin to The Ephemerist!)

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Thursday, July 30, 2009

Early Comics Published in Belgium: A New Blog by Pascal Lefèvre

Internationally regarded comics scholar/historian (and friend) Pascal Lefèvre has announced his new blog. I'll let him describe it, from his initial posting:
This is my research blog on Early Comics published in Belgium before Hergé's Tintin (1929). I've been browsing through Belgian periodicals and popular prints for the last five years and found already scores of examples, but most of them are reprints and translations from abroad. So, this blog will be mainly about early comics from an international perspective. I'm hoping to share parts of my research and foster some dialogue with other researchers. I've lots of plans, various articles are waiting to be published (see [the complete blog post] for former and projected publications). By the end of this year I'll put up also a website about my research.
I became a fan of Pascal's work even before I had the pleasure of meeting him, upon discovering his book (with Jan Baetens) Pour une lecture moderne de la Bande Dessinée in the bookstore of the Centre Belge de la Bande Dessinée [Belgian Comic Strip Center] in Brussels. I await his next post with great anticipation!

Image Credit: Dr. Lefèvre's Academia.edu page.

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