Comics and Stuff: A Virtual Book Club

Comics and Stuff: A Virtual Book Club

Please join me and a range of interesting guests for what we hope will be a lively discussion of my book, Comics and Stuff, and more broadly, of comics, comic studies, and living with our stuff. Each sessions will feature voices from multiple disciplinary backgrounds whose work as scholars and artists helped to shape this book.  Those attending any given Zoom session will get the most out of the experience if they have read the relevant passage from the book, but, of course, we welcome people who are encountering these ideas for the first time.

What’s the Big idea?

For most of their history, comics were widely understood as disposable―you read them and discarded them, and the pulp paper they were printed on decomposed over time. Today, comic books have been rebranded as graphic novels―clothbound high-gloss volumes that can be purchased in bookstores, checked out of libraries, and displayed proudly on bookshelves. They are reviewed by serious critics and studied in university classrooms. A medium once considered trash has been transformed into a respectable, if not elite, genre.

Contemporary culture is awash with stuff. Contemporary graphic novels give vivid expression to a culture preoccupied with the processes of circulation and appraisal, accumulation and possession. By design, comics encourage the reader to scan the landscape, to pay attention to the physical objects that fill our lives and constitute our familiar surroundings. Because comics take place in a completely fabricated world, everything is there intentionally. Comics are stuff; comics tell stories about stuff; and they display stuff. In this book, stuff refers not only to physical objects, but also to the emotions, sentimental attachments, and nostalgic longings that we express―or hold at bay―through our relationships with stuff.

Host—Henry Jenkins, Provost’s Professor of Communication, Journalism, Cinematic Art, and Education at the University of Southern California, is the author or editor of 20 books on various aspects of media and popular culture. Among them are Textual Poachers: Television Fans and Participatory Culture, Convergence Culture: Where Old and New Media Collide, Popular Culture and the Civic Imagination: Case Studies of Creative Social Change, and Comics and Stuff

Moderator—Drew Morton is an Associate Professor of Mass Communication at Texas A&M University–Texarkana. He is the author of Panel to the Screen: Style, American Film, and Comic Books During the Blockbuster Era (University Press of Mississippi, 2016) and cofounder and coeditor of [in]Transition, the award-winning journal devoted to Videographic Criticism. He is currently editing an anthology on the Watchmen sequels.  

Audience Chair—William Proctoris Principal Lecturer in Comics, Film and Transmedia at Bournemouth University. He is the co-editor of the books Transmedia Earth: Global Convergence Cultures (with Matthew Freeman) and the award-winning Disney's Star Wars: Forces of Production, Promotion, and Reception (with Richard McCulloch). William is a leading expert on the history and theory of reboots, and is currently preparing his debut monograph on the topic for publication, Reboot Culture: Comics, Film, Transmedia for Palgrave Macmillan. He has also published widely on a broad array of subjects including Batman, James Bond, Stephen King,  Star Trek, Star Wars, and other forms of popular culture. William is also co-editor on the forthcoming edited collection Horror Franchise Cinema(with Mark McKenna) and he is associate editor of the website Confessions of an Aca-Fan

Weds. June 17 10-11:30 a.m. (Pacific)

How to Look at Stuff

(Introduction, Chapter One)

In this session, we will discuss, among other things, how the features of comics as a medium create particular relationships to the objects that are being depicted; what comics scholars can learn from earlier moments of art history about the relationship between material culture and visual representation; how new configurations of knowledge and expertise are forming online as collectors come together to discuss meaningful “stuff.” 

Nick Sousanis

Nick Sousanis is an Eisner-winning comics author and an associate professor in Humanities & Liberal Studies at San Francisco State University, where he runs an interdisciplinary Comics Studies program. He is the author of Unflattening, originally his doctoral dissertation, which he wrote and drew entirely in comics form. Published by Harvard University Press in 2015, Unflattening received the 2016 American Publishers Association Humanities award for Scholarly Excellence and the 2016 Lynd Ward prize for Best Graphic Novel. Sousanis’s comics have appeared in NatureThe Boston Globe, and Columbia Magazine. More at http://www.spinweaveandcut.comor Tw @nsousanis

Lisa Pons

Lisa Pon is a historian of European art, architecture and material culture made between the fifteenth and seventeenth centuries, and professor of art history at USC.  Her research and teaching focus on the mobilities of art, artistic authority and collaboration, and the Renaissance concept of copia or abundance.  Her most recent book, Printed Icon:  Forlì’s Madonna of the Fire, examined an early print on paper that did not burn in a fire in 1428, and the consequences of that survival.

Will Straw

Will Straw is James McGill Professor of Urban Media Studies at McGill University in Montreal.  His interests include magazine history, theories of collecting and the culture of the urban night. 

