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DSQ Special Issue CfP - Global and Intersectional Framings of Disability in Comics & Graphic Narratives - British Association for American Studies

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DSQ Special Issue CfP - Global and Intersectional Framings of Disability in Comics & Graphic Narratives

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CALL FOR PAPERS

Global and Intersectional Framings of Disability in Comics & Graphic Narratives
Edited by Crystal Yin Lie (California State University, Long Beach) and Kai Qing Tan (Research Foundation Flanders, FWO; Ghent University)

Comics and graphic narratives have become a powerful medium for representing embodied disability experience. Foundational scholarship in disability and comics studies has largely focused on Anglophone and Euro-American contexts. This special issue of Disability Studies Quarterly seeks to expand the field by foregrounding transnational, multilingual, and Global South perspectives. We invite essays that examine how contemporary comics and graphic narratives engage core concepts from disability studies—such as crip time, interdependence and collective access, disability justice, debility and slow death, crip ecologies, and speculative crip futurities—across diverse cultural and geopolitical contexts.

Possible topics include (but are not limited to):

  • Representations of physical, sensory, and/or cognitive disability; neurodiversity; chronic illness; aging; and embodied trauma
  • Disability as method/embodied knowledge
  • Resistance to diagnostic and pathological frames
  • Formal strategies that materialize disability in comics form
  • Disability networks, care infrastructures, and collective survival
  • Critiques of social, political, and urban contexts
  • Structural violence, colonialism, environmental crisis, and debility
  • (In)accessibility in both content and form
  • Speculative or futurist imaginaries of disability justice
  • The place of comedy and humor was in disability narratives
  • The commodification of disabilities/narrative via social media and how to circumvent it
  • Ethical obligations in the discourse of disability narratives
  • Theorizations, critiques, and reimaginings of form and genres
  • Emergent directions and movements in comics and comics activism

We welcome analyses of transnational and multilingual works, including Japanese manga, South Korean manhwa, Brazilian and Latin American graphic memoir, Indigenous comics, Francophone bandes dessinées from West Africa and the Caribbean, Middle Eastern, Southeast Asian, and Eastern European graphic narratives, graphic journalism, autobiographical comics by disabled artists, and webcomics or other digital formats circulating across borders. In line with our commitment to providing space for disability narratives, we also encourage contributions that combine ethnographic research with creative interventions, integrating praxis alongside more theoretical approaches to the topics listed above. This issue aims to develop comparative methodologies for studying disability and graphic narrative across geographies, languages, and traditions. We encourage submissions from scholars at all career stages and from diverse disciplinary backgrounds.

Submission Guidelines:
Please submit a paragraph-length (300-500 words) abstract, a list of 3-5 key words, and a brief bio (100 words) by 30 September 2026 (Wed). Invitations to submit full essays (8,000-12,000 words) as well as shorter works of creative writing will follow. Full manuscripts will undergo double-blind peer review in accordance with DSQ guidelines.

Send abstracts and inquiries to:
Crystal Yin Lie, California State University, Long Beach
crystal.lie@csulb.edu

Kai Qing Tan, Research Foundation Flanders (FWO); Ghent University
kaiqing.tan@ugent.be