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Book

The Human Rights Graphic Novel

Book

The Human Rights Graphic Novel

DOI link for The Human Rights Graphic Novel

The Human Rights Graphic Novel book

Drawing it Just Right

The Human Rights Graphic Novel

DOI link for The Human Rights Graphic Novel

The Human Rights Graphic Novel book

Drawing it Just Right
ByPramod K. Nayar
Edition 1st Edition
First Published 2020
eBook Published 26 November 2020
Pub. Location London
Imprint Routledge India
DOI https://doi.org/10.4324/9781003110255
Pages 222
eBook ISBN 9781003110255
Subjects Area Studies, Humanities, Politics & International Relations
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Nayar, P.K. (2020). The Human Rights Graphic Novel: Drawing it Just Right (1st ed.). Routledge India. https://doi.org/10.4324/9781003110255

ABSTRACT

This book studies human rights discourse across a variety of graphic novels, both fiction and non-fiction, originating in different parts of the world, from India to South Africa, Sarajevo to Vietnam, with texts on the Holocaust, the Partition of the Indian subcontinent, the Rwandan and Sarajevan genocides, the Vietnam War,  comfort women in World War II and the Civil Rights movement in the USA, to mention a few.

The book demonstrates the emergence of the ‘universal’ subject of human rights, despite the variations in contexts. It shows how war, rape, genocide, abuse, social iniquity, caste and race erode personhood in multiple ways in the graphic novel, which portrays the construction of vulnerable subjects, the cultural trauma of collectives, the crisis and necessity of witnessing, and resilience-resistance through specific representational and aesthetic strategies. It covers a large number of authors and artists: Joe Sacco, Joe Kubert, Matt Johnson-Walter Pleece, Guy Delisle, Appupen, Thi Bui, Olivier Kugler and others. Through a study of these vastly different authors and styles, the book proposes that the graphic novel as a form is perfectly suited to the ‘culture’ and the lingua franca of human rights due to its amenability to experimentation and the sheer range within the form. 

The book will appeal to scholars in comics studies, human rights studies, visual culture studies and to the general reader with an interest in these fields. 

TABLE OF CONTENTS

chapter 1|11 pages

Introduction

Graphic humans and rights

chapter 2|39 pages

Staging vulnerability – I

Corporeality, debodiment and ruination

chapter 3|37 pages

Staging vulnerability – II

Dignity, humiliation and dehumanization

chapter 4|33 pages

Cultural trauma

Victims, memory and materials

chapter 5|31 pages

Witnessing

Spaces, response-ability, testimony

chapter 6|28 pages

Resilient resistance

Subjects, assembly and protest

chapter |13 pages

Conclusion

The face of human rights
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