This week sees the debut of S&S Founding Member A. David Lewis’s American Comic Books, Literary Theory, and Religion: The Superhero Afterlife. Based on both his doctoral work from Boston University and his American Academy of Religion (AAR) presentations, Lewis, co-editor of both Graven Images: Religion in Comic Books & Graphic Novels and Digital Death: Mortality and Beyond in the Online Age, delivers his first solo monograph in Comics Studies. Read more here.
Category Archives: academic
Jesus, Comics, and the Gospels from Scott S. Elliott
One of S&S’s newest members, Scott S. Elliott, shared his terrific Postscripts paper on “Jesus in the Gutter: Comics and Graphic Novels Reimagining the Gospels” on his Academia.edu page. It’s free to read, even without a membership! Read more about it here.
Sequart Reviews A. David Lewis’s New Book: “particularly timely”
Sequart‘s Karra Shimabukuro was given early access to the new book by A. David Lewis, American Comics, Literary Theory, and Religion: The Superhero Afterlife. Due out in November from Palgrave Macmillan, Shimabukuro detailed what readers can expect from the forthcoming book on superheroes, the afterlife, and audiences’ notions of personal selfhood.
As more and more people question the purpose and definition of self in the modern world, Lewis’ work is particularly timely.
Shimabukuro particularly noted the incorporation of theorists Benedict Anderson and Jeffery Burton Russell as personal attractions to the text. The book, she says, will be of interest to readers intrigued by the “argument for multiple selfhoods, and how this relates not only to how we view characters (in relation to reboots, revisions, and retcons), but also how we understand characters through the ever growing intertextual connections such as movies, cartoons, fan fiction, etc.”
Wednesday Theology: Daring to Address God
Mitch Alfson of Wednesday Theology shared his 2012 paper from Dordt College’s The Christian Evasion of Popular Culture Conference. In it, he encourages his audience to look beyond the superhero genre for (the lack of) engagement with God, featuring Will Eisner’s A Contract with God and Garth Ennis & Steve Dillon’s Preacher in particular. Read more here.
Fifth Anniversary of the Religion and Graphica Collection at Boston University STH Library
Quietly celebrating its five-year anniversary this year, the Religion and Graphica Collection at the Boston University School of Theology Library remains a one-of-a-kind resource for comics scholars. Available through inter-library loan (ILL), the Collection was founded 2009 through a fund from the Humanities Foundation, and much of their catalog can be found online at http://www.bu.edu/sthlibrary/collections/the-religion-and-graphica-collection/ .