Saving the Day for Robin Hood Studies: Perspectives and Reflections on Comics Adapted from the Matter of the Greenwood (Roundtable)
Sponsored by
The Medieval Comics Project, an outreach effort of the Association for the
Advancement of Scholarship and Teaching of the Medieval in Popular Culture.
For Global
Outlaws: The Biennial Conference of the International Association for Robin
Hood Studies
Tentative Date:
3-5 December 2021.
Medium: VIRTUAL.
Deadline for
Proposals: 11 October 2021.
According to a recent search of the Grand Comics Database, creators of comic
books and graphic novels have produced over three thousand comics directly based
on or inspired by the Robin Hood tradition. These comics span almost ninety
years and come from over twenty countries; however, the true scope of Hood’s
influence on the medium appears much larger. A variety of archers, both heroes
and villains, also feature within the pages of comics, and Hood and his fellows
have also frequented both cartoons and comic strips, though their adventures
there remain largely uncatalogued.
Of these thousands of comics, how
much and what items are actually known to enthusiasts of the Matter of the
Greenwood? Robin Hood scholars, since the1990s, have started to offer some answers,
but much work still remains to more fully explore the world of Sherwood Forest
depicted in their panels. In this sponsored session, we hope to create a deeper
connection between Robin Hood Studies and Comics Studies to highlight this rich
corpus and provide tools and resources for how to find, access, and employ
Robin-Hood-themed comics in our classroom and research.
Please send
proposals of approximately 250 words and a short academic biography to the
panel organizers at Comics.Get.Medieval@gmail.com.
We will forward the full panel details to the conference committee.
For more
information on the Medieval Comics Project and the Association for the
Advancement of Scholarship and Teaching of the Medieval in Popular Culture,
please check out our websites at https://medieval-comics-project.blogspot.com/
and https://medievalinpopularculture.blogspot.com/.
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