Tag: teaching comic books

  • New journal article!

    After our blog post for BERA, I am delighted to now share the longer article version with you. In the blog post, we reflect on comics as a teaching tool, using Emina’s story as an example. We argue that comics equip students with visual literacy skills in education, and (maybe more importantly) with critical thinking…

  • Close Reading The Conversation: Forced Marriage and Human Trafficking

    Of course, we aren’t the only folks talking about forced marriage. It’s such a pervasive issue that it’s being addressed around the world. Though this is troubling in terms of how widespread the problem is, it is also reassuring to know that there are a multitude of diverse people tackling it in different ways. For…

  • Alex Says Goodbye

    “I believe in comics,” I said in my job interview for the research assistant role. I remember it distinctly because I cringed about it afterwards. Oh no, I thought, aghast. Why did I say that? It sounded so earnest, so cheesy. What if I came across as insincere?? I squirmed, I blushed, I gnashed my…

  • Let’s Talk About Human Rights and Forced Marriage! – How We Launched Our Comic

    It has taken about thirteen years to arrive at this moment. From the very first glimmer of inspiration in Hannah’s postgraduate mind, to December 2023, with a comic in our hands and a teaching pack online. This year alone has been a whirlwind of school visits, art revisions, and data collection, as well as feedback…

  • A Review of Daria: A Roma Woman’s Journey 

    After reviewing Team Muhafiz and the Child Raiders and Cash Cow, I would like to add Daria: A Roma Woman’s Journey to our list of forced marriage comics.   Source Together, they are painting a more and more complex picture of forced marriage.  They show that forced marriages are a global problem. Statistically speaking, forced marriages…

  • Prepare for take off! – Comic Launch

    It is on the internet, therefore it must be true.  Like little elves, we are busily preparing the launch of our comic and a separate but connected panel discussion on human rights education more broadly.   If you want to know more, click the link and scroll down until you find our event. We’d love to see…

  • Diversity in Comics: A Reading List

    In an attempt to make this blog a welcoming corner of the internet, I decided to put together a list of classic comics that any beginner would have a great time reading. But I noticed as I was writing the list that the comics skew a little… well… male. They’re written by men. They’re predominantly…

  • Classic Comics: A Reading List

    Comic culture can be daunting. The world is changing, I know, but I remember the days when I, a young (feminine) reader of comics, felt really uncomfortable and unwelcome in a comic book shop. The closest thing I got to representation was Sailor Moon, which I was clearly too much of a proto-Cool Girl to…

  • So You Want to Make a Comic 2: How we did it 

    A couple of weeks ago, I came across Alan Moore’s Writing for Comics and Alex put together a handy list resources for comic making. I wish I could say I followed any of the advice of The Great comic writers when I wrote ours.   Instead, and as so often in academia, I made it up…

  • So You Want to Make Comics: A Resource List

    When we ran one of our workshops, a student approached us at the end of the session and expressed her interest in becoming a comic artist. She asked if there were any books on making comics that she could read to develop her work. Caught on the back foot, I recommended the trusty Understanding Comics…