Opus 179:
Opus 179 (February 27, 2006). The Danish Dozen were in the
news almost every day for the last fortnight, until they were blown off the
front pages by the wanton destruction of the revered Golden Dome in Iraq,
which, in what we’ve come to recognize as the natural course of events in the Middle
East, resulted in more riotous rampaging in the Arab streets. If you can’t vote
to get your opinions out there, how else do you manage it? We focus on the
remnants of the catastrophe—namely, the issue of freedom of expression vs.
“sensitivity” to religious feelings. Here’s what’s here, in order: NOUS R US —The Empire State Building
venue of Mort Walker’s National Cartoon Museum described, new creative boss at
Pixar-Disney, current shows and books at the Cartoon Art Museum in San
Francisco, Stan Lee’s comments on
the recent movies made of the superhero characters he helped to create, and the
passing of Little Chief’s creator, Brummett Echohawk, who we had just me,
last time; CIVILIZATION’S LAST OUTPOST —Join
Chip Beck, the self-proclaimed First Boomer, in commemorating Boomerdom; DANISH DOZEN —Will free expression be
forfeit to religious and ethnic sensitivities? Denmark’s Flemming Rose tells,
in great detail, why he published the offending cartoons of Muhammad, and his
motives are impugned as neocon-tainted while the motives of the news media are
similarly questioned, after which, the reactions of several cartoonists and two
outrageous cartoon contests are described; BOOK
MARQUEE —The third collection of Sinfest is now out, better reproduction than the others, and some other invaluable
tomes are noted; WINSOR McCAY REVISITED —The “revised and enlarged” new edition of John Canemaker’s landmark book is
assessed and plugged, ditto my own monograph on McCay and a fresh collection of
McCay’s cartooning labors other than Little
Nemo is extolled with great enthusiasm; FUNNYBOOK FAN FARE —Testament is
reviewed and the second issues of The
Exterminators and Sable and Fortune are briefly commented on; COMIC STRIP
WATCH —Raves about Graham Nolan’s Phantom and Dan Heilman’s Judge Parker,
with a fond farewell to Harold LeDoux, who
has been drawing the Judge since 1965 and is now on the cusp of retiring; TWOMORROWS TOMES —Reviews of several of
the Modern Masters series, Jose Luis Garcia-Lopez, Bruce Timm, Kevin Nolan, George
Perez, and Arthur Adams; winding up with a little recreational Bushwhacking and
quail target practice. And don’t forget to activate the “Bathroom Button” by
clicking on the “print friendly version” so you can print off a copy of just
this lengthy installment for reading later, at your leisure while enthroned.
Without further adieu—
NOUS R US
The
International Museum of Cartoon Art, once lodged in a sumptuous tailor-made
facility in Boca Raton near the Florida shore, has changed its name to the
National Cartoon Museum to coincide with its having found a new digs—in the
Empire State Building in mid-town Manhattan. Founded in 1974 by Beetle Bailey’s Mort Walker, the Museum will re-open early in 2007. It will have
three venues in New York’s skyscraping icon—a street-level entrance with gift
store and, on two upper floors, a two-story-high exhibition hall and an
orientation center with various programmed activities—designed by Ralph
Appelbaum, whose previous assignments have included the United States Holocaust
Museum and the William J. Clinton Presidential Library. Exhibits and
interpretive features of the Museum will include a Cartoon Timeline that traces
the history of the medium, the William Randolph Hearst Cartoon Hall of Fame
(offering samples of the work of the present 31 inductees), and a theater for
film and video screenings. The Studio and Education Center of the Museum will
serve as a virtual cartoonist’s studio where visitors can observe the creation
of a cartoon, step-by-step, and can even make their own. At the heart of the
Museum’s activities is its permanent collection of more than 200,000 works,
most donated by their creators, which will rotate on display, some permanently
(like the Hall of Fame), some periodically (a special show of comic book
superheroes, for example). Said Director Stephen Kiviat: “Our aim is to bring
scholarship to an entertaining artform and to communicate to a large and
diverse audience the myriad ways in which cartoons have been a source of humor,
social commentary, and creative expression around the world.” This latest
version of Walker’s museum seems to me more likely to succeed than its previous
three incarnations. First, the location in mid-town Manhattan in the already
high-traffic vicinity of a major tourist attraction will surely bring more
people into the Museum than any of its previous locales (in distant Connecticut
and Florida) could hope for. Second, the street-level entrance and gift store
will enhance the location with high visibility. Now, if that Studio and
Education Center houses, on a more-or-less permanent basis, some actual working
cartoonists, the new Museum will have all the ingredients I’ve been touting as
essential for lasting viability.
Pixar’s John Lasseter will be the chief creative officer of the animation
operation of the merged Pixar and Disney operations. “Lasseter is probably the
most respected single person in American animation,” said Kevin Koch, president
of Animation Guild Local 839, the Hollywood animators’ union. ... Ann Coulter,
the right-wing nut commentator who is rapidly turning herself into the only
truly funny person on the Right, ended her most recent column, in which she
hilariously insults Arabs by calling them “savages,” with a declaration based
upon “the lesson that violence works,” saying, “I hereby announce to the world:
I am offended by hotel windows that don’t open, pilots chattering when
passengers are trying to sleep, and Garfield cartoons,” adding that “one minute after ‘Garfield II’ goes into
pre-production, some heads are gonna roll.” Nothing succeeds like dispassionate
analytical reasoning, eh? That and permanent tax cuts for the rich. ... A man
wearing a Spider-Man mask entered
unobtrusively (how else would you dress to do this?) a comic book store in
Culver City, California, took out a hammer, smashed a glass display case, and
grabbed several of the rare comic books on display and fled on foot. Apparently
he did not attempt to scale the wall of any of the surrounding buildings in
order to make good his escape, but he nonetheless remains at large. ... Milton
Griepp, CEO of ICv2, announced at the one-day graphic novel prelude to the New
York ComiCon, February 25-26, that while retail sales of graphic novels have slowed somewhat compared to previous years,
they’re still growing—by 18% last year, to an estimated $245 million. ... And
here’s another installment of “that story” that used to make the rounds a
decade or so ago, every time establishing, once again, the inherent value of
comics by proclaiming their dollar worth: Marvel
Comics No. 1 sold for $201,250; Captain
America from 1941, for $96,686; Flash
Comics No. 1, for $273,125. These figures are from a February 13 story in Daily News Business by Phyllis Furman,
who doesn’t say when these books sold for that money. But she says the
Manhattan comic book store, Midtown Comics, reports its sales are up 10% over
last year. ... Speaking of years, this year’s Free Comic Book Day will be May 6, a Saturday as always; and that
means this year, FCBD will be just after Cartoonists
Day on May 5 and at the end of Cartoon
Appreciation Week, May 1-7.
At the Cartoon Art Museum in San
Francisco, an exhibit called “No Straight Lines: Queer Culture and the Comics”
will open March 18 and run until June 25, featuring the work of 20 cartoonists,
including Alison Bechdel’s Dykes to Watch Out For strip and Paige Braddock’s Jane’s World strip/comic book, which can be seen on United Media’s
Comics.com. Another exhibit running simultaneously (that is, until April 20) is
“Why Do They Hate us? Foreign Cartoonists View a Dominating Culture,” in which
more than 100 cartoons by 35 cartoonists from 25 countries provide a reality
check on such American preoccupations as GeeDubya, American elections, the
occupation of Iraq, Hurricane Katrina and Arnold Schwarzenegger. And in the
same spirit of enlightening our self-absorption by subjecting it to an alien
insight, “Israel: The Cartoonists’ Diagonsis—A Viewpoint from Within” (which
will close April 9) presents the views of 15 Israeli cartooners on contemporary
issues in that troubled region, the first-time ever display of this work. And
while we’re pausing here at the Cartoon Art Museum, let me mention two sterling
books it has published, both entitled Spark
Generators, volumes 1 and 2. In these nifty books, cartoonists discuss, in
cartooning forms, the people and events that have shaped their careers. Here we
have, for example, Carol Lay toasting
the fictional women in comics who inspired her. Lots more in this vein, and I
fully intend to report on some of them in more detail, but until I get around
to it, you can visit www.cartoonart.org where you can order
Volume 1 and, probably, Volume 2, which they say will be out in 2003, and, in
fact, it was. The books (112 6x10-inch pages in b&w paperback) appear to be
$13.95 each and can be ordered by snail from the Cartoon Art Museum, 655
Mission Street, San Francisco, CA 94105.
Interviewed by Todd Gilchrist at
dvd.ign.com, Stan Lee said he isn’t
at all miffed by filmmakers re-imagining the characters he created at Marvel
with Jack Kirby and Steve Ditko. Said he: “I would hope they would revamp them.
... When you go to different forms of media, you have to adapt.” About the
various celluloid versions, Lee said: “I thought that ‘Daredevil’ was better than
most people think it was. I thought it was pretty true to the spirit of the
Daredevil comics, and I enjoyed that very much. ... I cannot tell you how much
I loved Spider-Man. I thought the ‘Fantastic Four’ was a very enjoyable, good
family movie; it had the spirit of the comic books down pat, and it was
colorful and eye-filling and the characterization was filling, so I really
liked ‘Fantastic Four.’ ... I loved the X-Men. I thought the X-Men were just
wonderful. ... I enjoyed the Hulk ... what Ang Lee did to give it a comic book
feeling. ...” He also loved the tv version of the Hulk with Lou Ferrigno and
Bill Bixby, even though, as he said, “it was mostly the story of Bill Bixby,
which made it a really serious psychological drama that only adults could enjoy—and
the younger people loved to see it and were waiting and waiting for the Hulk to
appear.”
In Japan, the land of the rising manga, they’re all of a sudden worried
about the influence on the Young of anime featuring pornography for young
girls, of which material there is, apparently, a plentitude. According to Akemi
Nakamura of the Japan Times, the
National Police Agency says the number of recognized sex crimes involving
victims under 13 years old, mostly girls, is up from 1,298 in 1995 to 1,762 in
2004. Roughly 2,000 pornographic animated titles are distributed annually in
Japan, and the so-called experts think this material contributes to the growing
problem. A “concerned group” opines that juveniles who watch animated porn may
develop distorted views about girls or women. May. May not. Sounds to me
suspiciously like Wertham is being reborn in Japan.
And his shade hovers over this side
of the Pacific, too, as ever. At a panel discussion on Friday, February 24,
during the opening day of the New York ComiCon, librarians and publishers of
manga struggled with the ever-present ogre of Sex in comics. The issue is adroitly dramatized by Kai-Ming Cha in
her publishersweekly.com report, which begins: “It’s a classic manga scenario—a cute girl and a bumbling
guy. A gust of wind blows up her skirt revealing her underwear, and the guy
gets a nosebleed.” Panties are sexually exciting in manga, and, as Cha says,
“Nosebleeds represent sexual overtones and they are common in manga.” Probably
“sexual overtones” is politeese for “ejaculation,” but I’m just a typist here,
pretending no expertise at all. “So what’s a librarian to do about supplying
books to teens and children?” Kai-Ming asks. Good question. Japanese attitudes
about sex are considerably more forthright than American attitudes, and manga
often fosters an awareness of sex that is not as openly acknowledged in
American publications geared to the same juvenile age groups. And manga genre
like yaoi (boys in love with boys)
“can really produce problems for librarians,” particularly “because manga is
considered a category for teens rather than adults.” According to many in the
audience at this ComiCon session, there is growing resistance to manga not only
from parents but from librarians. More clash of cultures, kimo sabe, and we may
expect more of the same as globalization continues, unabated.
