School of Information Sciences

Tilley to speak at Comic-Con International: San Diego

Carol Tilley
Carol Tilley, Associate Professor

Assistant Professor Carol Tilley will join more than 130,000 of her fellow comic book fans at Comic-Con International in San Diego July 24-27. This annual convention is considered by many to be the premier comics and entertainment event in the world. It focuses on creating awareness of and appreciation for comics and related artforms and celebrates the historic and ongoing contribution of comics to art and culture.

Tilley will share her expertise in comics and comics history through her participation in the following events:

  • “Using Graphic Novels in Education” (July 24, 12-1 p.m., Room 30CDE), in which she will join other experts from the Comic Book Legal Defense Fund (CBLDF) to discuss the use of comics in classrooms and strategies for combating the confusion that often leads graphic novels to be targeted by censors.
  • “Dr. Wertham's War on Comics” (July 25, 12-1 p.m., Room 30CDE), where she will present a talk about Fredric Wertham, who nearly destroyed the comics artform in the 1950s through his efforts to discredit the medium.
  • “Reading With Pictures—Getting the Most out of Graphic Novels in Your Classroom & Library,” (July 25, 4-5 p.m., Room 29A), where she will serve as a special guest on a panel addressing the latest research and proven practical strategies for using comics and graphic novels in the classroom or library.
  • “Sixty Years of Seduction: Right, Wrong, and Wertham” (July 25, 8-9 p.m., Room 9), in which she will again discuss her research on Frederic Wertham.
  • “Banned Comics” (July 26, 1-2 p.m., Room 30CDE), in which she will once again join colleagues from the CBLDF for a panel session to discuss some of the greatest comics—and those most frequently targeted for bans. Panel speakers include well-known comics creators Jeff Smith and Gene Luen Yang.

Tilley has received recent press coverage for her work through interviews in Comic Book Creator #5, DiamondBookshelf, Baltimore City Paper, and in the documentary Diagram for Delinquents

At GSLIS, Tilley teaches courses in comics’ reader’s advisory, media literacy, and youth services librarianship. Part of her scholarship focuses on the intersection of young people, comics, and libraries, particularly in the United States during the mid-twentieth century. Additional research interests include history of youth services librarianship, children's print culture, information inquiry and instruction in school libraries, information seeking and use, and media literacy. Tilley's research has been published in journals including the Journal of the American Society for Information Science and Technology (JASIST), Information & Culture: A Journal of History, and Children’s Literature in Education. Her research on anti-comics advocate Fredric Wertham has been featured in the New York Times and other media outlets. This fall Tilley will receive tenure and promotion to the rank of associate professor.

 
Tags:
Updated on
Backto the news archive

Related News

Chan’s "Predatory Data" named a 2026 PROSE Award finalist

Professor Anita Say Chan's book Predatory Data: Eugenics in Big Tech and Our Fight for an Independent Future (University of California Press, 2025) has been named a finalist in the Computing and Information Sciences Category of the 2026 PROSE Awards. The annual awards bestowed by the Association of American Publishers recognize the very best in professional and scholarly publishing and celebrate works that have made significant advancements in their respective fields of study.

Anita Say Chan

He inducted into Sigma Xi

Professor Jingrui He has been inducted into Sigma Xi, The Scientific Research Honor Society. Sigma Xi is the international honor society of science and engineering and one of the oldest and largest scientific organizations in the world, boasting a history of service to science and society spanning over 125 years. It has a multidisciplinary membership of scientists, engineers, and scholars, and Sigma Xi chapters can be found in universities and colleges, government laboratories, and commercial research centers.

Jingrui He

Hassan and Bashir receive distinguished paper award

A paper co-authored by PhD student Muhammad Hassan and Associate Professor Masooda Bashir received the Distinguished Paper Award at the Workshop on Security and Privacy in Standardized IoT, which was held last month in San Diego, California, in conjunction with the Network and Distributed System Security (NDSS) Symposium 2026. 

iSchool researchers to present work at Technocracy Conference

This week, iSchool PhD students and faculty will present their research at the Technocracy Conference. Hosted by the Unit for Criticism and Interpretive Theory at the University of Illinois on March 5–6, the conference will begin with a panel of graduate student papers and continue the following day with invited speakers and a keynote. All events will take place at the Levis Faculty Center on the Urbana campus. 

New multi-institutional project to use AI to represent past historical periods

A new project led by a team of researchers from four universities aims to create and evaluate language models that represent past historical periods. The project, "Artificial Intelligence for Cultural and Historical Reasoning," was recently selected for a 2025 Humanities and AI Virtual Institute (HAVI) award from Schmidt Sciences. The $800,000 grant will be split among four institutions: Cornell University, the University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign, The University of British Columbia, and McGill University. Professor Ted Underwood will serve as the principal investigator for the portion of the project at Illinois.

Ted Underwood

School of Information Sciences

501 E. Daniel St.

MC-493

Champaign, IL

61820-6211

Voice: (217) 333-3280

Email: ischool@illinois.edu

Back to top