Deadline has been extended to February 11.
The Comics and Popular Arts Conference (CPAC) invites submissions for our 12th Annual meeting in Atlanta, Georgia, August 30-September 2, 2019.
CPAC is an annual academic conference for the studies of comics and the popular arts, including science/speculative fiction and fantasy literature, film, and other media, comic books, manga, graphic novels, anime, gaming, etc., presented to a mixed audience of scholars and fans. The mission of CPAC is to promote scholarship on popular culture and to encourage the engagement between scholars and fans in order to deepen our understanding of comics and the other popular arts. CPAC presentations are peer reviewed, based in scholarly research.
Please submit a proposal that engages in substantial scholarly examinations of comic books/graphic novels, anime, manga, science/speculative fiction, fantasy, or other parts of popular culture.
A broad range of disciplinary and theoretical perspectives is being sought, including but not limited to proposals pertaining to literary and art criticism, philosophy, linguistics, history, communications, law, pedagogy, and natural and social sciences. Proposals may range, for example, from discussions of the nature of the comics medium, the science of a particular franchise, how to utilize pop culture in the classroom, analyses of particular works or authors, cross-cultural and cross-medium comparisons, and more. We are open to any and all academic topics relevant to the study of the popular arts.
CPAC talks are presented to a mixed audience of academics and fans, and take place in conjunction with DragonCon. Presentations should be prepared with a general audience in mind. Presenters must register for DragonCon if their paper is accepted in order to present. Presenters from out of town should make lodging arrangements far in advance.
Individual and group submissions should both be tailored to fit in one of the following tracks:
Comics | Anime/Manga | American SF Media |
Sci-Fi Literature | Star Trek | Tabletop Gaming |
Animation | Horror | Paranormal Fiction |
Apocalyptic / Post-Apocalyptic |
Alt History / Steampunk |
American SF Classics |
Urban Fantasy | Electronic Frontiers Forum | Fantasy Literature |
Military SciFi | Podcasting | Puppetry |
Star Wars | Asian Cinema & Culture | Young Adult Lit |
Diversity in Speculative Fiction | High Fantasy | Video Gaming |
While there may be great intellectual merit in cross-track proposals, or proposals that include materials covered by various tracks, administratively, it can be very difficult to place such proposals. We prefer that you select one topic per proposal, though if your proposal would fully fit either track, you may select two.
We are interested in proposals for any of the above tracks, not only Comics.
Submission instructions: please follow the submission instructions for the kind of presentation as listed below. Prospective participants may submit multiple proposals, but only one per track.
For individual papers and presentations: please submit 250-300 word abstracts to the link below.
For group panels and presentations: in addition to the 250-300 word abstract, you should submit a 1-2 page document that further explains the rationale for a group session and explains the format and the planned contributions of all panelists. Group panels should not be individual papers loosely organized around a theme, but genuinely collaborative presentations with a strong reason to be considered as a group as opposed to individually. (This differs from our requirements from previous years.)
For informal sessions such as roundtables, workshops, and book sessions: please submit a 250-300 word abstract to the link below, plus a 1-2 page document that outlines the objective of the workshop or roundtable, or a brief description of the format of the book session including title and subject matter of the book (author meets critic, book discussion, etc).
Please submit your proposal via the following link:
Submissions Deadline:To receive the fullest consideration, proposals will be submitted by January 15, 2019 February 11, 2019.
This submission process is open to everyone, but we are especially interested in receiving submissions from members of those groups traditionally underrepresented in academia, such as women, LGTBQIA academics, and academics of color.
Send any questions to: organizers@comicspopularartsconference.org
Program Committee
- Tracey Berry (UT Dallas)
- Elizabeth Blum (Troy University)
- Tasha Browning (Supportive Connections)
- Rachel Dean-Ruzicka (Georgia Tech)
- Andy Famiglietti (West Chester University)
- Erin Gordon (University of Florida)
- Poe Johnson (DePaul)
- Stephanie Noell (Savannah College of Art and Design)
- Kari Storla (University of Southern California)
CPAC Coordinating Board
- Matthew J. Brown, University of Texas at Dallas – Coordinator
- Richard Scott Nokes, Troy University – Vice Coordinator
- Daniel Amrhein, Independent Scholar
- Jillian Marie Browning, University of Florida
- Johnathan Flowers, Worcester State University
- Kari Neely, Middle Tennessee State University
- Kari Storla, University of Southern California
- Damien Williams, Virginia Tech
- Vickie Willis, Georgia State University