Fascinating
Footnote. Much of the news
retailed in this segment is culled from articles eventually indexed at http://www.rpi.edu/~bulloj/comxbib.html, the Comics Research Bibliography, maintained by Michael Rhode and John Bullough, which covers comic books, comic
strips, animation, caricature, cartoons, bandes
dessinees and related topics. It also provides links to numerous other
sites that delve deeply into cartooning topics.
NOTED PAWNEE ELDER DIES
Amazingly, we just celebrated Brummett
Echohawk’s comic strip, Little
Chief, last time we met. And
within a week, I received this communique, quoting from nativetimes.com on
February 14:
Echohawk Was an Artist, Actor, Advocate
for His People
By
Sam Lewin
(Bartlesville,
Ok)—A Pawnee elder that excelled in a diverse range of fields and professions
has passed away. Brummett Echohawk died Feb. 13 of natural causes in a
Bartlesville hospital. He was 83.
"He was an author, actor,
painter, sketch artist and World War II veteran," Echohawk's nephew Steve
Echohawk told the Native American Times.
During his long career Echohawk was
spotlighted throughout the country. In 2001, the Frye Art Museum in Seattle
featured a display called, "Little
Chief: The Comic Art of Brummett Echohawk, a hilarious Native American
comic strip that ran in Tulsa's Sunday
World." Steve Echohawk said his uncle also drew for the Chicago Tribune and the Detroit Free Press.
Brummett Echohawk was Kit-Kahaki
(warrior band) and attended the Chilocco Indian Boarding School in Chilocco,
Oklahoma. He distinguished himself during World War II, winning a Bronze Star,
three Purple Hearts and four Battle Stars. According to an online account of
his bravery, Echohawk and "William Lasley, a Pottawatomie, led a
successful charge at Anzio Beach to take the 'Factory' which insured that the
allied toe-hold at Anzio Beach was secure. Lasley was killed in the first
assault."
After the war, Echohawk set about
creating paintings, emerging as a well-known artist with works displayed in
galleries across the world. It's a legacy that likely will endure: the day
after Echohawk's death, the e-Bay website listed some of his paintings
available for sale.
Echohawk also dabbled in acting at a
time when the American Indian presence in Hollywood was sorely lacking. Despite
this, Echohawk was generous with other performers, once sending a letter to
Hollywood producers commending Caucasian actor Jay Brands for "his
authentic performance and his ability" to speak the Pawnee language on the
50s tv show “Yancy Derringer.” Years later, author Yardena Rand wrote a book
called Why We Love Westerns that
featured an interview with Echohawk. Rand was trying to gauge Pawnee reaction
to Kevin Costner's "Dances With Wolves.” She wrote: "Brummett
Echohawk, noted Pawnee actor, painter, writer, veteran, and historian of the
Pawnee nation, expressed complete disgust with most Hollywood renditions of
Indians. But he was pleased with what he felt was an accurate portrayal in
‘Dances with Wolves.’ He was glad Costner used 'real Indian people and there
were no headbands in sight,' a practice started early on in the film industry
to keep white actors' black wigs from flying off during chase scenes."
The article, which describes
Echohawk as "the grandson of a Pawnee scout who served in Major Frank
North's all Pawnee battalion in the1860s and a decorated veteran of World War
II," also says Echohawk enjoyed Costner's film because it "made the
point we were very powerful. You could hardly call this tribe a weak-kneed
bunch."
Steve Echohawk described his uncle
as "an excellent man. He was a friend to everyone and everyone knew
him." He also said Brummett Echohawk was "very traditional. He was a
very proud Pawnee."
You can reach Sam Lewin at sam@okit.com
And Now, Michael Berry
I remarked, last time we met, at how difficult it was to find samples of Michael Berry’s cartoons. At one time, they were nearly ubiquitous in ads in such magazines as Saturday Evening Post and Collier’s. I looked some more and found a few reasonably stunning specimens. Here they are.
CIVILIZATION’S LAST OUTPOST
One of a kind beats everything. —Dennis
Miller adv.
Three
years ago in Iraq, the Internet was virtually unknown. Today, there are 215,000
subscribers, plus thousands of Iraqis who frequent “Internet cafes” that have
sprung up like desert blooms after a rain.
I keep seeing the expression
“judgement call” being used hither and yon. Most recently, in connection with
the Danish Dozen. Whether or not to publish the cartoons is, say some, a
“judgement call.” Well, no. Originally, “judgement call” referred to a decision
made quickly, under the pressure of the moment to accomplish something one way
or another. Like the decision a quarterback makes about whether to throw the
ball or run it, depending upon how the offense gets arrayed before him.
Similarly, the verdict of an umpire or referee is a “judgement call.” Decisions
about whether or not to publish the Danish Dozen are not “judgement calls”;
they are not made on the spur of the moment’s need for a decision. They are
“deliberate” decisions, made after careful and often thorough consideration.
Making such decisions requires judgement, which is what is implied by use of
the expression “judgement call,” but these are scarcely “judgement calls” in
the usual meaning of the phrase.
Chip
Beck, editoonist, one-time CIA operative, former Marine, and world
traveler, claims he’s the First Baby Boomer: he was scheduled to arrive on
January 1, 1946, but was frustrated in this intention by his mother, who
delivered him early, on November 23, 1945. He’s been in and out of Iraq lately,
drawing pictures and working with kids (if I recall aright). And now, he’s up
to another project for the Washington
Post. Says he: If you're a baby boomer you're at least 42 years old this
year, and we're seeking first-hand reports from inside this huge,
extraordinarily self-aware demographic bubble. We're looking for life lessons,
for things learned over a handful of decades. Extra points for detail, honesty
and humor. We'll publish some reports in this space. Write no more than 200
words. Include your name, age, where you live and a phrase describing your
submission. (This doesn't count against the word total.) Include a photo if you
like; digital preferred. By e-mail: boom@washpost.com. Put "Boom Box"
in the subject
line.
By the way, did anyone else observe,
last year during the Super Bowl episode of Janet Jackson’s exploding bodice,
that we have finally, after centuries of doubt and bafflement, determined what
it is that incites the sort of lust that topples civilizations? The female
nipple of the human sapien. That’s it. Nothing more. Or less. Just the female
nipple. One glimpse of it, we are now assured, and men become so craven with
desire that the inhibitions of ages fall away and rampant chaos reigns. I’m
glad we found that out, aren’t you?
One of the reasons for separation of
church and state is that, historically, religions became intolerant and violent
as soon as they were adopted by states. If we can keep them separate, we avoid
the brutality with which history rings.
Quips & Quotes
Stolen,
this time, from Craig Yoe’s new blog about comics and cartoons, Arflovers.
Check it out: http://arflovers.com
“American women expect to find in
their husbands a perfection that English women only hope to find in their
butlers." —W. Somerset Maugham
"If love is the answer could
you rephrase the question?" —Lily Tomlin
"A man in love is incomplete
until he is married. Then he's finished." —Zsa Zsa Gabor
"Sexual intercourse is a
grossly overrated pastime; the position is undignified, the pleasure momentary,
and the consequences utterly damnable." —Lord Chesterfield
"I married beneath me. All
women do."—Nancy Astor
"Men and women, women and men.
It will never work." —Erica Jong
And
then, from the back page column in Entertainment
Weekly:
“What did the Zen master say to the
hot dog vendor? ‘Make me one with everything.’” —Stephen King
THE RETURN OF THE DANISH DOZEN
The
rioting has only just begun to abate as I write this. The death toll has been
mounting for two weeks. Never before have cartoons been so much in the news,
and yet so little in evidence. The riots about the cartoons have been elbowed
off the front pages in news from the Middle East by even bloodier rioting in
the wake of the bombing of the Golden Dome. In other Muslim countries, however,
the cartoon riots continue. Ann Coulter explains all this death and disorder
with her typical right-wing tunnel-vision aplomb: they’re savages, she says.
Yeh, but—but a few years ago, we were as hard pressed to explain the violence
in Northern Ireland. Savagery isn’t peculiar to the Middle East. One of the
biggest causes of rioting in the Arab street is doubtless unemployment. If all these people had jobs,
they’d probably not be rushing downtown to rampage through the streets at every
provocation. They wouldn’t have time: they’d be at work. And they don’t have
jobs because they’ve been consistently oppressed and exploited by autocratic
regimes propped up by American foreign policy through the years.
In reprisal for the publication by a
Danish newspaper of the so-called “blasphemous” caricatures of Muhammad (see Opus
178), Muslim countries are boycotting Danish goods. Everything from Havarti
cheese to Lego toys has been pulled off the shelves, threatening trade ties
between countries not to mention the Danish economy itself. And in Iran, where
Danish pastries are beloved, the confection has been renamed: now called “Roses
of the Prophet Muhammad,” they can be purchased and enjoyed by Iranians with
perfectly clear consciences. “This is a punishment for those who started
misusing freedom of expression to insult the sanctities of Islam,” said Ahmad
Mahmoudi, a cake shop owner in Tehran.
Meanwhile, in this country, the news
coverage of the riots has been amply augmented by opinion columns discussing
the propriety of publishing, or not publishing, the cartoons. In only a couple
major newspapers, however, has the discussion been accompanied by reprinting
the offending cartoons themselves. The issue is not, as Nat Hentoff correctly
says, a First Amendment issue: “The First Amendment becomes involved only when the
government tries to prevent publication.” That hasn’t happened. Yet.
Self-censorship is the issue. Or, rather, editorial timidity in the face of
Muslim intimidation. Hentoff says the Organization of Islamic Conference (OIC)
representing 57 Muslim states is the hand shaping events in the Arab street. We
took a quick look at their December meeting in our report two weeks ago: this
was the “turning point,” we noted, at which deeply felt annoyance at the
cartoons turned to outrage expressed by mobs. At this meeting, it was
“resolved,” in Hentoff’s view, “to criminalize insults of Islam and its
prophets.” Their goal, he goes on, “is to inhibit criticism of Islamic jihadism
by threats of violence.” Said Hentoff: “If I were an editor of a newspaper, I
would publish the cartoons—within the context of the entire story.” Then he
quotes Eric Fettman, on the editorial board of the New York Post: “Showing sudden sensitivity in the face of the
murderous mobs ... is to effectively endorse violent intimidation of the press.”
To some extent, Hentoff concludes, “this has already begun.”
Oddly, William J. Bennett agrees
with Hentoff that the cartoons should be published. The news media have a duty
to do so, he wrote in the Washington Post on February 23. “Over the past few weeks, the press has betrayed not only
its duties but its responsibilities.” The press, he continues, had no problem
publishing stories that “challenged the administration and, in the view of
some, compromised our war and peace efforts,” pointing to the stories about Abu
Ghraib, detention centers, and electronic surveillance. But the press isn’t
publishing the cartoons. “The mainstream U.S. media have covered this worldwide
uprising ... and yet it has refused, with but a few exceptions, to show the
cartoons that purportedly caused all the outrage.” He concludes: “Radical
Islamists have won a war of intimidation. They have cowed the major news media
from showing these cartoons.”