Tuesday June 23rd 10 a.m. (Pacific)

Collecting Stories

(Chapters 2-5)

In this session, we will discuss how contemporary graphic novels have explored themes of collecting and accumulation; how collecting comics has been a central aspect of how comics artists orient themselves to their medium’s history; why artists are motivated to pay special attention to the material objects with which they populate their worlds; and how shared experiences of collecting helps to bridge between writers and readers of comics.

Bryan Talbot

Bryan Talbot has written and drawn comics and graphic novels for over 40 years, including Judge Dredd, Batman, Sandman, The Adventures of Luther Arkwright, The Tale of One Bad RatAlice in Sunderland,Dotter of Her Father’s Eyes(written by Mary Talbot and the winner of the 2013 Costa Biography Award)and five volumes of his Grandville series of steampunk detective thrillers. He is published in over twenty countries, is a frequent guest at international comic festivals, and has been awarded an honorary Doctorate in Arts and an honorary Doctorate in Letters and elected a Fellow of the Royal Society of Literature. http://www.bryan-talbot.com

Lincoln Geraghty

Lincoln Geraghty is Professor of Media Cultures in the School of Film, Media and Communication at the University of Portsmouth, UK. Major publications include Living with Star Trek: American Culture and the Star Trek Universe(IB Tauris, 2007), American Science Fiction Film and Television(Berg, 2009) and Cult Collectors: Nostalgia, Fandom and Collecting Popular Culture (Routledge, 2014). 

Jared Gardner

Jared Gardner is Professor of English and director of Popular Culture Studies at Ohio State University, where he spends all the time he can at the Billy Ireland Cartoon Library & Museum. He is the author and editor of a few books on comics, including Projections: Comics and the History of 21st-Century Storytelling.

Bart Beaty

Bart Beaty  is the author, editor, and translator of more than twenty books in the field of comics studies, including Twelve-Cent Archie (2015) and Comics versus Art (2012). He is the general editor of the Critical Survey of Graphic Novels (2012; revised 2018–2019) and the lead researcher on the What Were Comics? project (whatwerecomics.com).

William Proctor

William Proctor is Principal Lecturer in Comics, Film and Transmedia at Bournemouth University. He is the co-editor of the books Transmedia Earth: Global Convergence Cultures (with Matthew Freeman) and the award-winning Disney's Star Wars: Forces of Production, Promotion, and Reception (with Richard McCulloch). William is a leading expert on the history and theory of reboots, and is currently preparing his debut monograph on the topic for publication, Reboot Culture: Comics, Film, Transmedia for Palgrave Macmillan. He has also published widely on a broad array of subjects including Batman, James Bond, Stephen King,  Star Trek, Star Wars, and other forms of popular culture. William is also co-editor on the forthcoming edited collection Horror Franchise Cinema(with Mark McKenna) and he is associate editor of the website Confessions of an Aca-Fan

Tuesday June 30 10 a.m. (Pacific)

Object Lessons

(Chapters  6-8, Epilogue)

In this session, we will discuss how scrapbooks helped to inform the aesthetics of women’s graphic storytelling practices; the ways the depiction of “stuff” in graphic stories has been tied to family history and more generally, aspects of the past that sit uneasily in the present; the different kinds of stories women and artists of color have told about their relationships to the material world.

Rebecca Wanzo

Rebecca Wanzo is professor and chair of Women, Gender, and Sexuality Studies at Washington University in St. Louis. She is the author of The Suffering Will Not Be Televised: African American Women and Sentimental Political Storytelling (SUNY, 2009) and The Content of Our Caricature: African American Comic Art and Political Belonging (NYU 2020). Her essays have been published in journals such as American LiteratureCamera Obscuradifferences: a Journal of Feminist Cultural Studies,  The Journal of Popular CultureWomen and Performance, and numerous edited collections. Her research interests include popular culture, African American literature, critical race theory, and feminist media studies. 

Hillary Chute

Hillary Chute is Distinguished Professor of English and Art + Design at Northeastern University. She is the author or editor of six books on comics, including, most recently, Why Comics? From Underground to Everywhere(Harper, 2017). She is a comics and graphic novels columnist for the New York Times Book Review

Joyce Farmer 

Joyce Farmer has been a cartoonist since the series, Tits and Clits (1972-1987). Controversial at first,  she is now considered a pioneer of underground comix.  Her graphic memoir Special Exits (2010) won the Reuben and was nominated for the Eisner. The book has been translated into five languages.

For more information on registration go to the RVSP link at the following:

Part I: How to Look at Stuff

Part II: Collecting Stories

Part III: Object Lessons