This article examines two online comics about Australia’s policies of detaining asylum seekers, one created by the Australian government’s Customs and Border Protection Service (CBPS), and one published by the experimental journalism site The Global Mail. Through an analysis of the way online readers responded to these comics, this article shows how digital comics use visual style to imply particular kinds of relationships between their authors and their audience, while generating audience engagement through abstracted emotions and narrative gaps. These features have political dimensions, as in the CBPS’s comic, which elides crucial details about the government’s policies while suggesting (but never directly stating) its disregard for the h...
Banishing asylum seeker ‘boat people’ from the nation state has been a cornerstone of Australian pol...
Several scholars have raised concerns that the institutional mechanisms through which transitional j...
Theoretical thesis.Spine title : Twitter and the public sphere.Bibliography: pages 71-84.Chapter 1. ...
This paper explores the intersections between online comics, biopolitics, and the experimental form ...
This paper explores the intersections between online comics, biopolitics, and the experimental form ...
Published online: 26 May 2020.This article examines the drawings of Eaten Fish, an Iranian asylum se...
This chapter begins with an indicative survey of comics responding to the current ‘refugee crisis’. ...
This article is distributed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial 4.0 International Lic...
This chapter examines three refugee narratives in comics form, all located in the context of the Eur...
This article reports on a research project that investigated the framing of asylum seekers in the Au...
This article offers a close analysis of a trilogy of ‘refugee comics’ entitled ‘A Perilous Journey’,...
This paper analyzes the webcomic series Anger Management Comics (AMC), or its multiple aspects, tryi...
An introduction to FORUM: EMPATHY AND ETHICS IN GRAPHIC LIFE NARRATIVES, part of a special issue of ...
The output, a graphic story and creative project, narrates a story in response to the 2015 refugee c...
There is substantial literature on media representations of asylum seeker policy in Australia from a...
Banishing asylum seeker ‘boat people’ from the nation state has been a cornerstone of Australian pol...
Several scholars have raised concerns that the institutional mechanisms through which transitional j...
Theoretical thesis.Spine title : Twitter and the public sphere.Bibliography: pages 71-84.Chapter 1. ...
This paper explores the intersections between online comics, biopolitics, and the experimental form ...
This paper explores the intersections between online comics, biopolitics, and the experimental form ...
Published online: 26 May 2020.This article examines the drawings of Eaten Fish, an Iranian asylum se...
This chapter begins with an indicative survey of comics responding to the current ‘refugee crisis’. ...
This article is distributed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial 4.0 International Lic...
This chapter examines three refugee narratives in comics form, all located in the context of the Eur...
This article reports on a research project that investigated the framing of asylum seekers in the Au...
This article offers a close analysis of a trilogy of ‘refugee comics’ entitled ‘A Perilous Journey’,...
This paper analyzes the webcomic series Anger Management Comics (AMC), or its multiple aspects, tryi...
An introduction to FORUM: EMPATHY AND ETHICS IN GRAPHIC LIFE NARRATIVES, part of a special issue of ...
The output, a graphic story and creative project, narrates a story in response to the 2015 refugee c...
There is substantial literature on media representations of asylum seeker policy in Australia from a...
Banishing asylum seeker ‘boat people’ from the nation state has been a cornerstone of Australian pol...
Several scholars have raised concerns that the institutional mechanisms through which transitional j...
Theoretical thesis.Spine title : Twitter and the public sphere.Bibliography: pages 71-84.Chapter 1. ...