At Doonesbury.com where the
management regularly conducts a “statistically meaningless weekly Straw Poll,”
11,120 votes had been cast on the issue as of Friday, February 24. Those who
cast ballots are asked their religion. Of the 151 Muslims responding
(admittedly a very small sample), 43% oppose publication of the cartoons, 24%
support it, and a surprising 32% feel the cartoons weren't strong enough. (The
question producing the last response reads: “A death sentence for portraying
Muhammad as violent? I don’t think the toons were vicious enough. Put them on
billboards, worldwide. And spam.”) Of the 4,554 Christians responding, 41%
oppose the publication, 40% support it, and 17% feel the cartoons weren't
strong enough. There are also 6,415 other respondents, presumably including
Jews, atheists, and others. The tally there is 34% opposing publication of the
cartoons, 46% supporting them, and 18% feeling the cartoons weren't strong
enough. Elsewhere, a Gallup Poll survey at mid-week reports that 61% of
Americans think the Danish newspaper that published the cartoons acted
irresponsibly; 29% think the reverse.
But before I rant on and quote a
passel of cartooners who’re lined up for the purpose, let me quote in their
entirety three articles on the issue. The first, by the original offender,
Flemming Rose of the Danish newspaper Jyllands-Posten, who instigated the publication of the cartoons, followed
by John Sugg’s divergent analysis of Rose’s motives, and then Tim Rutten, who
adds what seems to me a key consideration. Then I’ll come barging back and
quote some colleagues in the inky fingered fraternity.
WHY I PUBLISHED THOSE CARTOONS
By Flemming Rose, the culture editor of Jyllands-Posten, in the Washington Post on Sunday, February 19, 2006:
Childish.
Irresponsible. Hate speech. A provocation just for the sake of provocation. A
PR stunt. Critics of 12 cartoons of the Prophet Muhammad I decided to publish
in Jyllands-Posten have not minced
their words. They say that freedom of expression does not imply an endorsement
of insulting people's religious feelings, and besides, they add, the media censor
themselves every day. So, please do not teach us a lesson about limitless
freedom of speech.
I agree that the freedom to publish
things doesn't mean you publish everything. Jyllands-Posten would not publish pornographic images or graphic details of dead bodies; swear
words rarely make it into our pages. So we are not fundamentalists in our
support for freedom of expression.
But the cartoon story is different.
Those examples have to do with
exercising restraint because of ethical standards and taste; call it editing.
By contrast, I commissioned the cartoons in response to several incidents of
self-censorship in Europe caused by widening fears and feelings of intimidation
in dealing with issues related to Islam. And I still believe that this is a topic
that we Europeans must confront, challenging moderate Muslims to speak out. The
idea wasn't to provoke gratuitously—and we certainly didn't intend to trigger
violent demonstrations throughout the Muslim world. Our goal was simply to push
back self-imposed limits on expression that seemed to be closing in tighter.
At the end of September, a Danish
standup comedian said in an interview with Jyllands-Posten that he had no problem urinating on the Bible in front of a camera, but he
dared not do the same thing with the Koran.
This was the culmination of a series
of disturbing instances of self-censorship. Last September, a Danish children's
writer had trouble finding an illustrator for a book about the life of
Muhammad. Three people turned down the job for fear of consequences. The person
who finally accepted insisted on anonymity, which in my book is a form of
self-censorship. European translators of a critical book about Islam also did
not want their names to appear on the book cover beside the name of the author,
a Somalia-born Dutch politician who has herself been in hiding.
Around the same time, the Tate
gallery in London withdrew an installation by the avant-garde artist John
Latham depicting the Koran, Bible and Talmud torn to pieces. The museum explained
that it did not want to stir things up after the London bombings. (A few months
earlier, to avoid offending Muslims, a museum in Goteborg, Sweden, had removed
a painting with a sexual motif and a quotation from the Koran.)
Finally, at the end of September,
Danish Prime Minister Anders Fogh Rasmussen met with a group of imams, one of
whom called on the prime minister to interfere with the press in order to get
more positive coverage of Islam.
So, over two weeks we witnessed a
half-dozen cases of self-censorship, pitting freedom of speech against the fear
of confronting issues about Islam. This was a legitimate news story to cover,
and Jyllands-Posten decided to do it
by adopting the well-known journalistic principle: show, don't tell. I wrote to
members of the association of Danish cartoonists asking them "to draw
Muhammad as you see him." We certainly did not ask them to make fun of the
Prophet. Twelve out of 25 active members responded.
We have a tradition of satire when
dealing with the royal family and other public figures, and that was reflected
in the cartoons. The cartoonists treated Islam the same way they treat
Christianity, Buddhism, Hinduism and other religions. And by treating Muslims
in Denmark as equals they made a point: we are integrating you into the Danish
tradition of satire because you are part of our society, not strangers. The
cartoons are including, rather than excluding, Muslims.
The cartoons do not in any way
demonize or stereotype Muslims. In fact, they differ from one another both in
the way they depict the prophet and in whom they target. One cartoon makes fun
of Jyllands-Posten, portraying its
cultural editors as a bunch of reactionary provocateurs. Another suggests that
the children's writer who could not find an illustrator for his book went
public just to get cheap publicity. A third puts the head of the
anti-immigration Danish People's Party in a lineup, as if she is a suspected
criminal.
One cartoon—depicting the Prophet
with a bomb in his turban—has drawn the harshest criticism. Angry voices claim
the cartoon is saying that the Prophet is a terrorist or that every Muslim is a
terrorist. I read it differently: some individuals have taken the religion of
Islam hostage by committing terrorist acts in the name of the prophet. They are
the ones who have given the religion a bad name. The cartoon also plays into
the fairy tale about Aladdin and the orange that fell into his turban and made
his fortune. This suggests that the bomb comes from the outside world and is
not an inherent characteristic of the Prophet.
On occasion, Jyllands-Posten has refused to print satirical cartoons of Jesus,
but not because it applies a double standard. In fact, the same cartoonist who
drew the image of Muhammed with a bomb in his turban drew a cartoon with Jesus
on the cross having dollar notes in his eyes and another with the star of David
attached to a bomb fuse. There were, however, no embassy burnings or death
threats when we published those.
Has Jyllands-Posten insulted and disrespected Islam? It certainly
didn't intend to. But what does respect mean? When I visit a mosque, I show my
respect by taking off my shoes. I follow the customs, just as I do in a church,
synagogue or other holy place. But if a believer demands that I, as a
nonbeliever, observe his taboos in the public domain, he is not asking for my
respect, but for my submission. And that is incompatible with a secular
democracy.
This is exactly why Karl Popper, in
his seminal work The Open Society and Its
Enemies, insisted that one should not be tolerant with the intolerant.
Nowhere do so many religions coexist peacefully as in a democracy where freedom
of expression is a fundamental right. In Saudi Arabia, you can get arrested for
wearing a cross or having a Bible in your suitcase, while Muslims in secular
Denmark can have their own mosques, cemeteries, schools, tv and radio stations.
I acknowledge that some people have
been offended by the publication of the cartoons, and Jyllands-Posten has apologized for that. But we cannot apologize
for our right to publish material, even offensive material. You cannot edit a
newspaper if you are paralyzed by worries about every possible insult.
I am offended by things in the paper
every day: transcripts of speeches by Osama bin Laden, photos from Abu Ghraib,
people insisting that Israel should be erased from the face of the Earth,
people saying the Holocaust never happened. But that does not mean that I would
refrain from printing them as long as they fell within the limits of the law
and of the newspaper's ethical code. That other editors would make different
choices is the essence of pluralism.
As a former correspondent in the
Soviet Union, I am sensitive about calls for censorship on the grounds of
insult. This is a popular trick of totalitarian movements: label any critique
or call for debate as an insult and punish the offenders. That is what happened
to human rights activists and writers such as Andrei Sakharov, Vladimir
Bukovsky, Alexander Solzhenitsyn, Natan Sharansky, Boris Pasternak. The regime
accused them of anti-Soviet propaganda, just as some Muslims are labeling 12
cartoons in a Danish newspaper anti-Islamic.
The lesson from the Cold War is: if
you give in to totalitarian impulses once, new demands follow. The West
prevailed in the Cold War because we stood by our fundamental values and did
not appease totalitarian tyrants.
Since the Sept. 30 publication of
the cartoons, we have had a constructive debate in Denmark and Europe about
freedom of expression, freedom of religion and respect for immigrants and
people's beliefs. Never before have so many Danish Muslims participated in a
public dialogue—in town hall meetings, letters to editors, opinion columns and
debates on radio and TV. We have had no anti-Muslim riots, no Muslims fleeing the
country and no Muslims committing violence. The radical imams who misinformed
their counterparts in the Middle East about the situation for Muslims in
Denmark have been marginalized. They no longer speak for the Muslim community
in Denmark because moderate Muslims have had the courage to speak out against
them.
In January, Jyllands-Posten ran three full pages of interviews and photos of
moderate Muslims saying no to being represented by the imams. They insist that
their faith is compatible with a modern secular democracy. A network of
moderate Muslims committed to the Constitution has been established, and the
anti-immigration People's Party called on its members to differentiate between
radical and moderate Muslims, i.e. between Muslims propagating sharia law and
Muslims accepting the rule of secular law. The Muslim face of Denmark has
changed, and it is becoming clear that this is not a debate between
"them" and "us," but between those committed to democracy
in Denmark and those who are not.
This is the sort of debate that Jyllands-Posten had hoped to generate
when it chose to test the limits of self-censorship by calling on cartoonists
to challenge a Muslim taboo. Did we achieve our purpose? Yes and no. Some of
the spirited defenses of our freedom of expression have been inspiring. But
tragic demonstrations throughout the Middle East and Asia were not what we
anticipated, much less desired. Moreover, the newspaper has received 104
registered threats, 10 people have been arrested, cartoonists have been forced
into hiding because of threats against their lives and Jyllands-Posten's headquarters have been evacuated several times
due to bomb threats. This is hardly a climate for easing self-censorship.
Still, I think the cartoons now have
a place in two separate narratives, one in Europe and one in the Middle East.
In the words of the Somali-born Dutch politician Ayaan Hirsi Ali, the
integration of Muslims into European societies has been sped up by 300 years
due to the cartoons; perhaps we do not need to fight the battle for the
Enlightenment all over again in Europe. The narrative in the Middle East is
more complex, but that has very little to do with the cartoons.
THE CARTOONS AND THE NEOCON DANIEL
PIPES AND THE DANISH EDITOR
John Sugg, who is described as editor
of Creative Loafing, wrote on February 14 at www.counterpunch.org that we “have been had by some of the most bigoted people in the world—and I'm
not talking about Muslim fundamentalists.” He continues:
The big news about blasphemy today
is in the Muslim world. A Danish newspaper, Jyllands-Posten, in September published 12 cartoons mocking the prophet Muhammad. It took
four months for that fuse to reach the powder keg of religious
sensibilities—the flame was relentlessly pushed along by the right-wing,
neo-conservative press until it exploded. The dumbed-down media depiction was
free speech versus intolerant Muslim fanatics. That's not entirely wrong, just
very incomplete. Ultimately, crowds erupted in protests in Muslim cities. The
picture of the burning Danish consulate in Beirut is the icon of the day.
I have to admit a severe conflict of
principles here. On the one hand, I want to shout: "I am Danish! Cartoons
don't kill, bombs do!" I don't countenance any prior restraint on freedom
of expression, and when I first read of the Muslim outrage over cartoons—such
as one depicting Mohammed's turban as a bomb—I sighed a deep sigh of regret.
There's no dialogue in burning embassies.
Should free speech have constraints?
