This will be an open access scholarly collection edited by Dr Brenna Clarke Gray (Douglas College, New Westminster, Canada) and the Comics Grid editorial team.
This call for papers explicitly invites submissions from early-career, marginalised, or underrepresented scholars, including those who are people of colour, queer, or woman-identifying.
In late October 2012, the University of Limerick in Ireland hosted ‘Strange Fascination? A Symposium on David Bowie’ over three days, offering an academic platform to discuss and celebrate the work of what most people agree is one of the most significant figures in contemporary popular culture. Emerging from the papers presented at the conference, the bookDavid Bowie: Critical Perspectives was released in April 2015. Edited by Eoin Devereux, Aileen Dillane, and Martin J. Power and published by Routledge, the book includes 18 essays on Bowie’s work. While this work represents an excellent and meaningful contribution to the field of Bowie Studies, the essays included do not intersect with the notion of the comic. This special issue, then, will build upon and complicate our notion of Bowie scholarship by directly engaging with the comic and the graphic in Bowie’s work, and with Bowie's diverse and complex presence and influence in comics worldwide.
As Devereux, Dillane and Power state in the preface to their collection, ‘in our media-saturated world the word ‘iconic’ is an overused and abused term. David Bowie is one of the few artists to whom the term is deservedly ascribed’ (2015, Preface, xiv). In spite of Bowie’s ‘iconic’ presence in popular culture, there is still a paucity of critical studies on Bowie’s influence and presence in the medium of comics, particularly from the vantage point of traditionally underrepresented voices and methodologies within established academia in general and comics studies in specific. Multidisciplinary, multimodal research on Bowie does exist, but scholarly approaches focusing on comics remain the exception rather than the norm (see, for example, film and comics scholar Will Brooker’s ongoing work on Bowie).
This call for papers seeks to encourage more diverse, open access comics scholarship around ‘David Bowie’ as a cultural phenomenon. The editors do not wish to establish thematic or methodological boundaries to this call, and invite colleagues to submit research work inspired by its title. Submissions, however, must fulfil The Comics Grid’s editorial guidelines, which are available here
The Comics Grid: Journal of Comics Scholarship is an open access journal; authors retain copyright of their own work and the published content is made available on HTML and PDF under a Creative Commons-Attribution License.
Submissions can be in any of the article types listed in our author guidelines. It is essential all research submissions include and directly refer to and discuss, in-text, specific examples of comics (panels, pages). Please ensure you have read the author guidelines carefully before submitting. Submissions must be uploaded directly to the journal here. All research submissions are subject to peer review. For technical specifications and special guidelines for research presented in comics form, please contact the editors before submitting.
Important dates
Submission deadline (full papers): 1 September 2016
Estimated Acceptance/Rejection Notices date: 1 December 2016
Estimated Publication date, depending on revisions and editorial processes: March 2017
http://www.comicsgrid.com/
Dr Ernesto Priego
@ernestopriego
https://epriego.wordpress.com/
http://www.comicsgrid.com/
Subscribe to the Comics Grid Newsletter: http://eepurl.com/iOYAj
@ernestopriego
https://epriego.wordpress.com/
http://www.comicsgrid.com/
Subscribe to the Comics Grid Newsletter: http://eepurl.com/iOYAj
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