22 July 2014

Visualising Law and Gender: BOOKING OPEN!



Centre for Law and Culture Conference 2014
Visualising Law and Gender

Booking is now open for the upcoming Centre for Law and Culture Conference on ‘Visualising Law and Gender’, 3-4 September 2014, here at St Mary’s University, Twickenham, London.

Law both regulates cultural representations and creates them. These dual themes will be explored in a conference focused upon the twin strands of law and visual culture, and law and gender.

How does law regulate gender; how does it regulate images? What is/are the relationship/s between visual culture and the gendering of law? How have gendered divisions structured the legal profession and practice, and what is the role of the visual in understanding such complexities? How can visual culture and representation challenge or enlighten the gendered dimensions of law?

This conference is aimed at exploring the intersections of law, gender, and the visual in an effort to address such questions and related concerns.

Booking now open! (visit http://www.ticketsource.co.uk/event/59449)

Conference date: 3rd-4th September 2014
Location: St Mary’s University, Twickenham, London TW1 4SX
Registration fee: £100 (including refreshments, lunch, and conference dinner)

Please visit www.smuc.ac.uk/law-and-culture/conferences.htm or contact the organisers (thomas.giddens@smuc.ac.uk or judith.bourne@smuc.ac.uk) for more details.


2 May 2014

Al Feldstein passes


Al Feldstein, of Mad magazine fame, has sadly departed. Read more here.

29 April 2014

Disguise Conference CFP

Since many superheroes wear masks, I thought some of you interested in Graphic Justice may also be interested in this...

Marginalised Mainstream 2014: Disguise
28-29 November 2014 Institute of English Studies, Senate House, University of London Keynote Speakers: Dr Bronwen Thomas (Bournemouth University), Dr Naomi Braithwaite (Nottingham Trent University)

'I like to reinvent myself — it’s part of my job.' – Karl Lagerfeld

In 2014, the Marginalised Mainstream conference will consider the varieties, motivations, and meanings of disguise. From secret identities to theatrical performances, from fictional fabrications to factual concealment, disguises of all sorts are part of mainstream culture. This event will explore various manifestations of disguise in popular fiction, media, and culture that have previously been academically marginalised.

Fictional instances of disguise range from Scooby-Doo to Superman, and have a long history in theatre, novels, and film. Factual disguise can also impact mainstream media, whether it be the subtle advancement of a concealed agenda in gay fiction of the 1960s, the academic impact of the Sokal hoax in the 1990s, or J. K. Rowling’s recent attempt to publish pseudonymously. Textual disguises, such as that of the murderer of Roger Ackroyd or the identity of Keyser Söze, retain the power to shock.

The motif of disguise appears in fiction and film, in real life and virtual reality. The prevalence of such masking and unmasking poses pressing questions for popular culture: when does disguise reveal as well as conceal? How do marginalised genres or media subtly alter mainstream opinions, while masquerading as mere amusement? How do changing fashions, in clothes, in texts, or in tastes, affect the ability to create disguises? Is critical marginalization an attempt to “disguise” the value of the mainstream?

This year's conference will offer a forum for new perspectives on the operation and meanings of such masking and unmasking in fiction, media, performance, other cultural productions.

We invite 250-word abstracts focusing on literature, cultural studies, art history, film studies or other disciplines. Subjects could include, but are far from limited to:

* Fictional secret identities (spies, superheroes, criminals)
* Role-playing games or narratives
* Theatricality
* Pseudonyms
* Forgery
* Parody
* Re-purposing genres
* Genre-crossing
* Undercover agendas
* Subversion of narrative expectations
* Deceptive focalization
* Dramatic irony

Please send proposals for 20-minute papers along with a brief biographical note to Sam Goodman, Brittain Bright, and Emma Grundy Haigh at hello@marginalisedmainstream.com<mailto:hello@marginalisedmainstream.com> by 30 May 2014.

If you are applying for a visa or funding and need a response sooner than 1 July, please submit your abstract by 2 May, and note your early notification needs in your submission.

'Oh, they never lie. They dissemble, evade, prevaricate, confound, confuse, distract, obscure, subtly misrepresent and willfully misunderstand with what often appears to be a positively gleeful relish and are generally perfectly capable of contriving to give one an utterly unambiguous impression of their future course of action while in fact intending to do exactly the opposite, but they never lie. Perish the thought.' – Iain Banks

8 April 2014

International Journal for the Semiotics of Law Thematic Issue: Visualizing Law in Comics and Cartoons

Deadline to submit papers:  31 AUGUST 2014
 
Papers should not exceed 10,000 words (references included)
Instructions for authors are available at: http://www.springer.com/law/journal/11196
 
Only papers submitted online will be evaluated:
 
 
Papers submitted to the International Journal for the Semiotics of Law should evaluate how legal meanings are produced, distributed and construed. Legal culture is being transmitted through another medium of analysis.
 
The International Journal for the Semiotics of Law welcomes innovative papers to document the diverse historical, cultural and communicative links that bind together Law and Comics/Cartoons under a comprehensive research analysis on legal visual semiotics.

27 March 2014

Isobel Williams draws at the Supreme Court after hours

Isobel Williams, artist and illustrator, is giving an illustrated talk at the Supreme Court's 'twilight hours' event. Her work captures various aspects of the legal drama, beyond what you may see in 'normal' court illustrations such as those on the news, and is evocative of the human dimension of the courtroom.

You can see more of her courtroom work here, alongside her reflections on the cases she observes.

Tickets and information for the twilight hours event  are here.