1st Edition

Comics and Migration Representation and Other Practices

298 Pages 16 Color & 39 B/W Illustrations
by Routledge India

298 Pages 16 Color & 39 B/W Illustrations
by Routledge India

298 Pages 16 Color & 39 B/W Illustrations
by Routledge India

Comics and human mobility have a long history of connections. This volume explores these entanglements with a focus on both how comics represent migration and what applied uses comics have in relation to migration. The volume examines both individual works of comic art and examples of practical applications of comics from across the world. Comics are well-suited to create understanding,... Read more

List of figures

List of contributors

Acknowledgements

1. Introduction: The entanglements of comics and migration

Anna Vuorinne and Ralf Kauranen

Part I.  Migration and the use of comics

2. The long road to Almanya: Comics in language education for "guest workers" in West Germany, 1970s–1980s

Sylvia Kesper-Biermann

3. Feminist comics activism: Stories about migrant women in Sweden by Amalia Alvarez and Daria Bogdanska

Anna Nordenstam and Margareta Wallin Wictorin

4. Contracts via comics: Migrant workers and Thai fishing vessel employment contracts

Anne Ketola, Eliisa Pitkäsalo, and Robert de Rooy

5. From representations of suffering migrants to appreciation of the Mexican-American legacy in the US: The NGO-produced comics Historias migrantes

Laura Nallely Hernández Nieto and Iván Facundo Rubinstein

6. Collaborative work, migrant representativity, and racism

Adrián Groglopo and Amalia Alvarez

Part II. Configurations of nationalism and migration

7. V for pissed-offedness: Anti-immigrant subversion of dystopian superhero intertexts

Oskari Rantala

8. On the "good" side: Hegemonic masculinity and transnational intervention in the representation of US–Mexico border enforcement

Anna Marta Marini

9. The politics of inversion in Americatown: Limits in public pedagogy

Christina M. Knopf

10. Racist and national(ist) symbols in a Finnish antiracist comics zine

Olli Löytty

Part III. Conventions and revisions of migration narratives

11. Absented from his master’s service: Benjamin Franklin House, slavery, and comics

Kremena Dimitrova

12. Tears of a refugee: Melodramatic life writing and Reinhard Kleist’s Der Traum von Olympia

Anna Vuorinne

13. To see and to show: Photography, drawing, and refugee representation in comics journalism on refugee camps

Aura Nikkilä

14. Humans on the move: Some thoughts about approaching migration as a journalist in comics

Taina Tervonen

15. Intolerable fictions: Composing refugee realities in comics

Dominic Davies

Index

Biography

Ralf Kauranen is a sociologist and comics scholar affiliated to the Department of Comparative Literature at the University of Turku, Finland. He led the project "Comics and Migration: Belonging, Narration, Activism", funded by the Kone Foundation and located at the Department of Finnish Literature, University of Turku, in 2018–2021.

Olli Löytty is an adjunct professor at the University of Turku, Finland. His research focuses on postcolonialism, nationalism, multilingualism, and representations of cultural encounters in literature. He is currently working on the project "Literature and Reading in the Era of Climate Crisis" at the University of Helsinki.

Aura Nikkilä is a doctoral researcher in art history at the University of Turku, Finland. Nikkilä’s doctoral project concerns the role of photography in migration-themed comics. She has published on multilingualism and transnationalism in comics as well as on empathy and activism in relation to graphic narratives.

Anna Vuorinne is a doctoral researcher in the Department of Comparative Literature, University of Turku, Finland. Her dissertation examines the conventions of human rights narration in contemporary German comics depicting migration. In her publications on comics, she has also written about the questions of gender, sexuality, and feminism.