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Nele Noppe

Call for papers: IBBY UK/NCRCL MA CONFERENCE, 14 NOVEMBER 2009 Roehampton University, L... - 0 views

  • IBBY UK/NCRCL MA CONFERENCE, 14 NOVEMBER 2009 Roehampton University, London - Call for Papers The theme this year is Comics and Graphic Novels. Graphic novels are becoming increasingly popular and diverse in the UK and have been highly valued in many countries, notably France, Belgium and Japan, for many years. The 2009 IBBY UK/NCRCL MA conference will explore the developing interest in this medium from a variety of perspectives, in addition to considering developments in the range and content of comics available to children and young people. The conference will include keynote presentations by well-known writers, publishers and academics. Proposals are welcomed for workshop sessions (lasting about 20 minutes) on the following or other relevant issues: International perspectives – comics and graphic novels in a particular culture and/or across cultures Comics from a contemporary or historical perspective. Has the number and range of comics declined and, if so, why? Manga - its origins in Japan and developments and adaptations in other cultures New literacies – the changing interface between visual images and text Links between media – computer games, films, internet comics, character toys Animations and cartoons The work of individual and collective creators of comics and graphic novels. What collaborations are involved in the production of a graphic novel? Is the author a major or minor player in the design of a graphic novel? Use of artistic styles – colour/black and white artwork/photography/fonts and typography. What are the technical complexities of producing comics and graphic novels? Engagement of children and young people with/through this medium. Is there a particular appeal to the `reluctant' reader? Gendered reading. Do comics and graphic novels have more appeal to male readers? Controversial issues/taboo subjects – the notion of `appropriate' material for What is the appeal of a graphic novel as against an illustrated book? How do picture books compare in popularity with graphic novels for a younger age group? We welcome contributions from interested academics and others. of these areas. Brief accounts of the papers that are presented at the conference will be published in the Spring 2010 issue of IBBYLink, the journal of British IBBY. Also we hope that the proceedings of the conference will be published later that year in full in book form. The deadline for proposals is 20 July 2009. Please email a 200-word abstract (for a 20-minute paper) as an attached Word document to Pat Pinsent and also contact her if your require any further information on this call for papers. Please also include a short biography and affiliation. Pat Pinsent, 23 Burcott Road, Purley, CR8 4AD. Tel: (020) 8668 4093. Email: patpinsent@aol.com The IBBY has just opened the CFP for its September 2010 conference in Santiago de Compostela, Spain. The theme is "The Strength of Minorities". Details here: http://www.ibbycompostela2010.org/ Topics Children's and young people's literature: a minority area within the literature arena Despite the high quality and notable presence of children's book editions and the general growth of literature, they still hold a minority status in the eyes of editors, writers and the media, generally. Why are we writing or illustrating for children in these conditions? Children's and young people's literature in minority languages: from difference to survival Literature written in minority languages invariably face a wide set of challenges. Its survival is dependent on factors such as socio-political context, the extent of the official status bestowed on them and the general public response to cultural and linguistic diversity. Children's books can contribute towards the standardization of the edition in minority languages. However, publishers targeting a reduced market undoubtedly encounter many difficulties. Readers in a minority situation Children and young people with disabilities or special needs usually encounter many obstacles with regards to access to books or the pleasure of reading. We must find solutions to help combat these difficulties. A readership bereft of childhood Books and reading matter are generally considered staples for intellectual and cultural development and the growth of the youngest members of society. However, not all children have easy access to books. How do we broach the subject of books and reading material with those readers who missed out on their childhood: exploited children and those without even enough to eat? I am a reading girl, you are a reading boy... Do we still need children's literature which takes into account the gender issue? How do we tackle questions relating to sexual orientation and the rights of sexual minorities within children's books? Globalizing diversity and tolerance through children's books The 21st century must ensure the survival of minorities on the road to a better future. Diversity and tolerance - which are vital for a fairer world - must respectively make inroads in relation to minority groups.
Ariane Beldi

Transformative Works and Cultures - 1 views

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    "Transformative Works and Cultures (TWC) is an international, peer-reviewed journal published by the Organization for Transformative Works. TWC publishes articles about transformative works, broadly conceived; articles about media studies; and articles about the fan community. We invite papers in all areas, including fan fiction, fan vids, film, TV, anime, comic books, fan community, video games, and machinima. We encourage a variety of critical approaches, including feminism, gender studies, queer theory, postcolonial theory, audience theory, reader-response theory, literary criticism, film studies, and posthumanism. We also encourage authors to consider writing personal essays integrated with scholarship; hyperlinked articles; or other forms that test the limits of the genre of academic writing."
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    This online journal is opened to work on anime and manga fandom, so I thought this would be of interest to this group!
Nele Noppe

Office sluts and rebel flowers: the pleasures of Japanese pornographic comics for women - 0 views

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    from Porn Studies
Nele Noppe

Pornography or therapy? Japanese girls creating the yaoi phenomenon - 0 views

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    from Millennium Girls
Nele Noppe

The social production of gender as reflected in two Japanese culture industry products:... - 0 views

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    from 'Themes and Issues in Asian Cartooning'
Nele Noppe

Female masculinity and fantasy spaces: Transcending genders in the Takarazuka Theatre a... - 0 views

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    in 'Men and masculinities in contemporary Japan'
Nele Noppe

PostGender: Gender, Sexuality and Performativity in Japanese Culture - 3 views

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    by Ayelet Zohar
Nele Noppe

Call for Papers: Images of Women in Film and Media - 0 views

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    MP journal seeks submissions that explore the ways Women/Femininity/Female agency are depicted in visual media such as video games, television, film, animation (anime), comic books, graphic novels, or any other visual depictions.
Nele Noppe

Dictionnaire de l'amour et du plaisir au Japon - 0 views

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    by Agnès Giard
Nele Noppe

L'imaginaire érotique au Japon - 0 views

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    by Agnès Giard
Nele Noppe

Cute but deadly: women and violence in Japanese comics - 0 views

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    from 'Themes and Issues in Asian Cartooning'
Nele Noppe

The Comics Reporter - 0 views

  • Although I imagine the finger will be pointed at a lack of effective marketing -- 1) every market failure can be seen as a failure of marketing, 2) effective target marketing is a legitimate problem within comics, 3) people in comics like to invoke marketing as a sort of magic pixie dust -
  • My gut says that a bigger set of factors may have been more along the lines of what I would call structural: how/if to sell these books through Direct Market accounts,
  • where to shelve them in bookstores,
  • ...4 more annotations...
  • Minx did a good job with the marketing. They just forgot to ask us to put the books in the right place. It's that simple.
  • "Where to shelve them is everything," Smith wrote. "The spine is everything. Manga publishers understand this. Marvel and DC don't have a clue."
  • No matter how much money you spend on outside marketing, twenty-two months is a brutally short time in which to nurture a comics imprint.
  • it also stands as a vote of no-confidence from one of comics' biggest entities in doing comics their way for that market -- or, really, any market not superheroes.
Nele Noppe

Uneasy Warriors: Gender, Memory, and Popular Culture in the Japanese Army - 0 views

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    by Sabine Fruhstuck
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