Official censorship is anathema to a free society. Self-censorship and spinning
for a regime—a la Fox News—is just as corrosive. On the other hand, I think the
media should be very judicious about gratuitous offense. I'm repulsed at such
things as artist Andres Serrano's "Piss Christ." And, I feel no need
to antagonize Muslims, Hindus, Wiccans or any other religious groups by
intentionally creating an affront to their faith. I even have respect for the
misbegotten gospel of the (un)Christian Coalition.
That the Muslim world reacted with
violence to the cartoons is abhorrent. That Christians have done the same
thing—lighting uptown centers and hilltops across Europe with flaming heretics
and blasphemers—is just as abhorrent. Indeed, the theocratic movement in
America, which would enshrine one narrow view of Christ's teachings as the law
of the land, is simply a variation on the Muslim fundamentalists bellowing
hatred at Scandinavian businesses and government offices.
There are other caveats that need to
be stated: The Muslim world has been under assault from western Christian
crusaders for a thousand years. We've colonized and despoiled their lands. Many
in America regard their oil as rightfully ours—an underlying if not complete
explanation for George Bush's war of conquest. We've carved up the Middle East,
overthrown democracies (pre-Shah Iran, for example), and fostered despots to
suit the West's imperial whims. And we wonder why THEY don't like us, and why
THEY take insults from us so seriously.
So, let's look at the guy who
started this whole cartoon escapade. He's Flemming Rose, the cultural editor of
the Danish newspaper. In all of the Lexis-Nexis database of stories from the
American media on the Mohammed cartoons, there is absolutely no mention of the
fact that Rose is a close confederate of arch-Islamophobe Daniel Pipes. Indeed,
there is almost no context at all about Rose's newspaper. Only a brief mention
in the Washington Post gave a hint at
a fact desperately needed to understand the situation. The Post described the affair as "a calculated insult … by a
right-wing newspaper in a country where bigotry toward the minority Muslim
population is a major, if frequently unacknowledged, problem."
How bad is Pipes? He wants the utter
military obliteration of the Palestinians; indeed, from the Muslim world, his
racism is about as blatant as that of the Holocaust denying Iranian President
Mahmoud Ahmadinejad. Pipes' frequent outbursts of racism—designed to toss
gasoline on the neo-cons' lust for a wholesale conflict of cultures—earned him
a Bush nomination to the U.S. Institute of Peace, a congressionally funded
think tank. Rose came to America to commune with Pipes in 2004, and it was
after that meeting the cartoon gambit materialized.
It's also worth noting that Danish
Prime Minister Anders Fogh Rasmussen wrapped himself in protestations about
freedom of speech, and that's commendable. But he is one of Bush's few fans in
Europe, steeped in the we-versus-them rhetoric, and having sent troops to the
Iraqi Crusade.
Is Rose an equal opportunity
offender? No way. As the British press reported last week, his newspaper
refused in 2003 to run cartoons that ridiculed Jesus. And, of course, free
expression in Europe is very relative. Many of the democracies have laws
banning certain speech.
Rose gave a rather misanthropic
rejoinder to AP when asked about whether he would have published the cartoons
in light of the subsequent protests. Rose said: "I do not regret having
commissioned those cartoons and I think asking me that question is like asking
a rape victim if she regrets wearing a short skirt Friday night at the
discotheque."
That, of course, makes the
assumption that women are responsible for being raped. It's just as fallacious
as assuming the Muslim world should passively accept an intentional
provocation, one that gratuitously attacked one of the religion's strictest
prohibitions.
Was the reaction overwrought?
Absolutely. Was it predictable? Absolutely. Was it an intentional scheme to
provoke Arab anger, and thereby engender Western disgust with the Muslim world?
The involvement of Pipes and Rose argues that that is exactly what happened.
RCH: Sugg might be right. Certainly, if
he is, it would nourish my favorite biases against neocon absolutism. But it
all looks a bit too much like “guilt by association”: just because Rose is
somehow, however tangentially, connected to Pipes, does that mean Rose does the
neocon dance to Pipes’ tune? Maybe. But if Rose’s argument for publishing the
cartoons seems sensible on its own, before knowing about his reputed connection
to Pipes, then I assume it remains sensible even if Rose is a “known associate”
of Pipes. Rose’s reasons are either good or they aren’t. And if they’re good,
then they’re good whether they are fostered by Pipes or not. Or so it would
seem.
And
Sugg’s reasoning is not without other incriminating flaws. In the closing
paragraphs, he calls Rose’s response to the AP reporter’s question “a rather
misanthropic rejoinder.” It is no such thing. Rose makes a comparison between
the alleged causes of rape and riot because the parallel is nearly exact,
rhetorically speaking. He knows perfectly well that short skirts don’t cause
rape any more than his publication of the cartoons caused street rampages and
death and destruction in the Muslim world. And that’s precisely why he made the
comparison—not, as Sugg suggests, because Rose believes that women are
responsible for being raped. Rose knows what Sugg is mostly, for the sake of
his argument, ignoring: that the riots in the streets of Islam are being
engineered, as the New York Times editorialized
on February 25, by “radical Islamists [who] are trying to harness [the
understandable] indignation [of Muslims] to their political goals and their
theocratic ends by fomenting hatred for the West and for moderate regimes in
the Muslim world.” The radical Islamist objective, a return to the Islam of
Muhammad’s day—pure Islam?—is possible only if societies turn their backs on
the last 1,300 years of history. In common parlance, that means abandoning the
presumed advances in science and thought and political theory achieved in the
West, advances that radical Islamists view with alarm, convinced that they
represent licentious, immoral behavior. Thus, to achieve a world in which
morality once again reigns, it is essential to destroy the societies of the
West and their corrupting influence. To destroy the influence of the West, it
is first necessary to discredit its achievements, to transform admiration to
hatred. The Danish cartoons, by seeming to suggest to the casual viewer that
the West disdains Islam, became the ideal mechanism by which radical Islamists
could muster opposition to the West.
The
issue of freedom of speech and a responsible press still waves like a flag over
the episode. I like to think Tim Rutten has the last word on that subject. On
February 11, Rutten in his Los Angeles
Times column “Regarding Media” revealed that his editor had nixed Rutten’s
idea that the paper publish the Danish Dozen. Rutten continues:
The New York Times, the Washington
Post, Wall Street Journal and USA
Today all have declined to run the cartoons because many Muslims find them
offensive. The people who run Associated Press, NBC, CBS, CNN and National
Public Radio’s website agree. So far, the only U.S. news organizations to
provide a look at what this homicidal fuss is about are the Philadelphia Inquirer, the Austin American-Statesman, the Fox cable
network and ABC.
Among those who decline to show the
caricatures, only one, the Boston Phoenix [an alternate newspaper], has been forthright enough to admit that its editors
made the decision “out of fear of retaliation from the international
brotherhood of radical and blood-thirsty Islamists who seek to impose their
will on those who do not believe as they do. This is, frankly, our primary
reason for not publishing any of the images in question. Simply stated, we are
being terrorized, and as deeply as we believe in the principles of free speech
and a free press, we could not in good conscience place the men and women who
work at the Phoenix and its related
companies in physical jeopardy.”
There is something wonderfully
clarifying about honesty.
Meanwhile, ironies that would be
laughable were the situation not so dire have mounted by the day. For one
thing, reporting in this paper, the New
York Times and Wall Street Journal has
made it clear that what’s at work here is not the Muslim street’s spontaneous
revulsion against sacrilege but a calculated campaign of manipulation by
European Islamists and self-interested Middle Eastern governments. If the
images first published in Jyllands-Posten last September are so inherently offensive that they cannot be viewed in any
context, why did Danish Muslims distribute them across an Islamic world that
seldom looks at Copenhagen newspapers? As Bernard-Henri Levy wrote this week,
we have here a case of “self-inflicted blasphemy.”
Then there’s the question of why
there was no reaction whatsoever when Al
Fagr, one of Egypt’s largest newspapers, published these cartoons on its
front page Oct. 17—that’s right, four months ago—during Ramadan. Apparently its
editor, Adel Hamouda, isn’t as sensitive as his American colleagues.
Nothing, however, quite tops the
absurdity of two pieces on the situation done this week by the New York Times and CNN. In the former
instance, a thoughtful essay by the paper’s art critic was illustrated with a
7-year-old reproduction of Chris Ofili’s notorious painting of the Virgin Mary
smeared with elephant dung. (Apparently, her fans aren’t as touchy as Muhammad’s.)
Thursday, CNN broadcast a story on how common anti-Semitic caricatures are in
the Arab press and illustrated it with—you guessed it—one virulently
anti-Semitic cartoon after another. As the segment concluded, Wolf Blitzer
looked into the camera and piously explained that while CNN had decided as a
matter of policy not to broadcast any image of Muhammad, telling the story of
anti-Semitism in the Arab press required showing those caricatures.
He didn’t even blush.
If the Danish cartoons are, in fact,
being withheld from most American newspaper readers and television viewers out
of restraint born of a newfound respect for people’s religious sensitivities, a
great opportunity to prove the point is coming. A major American studio, Sony,
shortly will release a film version of Dan Brown’s best selling novel The Da Vinci Code. It’s fair to say that
you’d have to go back to the halcyon days of the Nativist publishing operations
in the 19th century to find a popular book quite as blatantly and vulgarly
anti-Catholic as this one.
Its plot is a vicious little stew of
bad history, fanciful theology and various slanders directed at the Vatican and
Opus Dei, an organization to which thousands of Catholic people around the
world belong. In this vile fantasy, the Catholic hierarchy is corrupt and
manipulative and Opus Dei is a violent, murderous cult. The late Pope John Paul
II is accused of subverting the canonization process by pushing sainthood for
Josemaría Escrivá, Opus’ founder, as a payoff for the organization’s purported
“rescue” of the Vatican bank. The plot’s principal villain is a masochistic
albino Opus Dei “monk” for whom murder is just one of many sadistic crimes. (It
probably won’t do any good to point out that, while it’s unclear whether Opus
Dei has any albino members, there definitely are no monks.)
Now many Catholics, this one
included, regard Opus Dei as a creepy outfit with an unwholesome affinity for
authoritarianism gleaned from its formative years in Franco’s Spain. But
neither it nor its members are corrupt or murderous. It is a moral—though
thankfully not legal—libel to suggest otherwise. Further, it is deeply
offensive to allege—even fictionally—that the Roman Catholic Church would
tolerate Opus, or any organization, if it were any of those things.
So how will the American news media
respond to the release of this film?
Certainly, there should be reviews
since this is a news event, though it would be a surprise if any of them had
something substantive to say about these issues. But what about publishing
feature stories, interviews or photographs? Isn’t that offensive, since they
promote the film? More to the point, should newspapers and television networks
refuse to accept advertising for this film since plainly that would be
promoting hate speech? Will our editors and executives declare their revulsion
at the very thought of profiting from bigotry?
Naaaaww.
It won’t happen for a simple reason
that has nothing to do with the ideas being expressed or anybody’s
sensitivities, religious or otherwise. It won’t happen because Pope Benedict
XVI isn’t about to issue a fatwa against director Ron Howard or star Tom Hanks.
It won’t happen because Cardinal Roger M. Mahony isn’t going to lead an angry
mob to burn Sony Studios, and none of the priests of the archdiocese is going
to climb into the pulpit Sunday and call for the producer’s beheading.
On the other hand, perhaps the
events of the last two weeks have shocked our editors and news executives into
a communal change of heart when it comes to sensitivities of all religious
believers.
Right.
