This book considers the ways in which violence and its representations may be enabled or restricted by the contexts in which they take place. It provides insights into violence in comics in the context of war and peace; ethnic, religious and identity-based violence; as well as legal and historical contexts of violence.
Inhaltsverzeichnis
Contexts of Violence in Comics
Introduction
Ian Hague, Ian Horton & Nina Mickwitz
History and Memory
Doing justice to the past through the representation of violence: Three and ancient Sparta
Lynn Fotheringham
Comics do not forget: Historical memory and experiences of violence in the Spanish Civil War and early Francoism
Enrique del Rey Cabero
Legacies of War: Remembering Prisoner of War Experiences in French Comic Books about the Second World War
Claire Gorrara
"I think we're maybe more or less safe here": Violence and Solidarity
during the Lebanese Civil War in Zeina Abirached's A Game for Swallows Mihaela Precup
War and Peace
In a Growing Violent Temper: The Swedish Comic Market during World War II
Michael F. Scholz
Will Eisner and the Art of War: Educational Comics in the American
Defence Industry
Malin Bergström
Urban Conflict
Bringing the War Back Home: Reflecting Violence in Brian Wood's DMZ
Jörn Ahrens
Infrastructural Violence: Urbicide, Public Space, and Postwar Reconstruction
in Recent Lebanese Graphic Memoirs
Dominic Davies
Law, Justice and Censorship
The Lives of Others: Figuring Grievability and Justice in Contemporary
Comics and Graphic Novels
Golnar Nabizadeh
Scales of Violence, Scales of Justice, and Nate Powell's Any EmpireAlex Link
Oink: The Story of a Dangerously Funny Comic
David Huxley