

Dominic Davies and Candida Rifkind, "Graphic Refuge: Visuality and Mobility in Refugee Comics" (Wilfrid Laurier UP, 2025)
Sep 17, 2025
Dominic Davies, a Reader in English at City St. George's, and Candida Rifkind, a Professor of English at the University of Winnipeg, delve into their co-authored book about refugee comics. They discuss graphic narratives that challenge conventional representations of refugees, exploring themes of migration and agency. The conversation highlights the emotional power of comics in portraying personal stories, the fluidity of identities, and the ethical dimensions of representing violence. Their insights illuminate how these stories foster empathy and redefine perceptions of citizenship.
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Collaborative Method Produces Dialogic Theory
- Davies and Rifkind collaborated by splitting chapters and peer-editing each other to combine distinct scholarly strengths.
- This dialogic method produced integrated theory while preserving each author's voice.
Refugee Comics As A Broad, Historical Category
- The authors define 'refugee comics' broadly to include varied lived relations of refuge beyond legal definitions.
- They focus on post-2015 works responding to the European 'migrant crisis' and its visual culture.
Think In Terms Of 'Citizen' Readers
- When analyzing refugee narratives, frame the presumed audience as 'citizen readers' rather than a vague 'Western reader.'
- Use this lens to interrogate how comics target citizens and reveal citizen–refugee dynamics.