That will happen when pigs soar
through the skies on the wings of angels, when the lion reclines with the lamb
on high-thread-count Egyptian cotton sheets and no one bothers to beat the
world’s very last sword into a ploughshare because all the hungry have been
fed.
Until that glorious day, those of us
who inhabit this real world will continue to believe that the American news
media’s current exercise in mass self-censorship has nothing to do with either
sensitivity or restraint and everything to do with timidity and expediency.
Back Again at the Rancid Raves
Intergalactic Wurlitzer: Here’s what
some notable cartoonists are saying:
Joe
Sacco (interviewed by The Nation):
My initial reaction was, “What a bunch of idiots those Danes were for printing
those things.” Did they not think that there was going to be some sort of
backlash. Cartoons like that are simply meant as a provocation. ... In the end,
yes, there is a principle about the freedom of expression that concerns me, but
I’m always sorry to have to rush to the defense of idiots.
Art
Spiegelman (also interviewed by The
Nation): If there’s a right to make cartoons, there has to be a right to
insult, and if there’s no right to make cartoons, well, I’m in big trouble. And
I think American might be, too. ... This notion that the images can just be
described leaves me firmly on the side of showing images. The banal quality of
the cartoons that gave insult is hard to believe until they are seen. We live
in a culture where images rule, and it’s as big a divide as the
secular/religious divide—the picture/word divide. ... Cartoons have a kind of
acidic potency for clarifying a situation because they’re reductive. It also
seems to me that cartoons are defamatory by nature. ... If The Nation and the New York
Times had simply said, “We’re scared shitless,” I could take that. I’m not
only a cartoonist: I’m a physical coward.
Scott
Stantis, editoonist at the Birmingham
News, in support of the power of cartoon images: Editors might ask
themselves: Do you think the streets of the Arab world would be ablaze if that
Danish newspaper had run a series of editorials on the same subject as those
cartoons?
Daryl
Cagle (at his blog at CagleCartoons.com): Almost every newspaper in America
has refused to reprint the cartoons, leaving readers to believe that if they
saw the cartoons, they would be offended too. In fact, if American readers saw
these dull, banal cartoons, we would say, “This? This is what makes them so
angry? That’s crazy!” ... American editors should rethink their decision not to
reprint the original Danish cartoons.
Bob
Englehart, Hartford Courant: Most
all American papers declined to run the Danish cartoons, thus again proving
that newspapers are becoming irrelevant to the news/information process. You,
the curious informed public, need to have a computer and Internet service to
learn what all the fuss is about.
Mike
Lester, Rome News Tribune: I once
drew a cartoon of Jesus turning regular into decaf and was deluged with mail
from Christians requesting t-shirt reprints. It would appear that, even though
the West has been watching “Skating with Celebrities” and smoking Sudafed,
we’ve somehow developed a sense of irony leaving the Dark Aged Islamo-fascists
still working on indoor plumbing and a sense of humor.
Ranier
Hachfeld, Neues Deutschland, Germany:
Editors are and were always timid, particularly in the U.S.A. Nothing will
change in the behavior of editors. On the other hand, I hate the ridiculous
self-pity of cartoonists which is shown in many cartoons about the so-called
Muhammad cartoon controversy.
Monte
Wolverton, syndicated editooner: The recent unrest will only reinforce that
cautious mindset. But public discourse is not for the cautious, faint-hearted
or easily offended.
Pat
Bagley, Salt Lake Tribune: The
episode has opened the door on why religion is somehow exempt from criticism.
Wasn’t that the whole point of the Enlightenment—that folks could speak back to
religious authority? [Bagley, a Mormon, frequently speaks back in cartoons
critical of church-espoused policies and politic issues.]
Vince
O’Farrell, Illawarra Mercury, Australia: ... to deliberately antagonize the Muslim community especially in
the context of broader world events was an irresponsible exercise in abuse of
freedom of the press. The response from the rampaging fanatical zealots was
just as stupid and pathetic.
Ali
Dilem (“the beacon of free press” in Algeria, and, I assume, a Muslim):
What I do not understand is the logic that leads some Muslims to try and make
non-Muslims abide by the precepts of Islam; it’s a bit silly. Today we start by
forbidding them to draw things about Islam, and tomorrow, what? Will they
forbid them to eat ham? To each his own religion, and things will be square.
About that “beacon of the free
press” accolade: Ali Dilem has just been sentenced to a one-year prison
sentence and 50,000 dinar ($550) fine for drawing a dozen cartoons of the
Algerian president. His appeal was denied. He has 24 more cases of press offenses
pending against him. The editors of Arab-language weeklies in Algiers were
arrested earlier in February for reprinting the Danish cartoons. Both papers
were suspended and the editors face prison sentences.
Newspaper editors are increasingly
intimidated, it seems, abroad as well as in these parts. Emad Hajjaj, Jordanian editoonist, reported that he drew a cartoon
urging all Muslims to be civilized in their protest and to stop looting and
burning. “Unfortunately,” he noted, “the two Arabic newspapers I work for
refuse to publish it.”
Brian
Fairrington, a somewhat conservative
and freelance editooner, reports that he was asked to produce a full color
cartoon for the cover of New Republic magazine.
They phoned on Monday and needed it by Wednesday. They had already formulated
an idea: “they described it as the ‘classic cartoon fight scene’ showing a
cloud with lots of fists, heads and feet coming out of it.” Identifiable were
the feet of a “blue collar looking westerner” and a Arab looking guy with a sword.
Fairrington was given the go-ahead and worked all night to finish the drawing,
e-mailing it to Boston that morning. At that point, the Associated Press Paris
Bureau chief phoned Fairrington to ask if the cartoonist thought the Danish
controversy would have any kind of “adverse effect on how editors would treat
‘hotbed’ cartoons.” Just as Fairrington hung up the phone from that call, it
rang again. “It was the New Republic,”
he said, “calling to tell me that the publisher had killed the cover because
they felt it might generate a reaction.”
Without question, it is regrettable
that many Muslims find the cartoons blasphemous and believe publishing them
betrays a Western insensitivity to Islam. But as Joshua Micah Marshall pointed
out at his blog (quoted last time), “blasphemy” can scarcely have any meaning
in a secular, pluralistic democracy. If the latter is to survive and thrive,
“blasphemy” must, perforce, be less and less a matter of public concern and
remain the province of private conscience. In the last analysis, there is much
more at stake here than hurt feelings, however genuine they may be.
I think Hentoff and Bennett are
right—they and all the cartoonists who side with them in favor of publishing
the cartoons. Originally—back in the fall, right after the cartoons first
appeared in the Danish newspaper—to publish them in this country would have
been to sensationalize in the interest of selling newspapers with the latest
scandal. But once the rioting became widespread, the cartoons became “news,” and
the news media had the same journalistic obligation to publish the ostensible
cause of the events that they had in publishing the images of tortured and
abused prisoners in Abu Ghraib. Yet they didn’t. Most editors resort to
describing some of the cartoons instead of publishing the cartoons themselves.
That, they feel, is good enough. But, of course, it isn’t. Words don’t have the
visceral power of images, and without seeing the images, we can scarcely
comprehend the nature of the offense, the reason for all the outrage and
bloodshed. The usual reason given for not publishing the cartoons is the wish
of the editorial powers not to give offense. One must respect religious
beliefs, and the belief of most Muslims is that to portray the Prophet Muhammad
is to commit a sin, approaching idolatry. Religious sensibilities, then, would
be offended by the pictures. In the phrase of the day, just because one has the
right to publish doesn’t mean one ought to publish. It’s a question of taste,
ultimately. And editors have been trained to deal with such matters. Their news
judgement is guided by their taste in determining the content of their papers.
But if it’s a question of taste—which, in the last analysis, is a question of
offending or not offending—then which sensibilities are the next that we’ll not
want to offend? Which religion is the next to be protected by a desire not to
offend? The Catholic Church in its desire to avoid publicity about the sex
crimes of its priests? And after we’ve exempted all religions from coverage of
any story that may offend, then what? Which interest group is next to be
protected? Cigarette smokers? Right to Lifers? Choicers? This way, clearly,
leads to a steady deterioration of an informed body politic.
But lest we depart this sad subject
shrouded in somber sobriety, let us remember, in closing, that we’re discussing
cartoons and cartoonists, a more irreverent and perpetually jocular breed you
can’t imagine. When an Iranian newspaper announced it was holding a cartoon
contest to pick the best anti-Semitic cartoon on the Holocaust, two Israelis
decided to respond to hate with in the way cartoonists usually face crisis.
With a laugh. Amitai Sandy, a
29-year-old Tel Aviv cartoonist, and his screenwriter friend Eyal Zusman, 30, launched an Israeli
anti-Semitic cartoon contest for Jewish artists only. As of February 23, they
have received 40 submissions. Sandy is no stranger to this sort of satiric
gesture. Last November, he participated in an artist protest against the
security barrier in Israel, producing a poster depicting a smiling Jewish-Arab
couple with the slogan, “Yes, I f-ck Arabs.” Sandy explained: “Whenever there
was a left-wing demonstration in Israel, right-wingers would go by and shout,
‘You f-ck Arabs,’ so I thought: ‘Why not turn this around and make it a point
of pride?’”
Among the 40 submissions are four
from Avi Katz, an illustrator for
the bi-weekly Jerusalem Report and
the creator of the comic strip, Virtuella.
Said he: “I think it’s funny. I think it’s noble. I think it’s the right answer
to anti-Semitism.”
All of the cartoons are drawn by
Jews and some are clearly ironic. One shows Moses giving the Israelites the
“secret Eleventh Commandment,” which, he says, is: “Don’t forget to control the
media.” But not everyone is keen on the project. The Anti-Defamation League of
Bnai Brith is “not amused.” An official in the American group’s Jerusalem
office said the contest was “in poor taste and exploitative.” And elsewhere in
the U.S., Deborah Lipstadt, the Holocaust Studies professor at Emory University
who in April 2000 won a libel suit against revisionist historian David Irving,
thought at first that the Israeli competition was a great ironic send-up of the
Iranian contest. But she’s changed her mind. Irony, it seems, can be easily
misused and adapted by the objects of the ridicule. When Arab and Muslim news
outlets announced their intention to run the anti-Semitic cartoons produced by
Jews, Lipstadt urged the sponsors to cancel the contest. Sandy says he’s not
worried about his project being misused. “The hate-mongers don’t need me to
come up with cartoons. They have been doing it for hundreds of years.”
An American artist, Tim Kreider, reports that he’s entered
both contests. With the same cartoon (visible at www.thepaincomics.com).
I’ll give him the last words:
My
goal [Kreider writes] was to
demonstrate to the Arab world that Freedom of Speech is not just a convenient
pretext to bash Arabs. Nobody needs any pretext to insult Arabs. Shit, we
hardly needed a pretext to bomb them. I wanted to show them that we are not
fucking kidding—that Americans are ballsy and funny and free enough to laugh in
the face of death. Also, of course, I wanted to meet the challenge of drawing a
cartoon about the Holocaust without being anti-Semitic, one that would be
shocking and outrageous without being offensive, and, most importantly, one
that would be authentically hilarious. It was a trick to pull off, let me tell
you. ...
The
letter I sent to [the Iranian newspaper] to accompany the cartoon follows:
“Your
Holocaust cartoon contest seems to reveal more about Arab bigotry than Western
taboos. Why insult the Jews, instead of the Danes? Nothing's funny about the
Danes? I have to tell you that you appear to be a little batty on the subject
of the Jews. I hope you can see from my entry that I do not share or endorse
the mean-spiritedness of your contest. Some of my closest friends are Jews.
