Abstract
This paper introduces a hermeneutical approach to graphic novel representations of punishments
inflicted on women accused of collaboration with the German occupant during the French purge in 1944-
1945. Since the study aims to determine to establish links between graphic novels and the evolutions of the
historiography of the Occupation and Liberation of France, it includes a historiographical component.
Drawing on other cultural medias who have dealt with this theme (novels, movies, poems, songs), the aim is
also to identify the meaning given by artists to their portrayals of shorn and assaulted women. The paper
eventually introduces a broader philosophical reflection on the emancipation from authoritarianism. It is the
study’s contention that graphic novelists are offering a feminist discourse and are using the theme of shorn and
assaulted women during the liberation as a reminder of the late emancipation of women from male
domination.