Comics Picturing Girlhood Symposium

Comics have long relied on reinforcing reader identity formation whether through interest, age group or hobbies. Constructed and largely mythical notions of gendered readership consequently became key aspects of many of these comics. As gendered products, comics have constructed feminine role models and identities to which girls have replied with both rebellion and conformity. The aim of this symposium is to inspire and promote discourse around comparative constructions of girlhood. This exploration will consider relationships between and influences on European girls’ comics in the twentieth and twenty-first centuries.

Due to the pandemic of covid-19, this conference will take place online. To attend the talks, register here.

Programme

Download the full programme in PDF.

If you wish to read the abstracts and want to get to know our participants better, download the AbstractBook.

 

Thursday 22 April

11 – 12:30 Welcome – Dona Pursall & Eva Van de Wiele (Ghent University)
Keynote – Mel Gibson (Northumbria University Newcastle)
Professional Identity, Girlhood Comics, Affection, Nostalgia and Embarrassment + Q&ALearn about her publications and trainings on her website.
13:30 – 14:30 Panel 1 – Disability in Girl Comics (Chair: John Miers)
Charlotte J. Fabricius (University of Southern Denmark)
Beyond the WASP: Disability, Community, and Girl Power in The Unstoppable Wasp
JoAnn Purcell (York University and Seneca College)
What Does a Girl with an Intellectual Disability Really Want?
15 – 16:30 Panel 2 – Beyond Fact and Fiction (Chair: Michel De Dobbeleer)
María Porras Sánchez (Universidad Complutense de Madrid)
‘A harrowing, transient girlhood’: Representations of Refugee Girls in the Context of European Migrant Crisis
Giorgio Busi Rizzi (Ghent University)
Green Apples Sometimes Fall Far from the Tree: The Evolution of Valentina Mela Verde from the Pedagogy of Girlhood to Engaged Realism
Özlem Alioğlu Türker (Ankara University)
Sıdıka Behind the Window and the Women’s Activism in Turkey
17 – 18:30 Round table
Monalesia Earle (independent scholar) and Joe Sutliff Sanders (Cambridge University) discuss Hilda and the Black Hound by Luke Pearson, Jeg rømmer by Mari Kanstad Johnsen, Sardine by Emmanuel Guibert and Joann Sfar
19 – 20:30 Panel 3 – Beyond Judgement (Chair: Jessica Burton)
Alison Halsall (York University Toronto)
‘Friendship to the max!’: The Lumberjanes’ Collectivist and Feminist Revision of the Scouting Story
Joan Ormrod (Manchester Metropolitan University)
‘It’s fun-it’s new and it’s all for YOU’: Modernity and the Active Female Body in Mirabelle 1964-1967
Marine Berthiot (University of Edinburgh)
Developing A Style of One’s Own in Mophead, a Graphic Novel by Selina Tusitala Marsh (2019)
Interview with Dr. Jesus Jiménez Varea, Vice Chair of theiCOn-MICS Action -Investigation on Comics and Graphic Novels in the Iberian Cultural Area (CA19119) and on girls in comics

-> Watch it here.

Book presentation and interview – Valentine Gallardo & Mathilde Van Gheluwe: Pendant que le loup n’y est pas

 

Friday 23 April

 

9:30 – 11 Panel 4 – A Space for Girls’ (Comics) (Chair: Gert Meesters)
Sylvain Lesage (Université de Lille)
Girls’ Comics, The Lost Continent of the Ninth Art?

Aswathy Senan (The Research Collective Delhi)
The Childhood of Malayalis: The (Im)possibilities of Comic Imagination

11:15 – 12:15

Panel 5 – Feminists in Training (Chair: Ivan Pintor Iranzo)

Nicoletta Mandolini (Universidade do Minho)
Re-Appropriating Abjection. Ana Caspão’s Fundo do nada (2017) as a Feminist and Macabre Coming of Age

Amanda Potter (Open University)

Girlhood in training: Learning to become a warrior and a woman in The Legend of Wonder Woman (2015-16) Age of Conan: Valeria (2019) and A Man Among Ye(2020)

 14 – 15

Keynote 2 – Julia Round (Bournemouth University)

‘There’s no room for demons when you’re self-possessed’: Supernatural Possession in Spellbound and Misty + Q&A

Find out more about Julia Round on her website.

15:30 – 16:30 Panel 6 – Beyond Bodies (Chair: Eszter Szép)
Martha Newbigging (Seneca College Toronto)
Drawing Comics: A Methodology to Materialize Queerness Within Childhood
Barbara Postema (Massey University New Zealand)
‘There are a lot of ways to be marked’: Suffering Bodies in Skim by Mariko Tamaki and Jillian Tamaki
17 – 18 Panel 7 – Beyond Reading (Chair: Maaheen Ahmed)
Mel Loucks (New Mexico Military Institute)
Out of the Mouths of Babes: Jackie Ormes and the Children of the Civil Rights Movement
Sébastien Conard (KASK Ghent School of Arts and LUCA Brussels)
Death and the Maiden: Charlotte Salomon in Red and Yellow Dots

 

Interesting links and sources gathered during the conference

Our Padlet is our collective notebook for interesting links and sources. We will use this collaborative tool throughout the symposium. Feel free to add!