Their religious upbringing is a matter of as much interest to me as their hat
sizes. Perhaps you cannot imagine how I can be so indifferent to people's
ethnicity and faith, or understand how they could not be furious at me about
this cartoon. But that's what it's like to be a Godless infidel in a pluralistic
society. It's really rather nice. ...
“My
intention in drawing this cartoon is to call your bluff—to prove that we in the
West can take it as well as dish it out, as we say. We are not fucking kidding
about Freedom of Speech. We believe that nothing is off-limits to question,
opposition, or ridicule. No humorist who believes, as I do, that anything can
be funny could regard a contest to draw a cartoon about the Holocaust as
anything other than a high challenge. As an American cartoonist and heir to the
greatest comedic tradition on Earth, I believe there is nothing so sacred that
it cannot be further consecrated—nor anything so monstrous it cannot be
redeemed—by laughter. Laughter is sanity; it is strength; it is fearlessness in
the face of hatred and death. Laughter is how we get through this life without
faith. It's the wine we make from rage. We Americans are braver and funnier and
freer than you can begin to understand. I pity your humorlessness. We have a
saying that I offer you not as a rebuke but as friendly advice: Lighten up.”
...
I've
also learned, to my dismay, that some Israeli cartoonist has responded to the
Iranian contest by sponsoring his own contest for Jews to draw anti-Semitic
cartoons. This genuinely worries me, because the Jews are nothing if not funny,
and the subject on which they are funniest is themselves. If anybody can draw a
funnier Holocaust cartoon than me, it'll be a Jew. They are serious
competition. Although I am not Jewish I am also submitting my cartoon to them.
My accompanying letter reads:
“I
am an American cartoonist who drew this entry into the Iranian Holocaust
cartoon contest. […] I was cheered when I heard about your competing contest,
and I applaud your defiant good humor. In the same spirit, I would like to enter
my cartoon in your contest as well. I hope my submitting it to multiple
contests simultaneously will not disqualify it. I regret that the cartoon is
not really anti-Semitic. I also regret not being Jewish, but this could not be
helped. I am circumcised, and generally anxious and guilty, if those count as
credentials. I hope you will consider my submission.”
I
do not actually believe [the Iranian newspaper sponsoring the contest] will run
this cartoon, if for no other reason than because there are people fucking in
it. If there were any justice in the world, which there isn't—and if there is
it's definitely not in Iran—I would win this contest. Because the Arabs, for
all of what I'm sure must be their many other virtues, do not have a reputation
for hilariousness, and Americans, whatever their many, many other faults may
be, are the funniest fucking people on Earth. Ideally I would get to attend an
awards luncheon in Iran. Maybe a luncheon and beheading! I wonder whether they'd have lunch first or
the beheading. I hear the prize money is to be given out in the form of gold
coins, a unit of currency I have not used since Dungeons & Dragons. Perhaps
I can spend it among pirates. If I win it I intend to either donate the money
to the Holocaust museum or blow it all on beer. More likely the Jews will issue
the Jewish equivalent of a fatwah, and by this time tomorrow the world will be
clamoring for my head on a stick. Of course I have no doubt that this cartoon
will b misconstrued as hateful by the humorless and simple-minded, but this is
an occupational hazard I accept every week. The sensitivities of the humorless
cannot be my concern. Most likely of all is that absolutely nothing will come
of it like it always does. Whatever happens, I am currently feeling extremely
good about getting into the thick of this absurd fray. It's like one of those
scenes in a Western where everybody in the saloon is fighting and you joyfully
throw yourself into the melee and smash a chair or a whiskey bottle over some
guy's head. Yee-haw!
Quips & Crotchets
Here, culled from a greeting card I
bought but am keeping forever, are
Some Questions That Have Not Once Been
Uttered:
Dave,
the guys and I are gonna go paint pottery, wanna come?
Fresno
anyone?
You
think that "Hang in There" kitten poster is what saved his life?
Meet
me for drinks at the toll booth plaza?
Why
not mauve?
Could
I get "Pipe fitters Local 107" stitched in a pillow please?
Dude,
check out that elementary school cafeteria worker—has milk done that body good or
what?
Me again. I don't know why such
things strike me as vastly amusing. This all did once, but I'm not so sure
anymore. What do you think?
BOOK MARQUEE
Dance of the Gods is the third volume reprinting Tatsuya Ishida’s webstrip, Sinfest—for
my money, one of the two funniest and best drawn of today’s comic strips, on
the Web or anywhere; and in this volume, the reproduction is better than in the
previous two, Ishida’s telling fine filagree faithfully preserved to give
contrasting accent to his undulating bold lines. Ishida’s sense of humor is
sacrilegious and hilarious, sexy and insightful, and the laughter his strip
inspires is the silvery laughter of the heart. Ishida is a master, and if
you’ve missed this enterprise online, you’ve missed the best of the decade; go
to www.sinfest.com . Oh—the other of the two funniest and best
drawn? Brooke McEldowney’s 9 Chickweed Lane.
The
Eye of Dart-an-Gor is the latest of
ways to savor the well-behaved (good) feminine (girl) portraiture (art) of Alfonso Azpiri, whose Lorna slips in
and out of her space suit as easily as she does the beds of her friends and
enemies, an ample display of both embonpoint and lavish color and line. Krazy & Ignatz: 1935-1936 by George Herriman is the latest in
Fantagraphics Books project reprinting this masterpiece, and with this volume,
we get to the Sunday strips that were originally published in color, reproduced
here that way, too. Herein, Bill Blackbeard finally gives up his misguided
conviction that Herriman was Greek and endorses Jeet Heer’s essay discussing
the cartoonist’s mulato roots, an essay that, regrettably, finds racial themes
in a comic strip the prevailing theme of which was simply, majestically, the
art of the comic strip.
New
Yorker Book of Art Cartoons, like several other thematic compilations of
the magazine’s cartoons, is a persuasive argument for the surpassing artistry
of cartooning’s haiku form. Steinberg at
the New Yorker is both a gallery of his work and a biography of one of the
most inventive penmen of the last century.
In Alternative Comics: An Emerging Literature, Charles Hatfield argues
for comics as literature, deploying a meaty academic prose so dense with
meaning that it defies casual perusal even as it is bound to reward persistent
study.
This month’s Previews lists Will Eisner’s
John Law, due back in April with “Angels Ashes, Devils Dust,” Gary
Chaloner’s 4-part story, 30 pages in each successive issue. The series stars
the one-eyed detective Eisner invented in 1939 and revived a decade later, only
to abandon him again, re-touching all the stories he’d done to change Law’s eye
patch into the Spirit’s mask. Then Chaloner rejuvenated the character one more
time in 2004 for an appearance in “Dead Man Walking,” an engaging and atmospheric
tale done while Eisner was still alive and published by IDW in December 2004,
just before Eisner’s death. This square-spined opus includes all three of
Eisner’s original late forties tales and a short history of the character.
Chaloner’s story and treatment evoke Eisner’s mannerisms nicely without
actually aping them. The tale, like many of Eisner’s Spirit stories, is
convoluted, panels jammed with narrative bits and visual special effects. All
very noir, enhanced with gray tones and copious black shadows, strange
Eisnerish angles and perspectives, and, in the spirit of Eisner’s graphic novel
treatments, vignettes alternate with panels throughout. The emphasis, as in a
Spirit story, is on character rather than incident, but there’s incident
enough. More John Law transpires at regular intervals at www.ModernTales.com , and now, in the new series from IDW.
WINSOR MCCAY AGAIN
If
you don’t have on your shelf John Canemaker’s excellent biography of one of
cartooning’s authentic geniuses, Winsor
McCay: His Life and Art, you now have a chance to remedy your dereliction
in acquiring a copy when it first came out from Abbeville Press in 1987. Abrams
published last year a “revised and expanded” edition to celebrate the 100th anniversary of the inaugural appearance of McCay’s Little Nemo in Slumberland. It’s a handsome 11x13-inch 270-page
tome at $45, and I recommend it heartily if you don’t have a copy of the
earlier edition. If, however, you are tempted, as I was, to buy the Abrams
edition in the belief that “revised and expanded” meant the book was
substantially different from its predecessor, don’t bother. The promotional
information upon which I decided to buy Abrams trumpeted 40-some additional
pages and newly discovered illustrations, implying that the new edition would
have 40-odd pages of new illustrative material. It doesn’t. The new edition is
not so much “revised” as it is “re-designed,” and most of the additional 40
pages are devoted to the designer’s lavish use of white space. In the page layout’s
three-column grid, for instance, the third column is left mostly blank. This
maneuver enhances the appearance of the page but does not add to the content of
the book. As for the “expansion,” the new illustrative material is not very
extensive—a couple doodles, one or two color ads for Nemo merchandise, a
faithful reproduction of an old and browning newspaper clipping, and a few
cells and sketches for “Gertie on Tour,” McCay’s encore treatment of his
seminal animated film about a dinosaur. The new book has Nemo images on the
cover and illustrated end papers, which the first edition did not have. Beyond
these modifications, the book is pretty much the same tome as it was in 1987.
It is, as I said, a handsome object, and an invaluable reference as well as an
enchanting read, but I don’t need it. It doesn’t have enough new material to
replace my Abbeville volume, and I don’t want two Canemakers. Since I prefer
the earlier work, I’m offering here my copy of the new Abrams book, unread and
merely thumbed-through for comparison purposes, at the drastically reduced
price of $25, including p&h, to the first person who asks for it at RC.Harvey@SBCglobal.net . If you don’t have Canemaker on your
shelf, don’t miss this once-in-a-lifetime opportunity to correct the
deficiency.
Winsor McCay was the first original
genius of the comic strip medium. Ditto the medium of animated cartoons. No
question. He did things in both media that no one had done before. There is a
fine irony in the towering stature of his genius. He had no equals; he
therefore had no imitators. And no legacy. Much of what he achieved was simply
lost: like a rocket exploding brilliantly in the midnight sky, his work
illuminated the medium for a breathtaking instant and then faded into virtual
oblivion as, one by one, the scintillating spangles of his achievements winked
out, leaving his colleagues as much in the dark as before. He was so far ahead
of his time that many of his innovations were beyond the abilities of his
contemporaries: what he had discovered and demonstrated about the capacities of
each medium had to be re-discovered decades later by the next generation of
cartoonists.
But the irony in which McCay's
achievement is cloaked is an enigma of another dimension. Not only was his
grasp beyond the reach of most cartoonists of his day, but he himself was
prevented the full exercise of his talent for much of his career. His genius
was choked off at just the moment it peaked. For most of his life, he served a
master other than his muse. The story of McCay's cartooning career is therefore
a record of soaring artistic aspiration and accomplishment that plummets at
last, inert, all animating inventiveness suspended in order to perform humdrum
graphic chores of illustrating, albeit brilliantly, Arthur Brisbane’s
pedestrian editorials in the newspapers of William Randolph Hearst.
Canemaker’s book will explain how
this happened; so does my monograph, The
Genius of Winsor McCay. In fact, my book addresses this mystery directly.
Canemaker’s book is much better illustrated, but mine is cheaper. How much
cheaper? Just $7 plus p&h; find out more here.
