Graphic
life narratives, especially memoirs, diaries, and auto/biographies in the form
of comics, have flourished over the three decades since the landmark
publication of Art Spiegelman’s Maus. As a distinct field that combines life
narrative studies and comics studies, graphic life narrative scholarship has
gravitated towards texts that visualize stories of the self in relation to
memory, history, trauma, and reconciliation within familial, cultural, and
national contexts. This special issue seeks to expand the scope of graphic life
narrative studies to consider how migration, exile, and diaspora are prominent
experiences in print and digital auto/biographical comics.
We invite
submissions on graphic life narratives from both traditional centers of comics
production (North America, United Kingdom, France, Belgium, Japan) and from
under-studied regions (e.g. the Middle East, sub-Saharan Africa, South America,
South Asia, the Caribbean). We are especially interested in submissions that
take up issues of form as well as content within the transcultural contexts of
graphic life narratives about migration, exile, and diaspora.
Some
questions this issue may consider:
- How can cartoonists mobilize the visual-verbal form of comics to represent experiences of forced and voluntary movement in their own lives and the lives of others?
- How do graphic life narratives of migration, exile, and diaspora contend with memory, trauma, history, and survival in individual lives and across generations?
- What visual tropes, techniques, and traditions are emerging in migration, exile, and diasporic graphic life narratives? How can comics accommodate transcultural life experiences visually?
- How does the visual-verbal form engage the reader’s and/or the cartoonist’s sense of responsibility to bear witness to political and personal crises that have prompted the mass movement and displacement of peoples across borders?
We invite
contributions that expand disciplinary approaches to auto/biographical comics
to include theory and practices of life narrative in postcolonial and diasporic
studies, critical refugee studies, globalization studies, digital studies,
media and communications, art history, narrative studies, performance studies,
disability studies, gender and sexuality studies, war and conflict studies, childhood
and youth studies, and critical race theory.
Possible
topics could include:
- autobiographical coming-of-age in exile/in the diaspora
- intergenerational and intercultural conflict
- sexuality and sexual coming-of-age
- racial, cultural, and religious conflict
- class inequities and differences
- family dynamics across borders
- transnational identities
- border crossings/transgressions/surveillance
- web comics and digital diasporas
- memory and nostalgia
- childhood and the figure of the child
- maps, mapping, place and placelessness
- family archives, photographs, albums, and artifacts
- trauma and resilience
- testimony and witness
- domesticity, domicility, hospitality, and home-making
- visual tropes of movement and mobility
- ethics of representation and collaboration
- cultural translation and questions of audience
Include a
coversheet with your name and contact details with a 50 word bio. Authors must
also include a fifty-word abstract and two to four keywords with their
submissions. Essays should be 6,000-8,000 words including citations. Citations
should be in the Chicago Manual of Style 17th Edition.
This
journal supports the inclusion of both black & white and color images and
publishes ancillary digital and multimedia texts on the journal’s Routledge
website. Inquiries welcome.
Images with
captions must be submitted in a separate file as 300 dpi (or higher) tif files.
It is the author’s responsibility to secure any necessary copyright permissions
and essays may not progress into the publication stage without written proof of
right to reprint.
All essays
submitted for the special issue, but not selected, will be considered general
submissions and may be selected for publication. Inquiries welcome. Submissions
are due October 1, 2018.
Please email
submissions to the co-editors: Nima Naghibi nnaghibi@ryerson.ca and Candida Rifkind c.rifkind@uwinnipeg.ca
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