“…In the context of these observations, comics, with their collage‐like combination of frames and spatial layouts, seem to be an attractive medium to stage both a compositional and decolonial form of memory. The multimodal quality of comics, how ‘they communicate information and meaning in many ways at once’ (Hague, 2014: 22), is especially relevant in graphic memoirs, in which various accounts of history, memory and subjectivity are worked through and juxtaposed. Further, as Whitlock (2020: 232) points out, ‘embodiment – the presence of a somatic body, its senses, consciousness, and memories, its very anatomy – is the heart of autographics’.…”