And before we abandon McCay to the
chilly embrace of history once again, here’s another centennial celebration,
Fantagraphics’ Daydreams and Nightmares,
a gigantic 175 10-14-inch page b&w tome in paperback (merely $24.95), that
enriches our comprehension of his genius with specimens culled from every venue
of cartooning to which he turned starting in 1898. Except Little Nemo. Here are cartoons salvaged from his early magazine
work, samples of such series as Dream of
the Rarebit Fiend, A Pilgrim’s Progress, The Faithful Employee, Rabid Reveries,
Little Sammy Sneeze, and numerous other untitled series, as well as lots of
his staid editorial cartoons—all here in a sufficiency to remedy the lapse that
comics scholarship has displayed by concentrating just on Little Nemo and one or two of McCay’s other better known titles
(the Rarebit Fiend, for instance).
Bound of the short side, this volume presents all of this work in a dimension
that makes appreciation possible. McCay’s pictures are accompanied by
introductory matter from Gary Groth and Richard Marschall and—wonderful!—essays
by McCay himself on aspects of his art. Altogether, a suitably monumental compilation
for the occasion and an indispensable book for your cartoon-appreciation
library.
FUNNYBOOK FAN FARE
Religion,
which has always lurked in the backs of the minds of men—even in our so-called
modern times—has elbowed its way to the front recently. Since 9/11, the rants
of the Islamist hordes have astonished the West with their fervor, reminding us
that for much of the world religion is a much more motivating force than it is
hereabouts, where the Almighty Dollar is the reigning deity. And the death and
destruction in the wake of the Danish Dozen merely dramatize, one more time,
the passionate devotion that separates the Muslim world from the West. But even
with the emergence of religion in our daily lives, so to speak, it’s surprising
to find comic books taking up aspects of the subject. Revelations, for example, a six-issue mini-series that we reviewed
last time. And now, here’s Testament by Douglas Rushkoff with Liam Sharp on pictures. In the first
issue, Rushkoff sets up his parallel worlds: ancient Biblical times and the
modern just-around-the-corner future. In both, a father faces the prospect of
sacrificing his son. In the opening pages, Abraham takes his son Isaac up to
the mountain. Then, as we turn the page, we’re in a more contemporary setting,
where a father, Alan, is about to sacrifice his son, Jake: in the future
envisioned here, all young people are “tagged” with an embedded electronic chip
that the government can use to find them and call them up in the event the
military forces need an injection of manpower. Jake has friends who have dug
the chips out of their arms, freeing themselves from the obligation for
military service. But Jake seems about to go along with tagging—as if, his
father says, he has a choice. Rushkoff then flashes back to his Biblical
beginning when the voice of the Almighty tells Abraham not to lift his hand
against his son. And in our times, Alan decides to do the same, and he tags the
family’s pet pig instead of Jake. Thus, Rushkoff assures us, the Bible lives:
its plots have been recurring for centuries. “A comic,” he writes on the
editor’s page, “is a camouflage allowing me to expose the essential mythic
battle underlying Western Civilization, and sequential narrative is a perfect
way to tell a story that takes place in multiple universes at the same
time—including our own. It’ll follow a band of cyber-alchemist revolutionaries,
in a future just a day after tomorrow.” Sharp’s treatment of the story is good
journeyman realistic illustration, laced, perhaps a little extravagantly, with
hayey feathering and cross-hatching and fussy linear embellishments. But he
also deploys a confident bold outline, rescuing the hay of his embroidery from
visual confusion. Nothing spectacular here, but the art is more than adequate
to the task.
The second issue of The Exterminators takes us another
revolting step closer to the crisis that is slowly surfacing from under the
rocks of urban life. Truly disgusting pictures. And in the second issue of Sable & Fortune, John Burns continues to display a
painting virtuosity that pleases the eye even if it doesn’t always define the
image. Sable’s face varies too much, for instance: is her upper lip prominent?
Or is it her lower lip? The test in illustrating a story is not in drawing a
beautiful woman but in drawing the same beautiful woman, time after time. Burns can do that; he’s done it thousands of
times in the famed strip, The Seekers, for example. But that was a linear accomplishment, and here, he’s relying
entirely on color and shape, a much trickier prospect. Nonetheless, his
renderings are still spectacular—Sable’s silver lame suit, for instance, is an
achievement. And in this issue, there’s a longer and more satisfyingly done
action sequence.
COMIC STRIP WATCH
I
finally realized why it is that I’m not a particular fan of Sherman’s Lagoon. It’s the ultimate
talking heads strip. Most of the characters are fish, and fish, anatomically
speaking, are fairly limited. So there’s nothing much to draw except heads.
Talking. Visually, that’s boring. I felt the same way about “Finding Nemo.”
Our local paper publishes only the
Sunday Phantom, and it appears in the
chintzy two-tier abbreviation, so the initial allotment of meager space is even
more meager. But on February 12, I had to shake my head in amazed appreciation
of how much visual action the current artist, Graham Nolan, manages to cram in and pull off in those cramped
panels. He’s got the Ghost Who Walks in New York, trying to foil an assassin’s
attempt on Diana, the perennial Phantom wife, and the Man in Purple is shown
vaulting a fence, running down a street, pulling his guns, and letting fly at
the rooftop assailant. In only 8 panels. Great stuff. And Nolan can drawn
anatomy and atmosphere, too. Nolan spent two years at the Kubert School and got
so many job offers, he quit without graduating. He started with DC Comics in New Talent Showcase with a story called
“The Fan”; it was, he told Joseph Szadkowski at the Washington Times, “about me at a comic book convention, meeting all
of the rabid fans.” He did Bane in the Batbooks and then in 2000, he got out of
comic books “because they were cutting titles and [making] editorial changes.”
He continued: “I was also looking for something with less micromanagement, and
I needed more freedom. So I tried to syndicate my Monster Island book and ended up with strips by accident. King
Features had an opening on Rex Morgan,
M.D. and asked me if I would do it. I told them I would really like to do
the Phantom, but there was no
opening. A month later, after taking the Rex
Morgan job, I was called to take over the Sunday Phantom strip and have been doing both ever since.” Why the Phantom
fascination? “He was my mom’s favorite and she was always very supportive of my
career. He is also not dissimilar to Batman, kind of noirish with lots of
shadows, and I have always been drawn to pulpy stuff.” Nolan’s Phantom has
recently been compiled in Moonstone Books trade paperbacks, The Phantom: The Graham Nolan Sundays, Vols.
1 and 2; $16.95 each.
LeDoux Is LeDone
The
last remaining soap opera strips I call The Great Quartet because you almost
always find them together. Mary Worth,
Rex Morgan, Judge Parker, Apartment
3-G. If your newspaper runs one, chances are, it runs at least two of the
others. It’s as if there’s some sort of unwritten fatwa about breaking up the
set. Typically, they are all printed in a cluster on the funnies page, too. In
moments of high delusionary fancy, I imagine Mary Worth leaning with her elbows
on the border of her strip like Mrs. Goldberg at the window of her tenement,
looking down at Rex Morgan to ask his advice about some imagined ailment. Or
looking up to seek Judge Parker’s legal counsel on the forthcoming divorce
plans of an unfortunate couple whose marriage she had inadvertently arranged
year ago. Mary Worth is the oldest of
this bunch and is now being written and drawn by the fourth and fifth,
respectively, of its writers and drawrers. The others are into the third of
their scribes. Rex Morgan’s present
artist is the fourth; Apartment 3-G’s,
the third. But Judge Parker has been
drawn for most of its 53-year run by only one artist, Harold LeDoux. When LeDoux took over the strip from its originating
artist, Dan Heilman, after Heilman’s
death in July 1965, he perpetuated his mentor’s drawing style for a while; and
then, over the years, LeDoux’s work became increasingly wooden. For the last
ten years at least, it has been difficult to tell one of his female characters
from the others so identically did LeDoux draw faces; ditto the male
characters. But at first, his imitation of Heilman was stunningly accurate.
Heilman is one of my favorite
realistic renderers. His line is so crisp it snaps. He laid in blacks with hard
edges that defined shapes, and his anatomy is a supple shorthand. His treatment
of hands, in particular, fascinated me. When, in November 1952, Heilman’s Judge Parker debuted, written by its
creator, psychiatrist Nick Dallas,
who also wrote Rex Morgan, my jaw
dropped: nothing on the page was as sharply drawn. Heilman, who was
then 28, had served four years in the Air Force during World War II and, upon
discharge, attended the Chicago Academy of Fine Arts. He subsequently
illustrated a few children’s books and drew a couple comic strips—The American Adventure, a history strip,
and John Sunday, an aviation strip
for the Air Reserve. He delighted in Judge
Parker because, he said, it enabled him to draw in both realistic and
comedic styles, the latter applied exclusively to some of the most charming
little kids in comics since Merrily Sandhurst (a Caniff invention). He met his
future wife while both were enrolled in art school in Chicago, and she lettered
and colored Judge Parker; Dolores
(“Del”) Heilman continued lettering the strip for several years after her
husband’s death.
LeDoux joined the enterprise before Judge Parker was a year old. Le Doux was
26 at the time. He’d been in the Merchant Marine just after WWII, and he’d
attended Heilman’s alma mater in Chicago. Born in Port Arthur, Texas, where his
parents had moved from Acadia in Louisiana, Evangeline country, LeDoux imbibed
of his parents’ Cajun heritage, and when he went to New York to seek his
cartooning fortune in 1951, he took with him a portfolio full of Antoine of the Bayou, a comic fragrant
with “boudin” and “Pontchartrain” and other colorful but baffling
idiosyncracies of that region, too quirky for syndicate tastes. LeDoux went to
work for Steve Douglas, famed for editing Famous
Funnies and other comic books of that ilk. Patching together newspaper
strips for reprinting in paginated format and doing occasional illustration in
the styles of other cartoonists eased LeDoux out of his “big foot” mode into
the more realistic, or “little foot,” techniques of the illustrative manner.
Working for Douglas, LeDoux says he did the first adaptation of Jerry Lewis and
Dean Martin to comic books. After a couple years of this, he was hired by
Heilman to assist on Judge Parker.
LeDoux had been recommended by Heilman’s assistant on The American Adventure, a man who’d been a LeDoux classmate in
Chicago but who was going on to other endeavors.
At first, LeDoux said, he did only
backgrounds in the strip because everyone had decided, based upon his earlier
work, that he couldn’t “do realistic.” Gradually, however, he did more and
more, inking Heilman’s pencils; Heilman inked the faces, but LeDoux did the
rest. So when he first solo’d on the strip after Heilman died, LeDoux aped his
predecessor almost perfectly. Slowly, he discarded Heilman’s mannerisms in
favor of his own. He said Heilman had a distinctive way of drawing hands and a stylized
conception of anatomy that made it difficult to imitate. LeDoux preferred to be
completely realistic, he told Jud Hurd in Cartoonist
PROfiles (No. 2, Spring 1969). “He says if you tried to imitate Heilman’s
way of doing hands, you’d run into trouble,” Hurd reported. But LeDoux did a
pretty good job of it until he followed his own inclination. Alan Parker
eventually retired from the bench and married one of the defendants who had
appeared before him, surrendering the narrative to a young lawyer named Sam
Driver. I haven’t seen the good Judge in the strip for fifteen or twenty years,
I think. A couple years ago, Sam Driver finally married rich Abbey Spencer.
Since Dallas retired in 1990, the strip has been written by Woody Wilson, who also writes Rex Morgan. Wilson must’ve gotten chewed
over by the wedding bug about then because just before Sam and Abbey got
married, Dr. Morgan finally popped the question to his nurse, June Gale, who’d
been quietly in love with her boss for 47 years, a model of dignified, detached
and wholly unrequited passion.
