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Event | Mini-symposium – The Ludification of Vision

Event | Mini-symposium – The Ludification of Vision
Date:
9 May 2024
Time:
12:00-16:30
Location: University of Amsterdam, BG1 (Turfdraagsterpad 9), room 0.16
Organizers: Mathieu Li-Goyette, Toni Pape, with the support of the Amsterdam School of Cultural Analysis and the Netherlands Institute for Cultural Analysis
Credits: 1 ECTS

This one-day symposium explores the ways in which early comics artists pioneered new visual techniques to engage, educate, and challenge audiences. In the late 19th and early 20th century, artists like Frank Beard, J. H. Howard, and Winsor McCay approached the page as a complex interface that could educate and entertain audiences at the same time. Indeed, an important goal of this period was to train the audience’s media literacy through playful means, often combining the written word with visual realism and an oral commentary in the case of live performances.

Programme

12:00 – Benoît Crucifix (KU Leuven)

Childish Vision? Playful Interactions between Comics and Children’s Drawing

This talk will inquire into the interactions between cartooning and children’s drawing in the framework of a “ludification of vision” in the late 19th and early 20th century. Going from Töpffer’s thoughts on the proximities between children’s doodles and cartooning to playful interactions with readers in children’s magazines, it will connect this play with simple lines to intermedial exchanges affecting the relationship between reading, looking at, viewing, and drawing.

13:15 – Kin Wai Chu (U Gent)

Ludic Ways of Seeing: Cultural hybridisation of vision in early Chinese cartoon periodicals

Emerging at the turn of the 20th century, early Chinese cartoon magazines blended traditional Chinese drawing styles and pictorial storytelling with the transnational practices of western cartoons, comics journalism and printing technology. This talk examines two key periodicals, Dianshizhai Pictorial (1884–1898) and Shi Shi Hua Bao (1905–1912),  to trace the evolution of Chinese cartooning in shaping readers to engage with modernity, humour and new ways of visual storytelling.

14:45 – Mathieu Li-Goyette

Chalk Talking: Between Sunday School and Stage Stunts

This workshop will present different examples taken from chalk talking instruction manuals from the 1880s up to the 1920s in order to conceptualize a typology of different public drawing practices as well as their relationship to early American comic strips.

Credit details

Research Master’s students can obtain 1 EC for participating in the entire programme through NICA. To obtain a credit, please sign up through this form: https://forms.office.com/e/v1iC5RivXf

Beard, Frank [or Frank Bellew]. 1866. “Mr. Merryman’s Pictorial Prize Rebus,” Merryman’s Monthly (August 1st). Colour lithography. (Historical Periodicals Collection, American Antiquarian Society). Editor’s note: “Though rather difficult, we have no doubt, many will succeed in making it out, but it will require care and patience – two good things to acquire”.

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NICA archive 2010 – 2020

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Affiliated Universities

  • Leiden University
  • Tilburg University
  • Radboud University
  • University of Amsterdam
  • Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam
  • Erasmus University Rotterdam
  • Rijksuniversiteit Groningen
  • University of Maastricht
  • Utrecht University
  • Open University

National Research Schools

  • ARCHON, Research School of Archaeology
  • Huizinga Instituut
  • LOT, Netherlands Graduate School of Linguistics
  • NISIS, Netherlands Interuniversity School of Islamic Studies
  • NOG, Netherlands Research School of Gender Studies
  • NOSTER, Netherlands School for Advanced Studies in Theology and Religion
  • OIKOS, National Research School in Classical Studies
  • OSK, Dutch Postgraduate School for Art History
  • OSL, Onderzoekschool Literatuurwetenschap
  • OZSW, Dutch Research School of Philosophy
  • Posthumus Institute, Research School for Economic and Social History
  • Research School for Medieval Studies
  • RSPH, Research School Political History
  • RMeS, Research School for Media Studies
  • WTMC, Netherlands Graduate Research School of Science, Technology and Modern Culture

Useful Links

  • Academy of Creative and Performing Arts (ACPA)
  • Amsterdam Institute for Humanities Research (AIHR)
  • Amsterdam Research Center for Gender and Sexuality (ARC-GS)
  • Amsterdam School for Cultural Analysis (ASCA)
  • Amsterdam School for Heritage, Memory and Material Culture (AHM)
  • Babylon: Center for the Study of Superdiversity, Tilburg University
  • Benelux Association for the Study of Art, Culture, and the Environment (BASCE)
  • Centre for BOLD Cities
  • Centre for Gender and Diversity, Maastricht University
  • Leiden University Centre for Cultural Analysis (LUCAS)
  • Platform for Postcolonial Readings
  • Radboud Institute for Culture & History (RICH)
  • Research Institute of the Faculty of Philosophy, Theology, and Religious Studies (PTR)
  • Environmental Humanities Center Amsterdam
  • Centre for Environmental Humanities (UU)
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