 

Call for Papers — Comics Picturing Girlhood

Sugar and Spice and the Not So Nice: Comics Picturing Girlhood

International Symposium 22- 23 April 2021  

Image courtesy @ Valentine Gallardo

Download the call for papers.

Comics have long relied on reinforcing reader identity formation whether through interest, age group or hobbies. Constructed and largely mythical notions of gendered readership consequently became key aspects of many of these comics. As gendered products, comics have constructed feminine role models and identities to which girls have replied with both rebellion and conformity. The aim of this symposium is to inspire and promote discourse around comparative constructions of girlhood. This exploration will consider relationships between and influences on European girls’ comics in the twentieth and twenty-first centuries. We invite paper proposals under four key areas which can include, but are by no means limited to, the following:

Genre and Categorisation. What (un)acceptable genres for what girls? We seek further understanding of the historical, social and economic preferences for and divisions between gendering of different genres through discussion of more familiar genres such as romance, as well as girls’ relationships with less frequently studied genres such as gothic or fantasy/adventure.

Representations of Girlhood. What does the representation and embodiment of girlhood look like in comics? How do comics depict girls’ physicality? We seek to examine different kinds of protagonists, alternative identities of girlhood and the impact of female role models and feminine role play. We are especially interested in papers that deal with marginalised identity categories, making explicit room for work on disabled, black, and trans girls, both diegetic (the characters in the texts) and real (the writers, illustrators, editors, researchers).

Emotional Impact and Response. How do emotionally loaded representations of girls such as the coquettish, nymphetic, cute or grotesque impact readers? We invite a reconsideration of both conventional and radical aesthetic notions associated with girlishness which are perpetuated by comics. We additionally strive to illuminate models of good practice in girlhood comics studies by engaging with the problematic ethical and emotional questions of how personal identity, readership and scholarship impact upon one another, and what implications this has.

Practices and Interactivity. How do girls use their comics? Papers could contemplate the differing ways in which children are encouraged to act as more than just readers. Does gender play a role in interactions, whether through scrapbooks or paper doll construction, comics collecting, fandom or letters to the editor?

Please submit a proposal of approximately 400 words for a 20-minute paper, together with a biographical note (100-200 words), to comics@ugent.be by 15 September 2020. You will be notified of acceptance by or before 30 October 2020. The conference language is English. For any questions, please contact us on the above email address.

The keynote lectures will be delivered by Dr. Mel Gibson (Department of Social Work, Education and Community Wellbeing, Northumbria University Newcastle) and Dr. Julia Round (Faculty of Media and Communication, Bournemouth University). Drs. Monalesia Earle and Joe Sutliff Sanders will lead a reflective analysis of three ‘girl comics.’ The conference will furthermore involve a book presentation by comic artists Valentine Gallardo and Mathilde Van Gheluwe.

This symposium is organised by Eva Van de Wiele and Dona Pursall, doctoral researchers of COMICS: An Intercultural History of Children in Comics from 1865 to Today. The conference will be based at Ghent University, Belgium, if health conditions allow. Arrangements for an online conference will be made. We therefore request participants to also commit to a digital presentation.

Funding

This symposium is part of the COMICS project funded by the European Research Council (ERC) under the European Union’s Horizon 2020 research and innovation programme (grant agreement no. 758502)

 

Bibliography

Andrews, M., & Talbot, M. M. (2000). All the World and Her Husband: Women in the Twentieth-Century Consumer Culture. London: Cassell.

Cross, G. S. (2004). The Cute and the Cool: Wondrous Innocence and Modern American Children’s Culture. Oxford University Press.

D’haeyere, H. (2012). Stopping The Show Film Photography in Mack Sennett Slapstick Comedies (1917-1933).

Gibson, M. (2015). Remembered Reading: Memory, Comics and Post-war Constructions of British Girlhood. Leuven: Leuven University Press.

Gordon, I. (2016). Kid Comic Strips: A Genre Across Four Countries. New York: Palgrave Pivot.

Hatch, K. (2015). Shirley Temple and the Performance of Girlhood. Rutgers University Press.

Heimermann, M., & Tullis, B. (Eds.). (2017). Picturing Childhood: Youth in Transnational Comics. University of Texas Press.

Ngai, S. (2015). Our Aesthetic Categories: Zany, Cute, Interesting.

Round, J., (2019). Gothic for Girls: Misty and British Comics. Jackson: University Press of Mississippi.

Smith, F. (2020). Bande de Filles: Girlhood Identities in Contemporary France. New York: Routledge.

Tinkler, P., & Taylor & Francis. (2014). Constructing girlhood: Popular Magazines for Girls Growing up in England, 1920-1950. London: Taylor & Francis.