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Comics Telling Refugee Stories

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Documenting Trauma in Comics

Part of the book series: Palgrave Studies in Comics and Graphic Novels ((PSCGN))

Abstract

This chapter begins with an indicative survey of comics responding to the current ‘refugee crisis’. The comics in question adopt one of two distinct and established approaches. The first is reportage, usually featuring the author/creator as a central device, while the second re-works and renders testimony in visual form. In their different ways, both contribute to a wider repertoire of positive and sympathetic representations of refugees, offering a counter-point to hostile media and political discourse, often by a focus on the stories of individuals. Mobilizing compassion and moral responses through personal stories of hardship, trauma, tenacity, and survival has long been a tactic of reformist agendas and humanitarian advocacy. By their qualitative difference from dominant forms of factual discourse, comics offer certain advantages. They may also circumvent certain problems associated with photographic representations of suffering. Such comics can nevertheless run the risk of re-producing established victim tropes, and just as with other forms of representation, human-interest angles carry the potential to obscure political dimensions. In an attempt to consider and situate these concerns, the analysis considers the various positions and relations that constitute ‘refugee comics’: subjects, readers, creators, (im)materiality, and circulation.

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Notes

  1. 1.

    This use of individual narratives to draw attention to wider social issues is similarly evidenced in the recent proliferation of illness narratives.

  2. 2.

    The Meantime project was funded by the French NGO Solidarités International publicizing the everyday realities and experiences of Syrian refugees through online comics (http://comics.solidarites.org/en/home), and exhibited in Beirut in February 2017.

  3. 3.

    Originally published as a series of zines, this project has since been taken up by Ad Astra Comix, a Canadian publishing collective dedicated to producing social justice comics, and re-printed through crowd-funding.

  4. 4.

    While boasting that they release a hundred titles a year, Verso’s graphic overall novel output currently stands at nine titles, including Red Rosa (2015), Evans’ biography of Rosa Luxemburg.

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Mickwitz, N. (2020). Comics Telling Refugee Stories. In: Davies, D., Rifkind, C. (eds) Documenting Trauma in Comics. Palgrave Studies in Comics and Graphic Novels. Palgrave Macmillan, Cham. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-030-37998-8_16

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