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Guest Lecturer: Elizabeth "Biz" Nijdam

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Tuesday, March 19th | Angell 3222 1:45PM  Refreshments | 2:00 -3:30PM  Lecture & Discussion Please RSVP  here E lizabeth "Biz " Nijdam is Visiting Assistant Professor in German Studies and Film & Media Studies at Whitman College in Walla Walla, Washington. Last year, she was a postdoctoral fellow in the Berlin Program for Advanced German and European Studies at the Frei Universität Berlin, where she was working on her book project “Paneled Pasts: East German History and Memory in the German Graphic Novel,” which is now under contract with Ohio State University Press. Biz graduated from the Department of Germanic Languages and Literatures at the University of Michigan in Ann Arbor i n 2017. She has published in  World Literature Today, International Journal of Comic Art , and as chapters in the edited volume  Class, Please Open Your Comics  (2015) and the forthcoming book  Comics of the New Europe: Intersections and Reflections  with Universit

EC Comics: Race, Shock, and Social Protest - A Lecture By Qiana Whitted

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Please join the Transnational Comics Studies Workshop for our second event. All are welcome! Professor Qiana Whitted (University of South Carolina) Monday, February 25th | Angell 3154 2:00PM Refreshments | 2:30-3:30PM Panel Presentation & Discussion “How to Read an EC Magazine" Using material from her forthcoming book on EC Comics: Race, Shock, and Social Protest, Qiana Whitted will discuss the 1950s comic book publisher's attempt to establish clear boundaries between “entertaining” and “educational” reading practices that were mindful of the public’s anxieties over how comic books could influence young readers. Essential to this effort was an editorial emphasis on how narrative captions, dialogue, and other words acted as signposts of meaning. If comics were indeed as hazardous as critics such as Sterling North, Dr. Frederic Wertham, and Senator Estes Kefauver feared, the social-protest comics might prove that EC’s writers could co