Meanwhile, Sam and Abbey have taken
in a young woman wanderer named Sophie, an artist who is about to go off to
study art in Paris. That was LeDoux’s idea. “She was all set to go away to art
school,” he told Mike Peters at the Dallas
Morning News, “and I said to Woody, Why not have her go to Paris for art
school?” LeDoux had an ulterior motive: “I would love to draw Paris for the
strip,” he said. He’d been there while in the Merchant Marines. But, as it
turns out, LeDoux won’t be drawing Paris: he’ll be visiting the City of Lights
instead. After 41 years soloing the art on the strip, LeDoux, 79, is laying
down his pen.
Fitnut. Heilman’s assistant on The American Adventure was Jerry
Warshaw, who is presently, at the age of 79, the staff cartoonist of Evanston’s Beacon, a periodical of the
free tabloid persuasion that is distributed in Evanston, Illinois. I’ve known
Jerry for a couple years, ever since the Chicago chapter of the National
Cartoonists Society was formed. But I didn’t know much of his history in
cartooning. The other night, a tightly knit group of us had gathered for the
purpose of jurying the comic strip division of the Reuben awards, Jerry among
them, and we fell to talking, willy nilly, about assorted lore in the inky
fingered fraternity. I mentioned LeDoux’s retiring from Rex Morgan, and Jerry piped up and said he’d gone to art school
with LeDoux, and then it came out that Jerry had been Heilman’s assistant—the
self-same bloke who recommended LeDoux to take his place. I’d just written the
foregoing diatribe, so it was all fresh in my mind. Jerry said he and Heilman
used to “study Caniff,” assiduously. Herewith, another bit of lore finds its
niche.
SOME TWOMORROWS TOMES
From one of DC’s editors, Andrew
Helfer: As I sat in my office one
day, a man stepped into my doorway and stared at a point on the wall behind me
and just above my head. Although I’d never met the man, I knew his distinctive
face. It was Jean Gireaud, aka Moebius, and he was staring at the drawing of
Wonder Woman by Jose Luis Garcia-Lopez.
Without acknowledging me, he inched his way into my office and behind my desk
until he was just in front of the drawing. He shifted his glasses down off his
nose to get a better look at the drawing. After a moment, he turned to me.
“This Garcia-Lopez,” he asked in a
heavy French accent, “—he uses models, no?”
“No,” I answered, smiling.
“Son of a bitch!” Moebius hissed.
He didn’t need to say another word.
I already knew it was the highest compliment one artist could pay to another.
RCH again: I’m quoting, above,
verbatim, from Helfer’s Introduction to Modern
Masters: Jose Luis Garcia-Lopez (128 8x11-inch pages in b&w; paperback,
$14.95) the fifth volume in the series from TwoMorrows. I first encountered
Garcia-Lopez years ago with Atari Force comic
books, and from that alone, I can attest to the accuracy of the back-cover
blurb here: “Ask any comic book artist who the best draftsman in the business
is, and you’ll come up with one answer—Jose Luis Garcia-Lopez.” The volumes of
the Modern Masters series, all of identical dimension, consist mostly of interviews
and art, just as they should. In the interviews, the subject’s response to
questions traces his life and career; the art illustrates the various episodes
and achievements in that career. In almost every volume, a segment on
“storytelling and the creative process” concludes the text portion. There is
also a section in which the subject pays tribute to the other artists whose
work influenced him, with a representative illustration for each. The
illustrative material is all artwork; no photos, strangely—not even of the
subject himself. The books could use a chronological listing of the subject’s
credits, but the artwork in the volumes I have is gorgeous enough that I didn’t
notice this missing reference element until long after I’d thumbed the book and
then only when I started thinking about it. The artwork typically includes spot
illos, sketches in pencil and in ink, page layouts in pencil, sample whole
pages, unpublished character sketches and model sheets, and so on—in short, all
the usual paraphernalia we associate with a working artist. There’s also a
color section of 20 or so pages. The other four artists in the series, so far,
beginning with the first volume, are Alan Davis, George Perez, Bruce Timm, and
Kevin Nowlan. A sixth volume on Arthur Adams just arrived; and the seventh,
John Byrne, is a-borning. All can be found at www.twomorrows.com; prices vary somewhat from $12.95 to $19, depending upon your source and whether
postage is included in the price or not (it is at the website). Eric
Nolen-Weathington edits the series and did most of the interviews.
In the Garcia-Lopez volume, I
learned that he was born in Spain but grew up in Argentina. He started drawing
comics professionally at the frighteningly early age of 13, when his “studio”
was a coffee bar like Starbucks, where he sat and drew all day for the price of
a couple cups of coffee. Among the artists whose work he admired were the usual
(Alex Raymond, Harold Foster, Milton Caniff) as well as Ross Andru, Stan Drake,
Moebius, Jordi Bernet, Carlos De La Fuente and Kreigh Collins, neither of the
latter illustrated, alas. Collins drew several Sunday adventure strips, each of
which morphed out of its predecessor: Mitzi
McCoy (beginning November 7, 1948) was set in modern times, and it became a
chronicle of Mitzi’s medieval Irish ancestor under the title Kevin the Bold (starting October 11,
1950), which, in turn, came back to modern times as Up Anchor! in October 1968, ending, finally, February 27, 1972.
Collins had a unique style, realistic but lumpy in strange and wonderful
ways—nothing at all like Garcia-Lopez’s polished work. Garcia-Lopez moved to
the U.S. at the end of 1974 when he was 26, already an experienced
professional. Asked if he suffered any “culture shock” upon arriving in this
country, he said he didn’t: “Globalization is not a new thing; I was ready for
New York.” I was delighted to know that Garcia-Lopez loved doing Atari Force—“They had to take me off by
force,” he told Nolen-Weathington (which they did after the 12th issue
of the 20-issue run). I was disappointed, though, to learn that his favorite
characters were Morphea and Babe; mine were Blackjak and Dart. The
wise-cracking relationship between these two, who obviously loved each other
deeply, was one of the treats of the series, thanks to the estimable Gerry
Conway.Among
the penciled pictures herein iweet sisters the splash page from No. 3, which reveals that
Garcia-Lopez imagined that Dart slept in the buff; one of his favorite inkers,
Ricardo Villagren, “dressed her in the inking stage.” Garcia-Lopez was also
well-inked in the series by Bob Smith.
One of my fonder memories of the Chicago Comicon before it became the Wizard Wonder was the evening that the first of the new Batman animated series was previewed. The audience was, to a man—to a woman—blown away by the style of the art and the storytelling mannerisms. Seldom have I witnessed so universal a positive reaction. We were all swept up and away by it. So I was happy to find in the Bruce Timm volume, Timm tracing the evolution of the celebrated “Batman Animated Style.” John Buscema was a “major, major influence” on his early work, Timm said, but by the late 1980s, Timm became interested in the art deco illustration style of the 1920s and 1930s, a style that grew out of art nouveau at the turn of the century: art deco’s sleek, streamlined geometries represented a conscious effort to simplify the elaborately twining plant-like forms of the earlier style. Timm was also influenced—without realizing it, he said—by Harvey Kurtzman. And Dan DeCarlo was also incorporated into the new manner. Harley Quinn was a happy discovery—“lightning in a bottle,” he said. But at first, he was afraid that her cute comedy would act to blunt the Joker’s edginess. “We kept trying to make the Joker scary, and scary, and scary, and by having his wacky girlfriend there, it brings out his goofier side. I was really concerned about that, but we all loved the character, so Paul Dini kept sticking her in every Joker show.” The Joker did lose a little of his edge, Timm thinks. But “eventually, Harley became such an integral part of our version of the characters we were able to pull off some really dark stories with her as well as some fun and light ones.” DC “made a really smart choice in trying to adapt the animated style for the comics,” Timm said. “I, in turn, was influenced a lot by what Ty Templeton and Rich Burchett and Mike Parobeck were doing in the comics.” At first, he confessed, he was a little unnerved by other artists imitating his style because they did it “as good if not better” than he did. The art gallery in this volume includes numerous of Timm’s toothsome heroines, proving that simplification is a lot sexier than complication. Kevin Nolan, in addition to working with the meticulous Alan Moore, inked Gil Kane’s last penciled art for Superman: Blood of My Ancestors. “I had all 24 pages inked before I even knew how sick he was. The pages were coming in and then they just kind of stopped at one point.” He was asked to continue the penciling but declined; eventually, after “maybe more than a year,” they decided to get John Buscema to finish the book. “At first glance,” Nolan said, “it seems like a bad idea because he draws nothing like Gil. But then if you look at this specific book, on the surface it’s basically a Conan story.” This volume in the series has a few photos of its subject, but they’re all taken when he was about 12 or younger. The cover Action Comics Weekly No. 639 is reproduced, the only time I’ve seen the Phantom Lady so realistically proportioned albeit nearly naked. Nolan’s working relationship with Moore intrigued me, so I was glad that the artist talked in considerable detail about it. Oddly, Nolan had just moved to a small farming town near Wichita when he got the script for Moore’s “Jack B. Quick,” and he was able to use the environs as locale. A page of Moore’s script is reproduced herein, in all its exhaustive detail, and I was amazed to see in Nolan’s rendering next to it that the artist had altered Moore’s conception when visualizing it. Moore is detailed in his descriptions, Nolan says, but not “pushy” about it: if the artist thinks of a better way, he is invited to try it. But for the most part, Nolan said, he did it Moore’s way: that’s the only way the balloons work out. “Sometimes it was hard to work out the compositions, and I’d fudge a bit here and there. That’s also the reason a lot of it is long shot after long shot after long shot because he’s asking for a specific amount of [visual] information in every panel, and you can’t just come in close on a character’s face even though they’re basically just standing there talking because the story’s not written that way. You don’t have that much freedom.” Nolan also talked at some length about the Moore story, “Pet Theory,” in which Jack experiments with conflicting notions: cats always land on their feet, and so does a slice of bread always land on the buttered side. So, in one of the most celebrated of episodes in comics, Jack butters the back of a cat in the conviction that it “shouldn’t be able to land at all and will just rotate harmless in the air.” And that is exactly what happens. Nolan shows us his first attempt at rendering that phenomenon as well as his final choice. “I was trying to draw him twisting more,” and the picture shows the cat spinning with multiple legs and heads to convey the idea; but Nolan finally gave up on that and drew the cat in a somersaulting pose. “I don’t know if you know this,” Nolan said, “but cats are hard to draw.” The other books in the series offer
similar insights and visual gems. Of particular interest to me, George Perez talks about his career on Teen Titans, my first awareness of his
meticulous styling. And Arthur Adams discusses
Monkeyman and O’Brien and Jonni Future, a character who, in costume, is almost
embarrassingly embonpoint.This isn’t her, but you get the idea. Surely.
With this series, TwoMorrows
performs an invaluable service for the profession: quite apart from the
pleasure that their insights afford to fans of the specific artists, these
books make a beginning at forging a complete record of the creative histories
of the medium’s present-day practitioners, a record that is sadly blank about
the years during which comic books were being shaped by the earliest artists
and writers. TwoMorrows fills in a few of these vintage cracks in our knowledge
with books on Wally Wood and Murphy Anderson (the latter, by yrs
trly), but too many of those with personal experience of the period are gone.
For those in the mid-term—Gene Colan,
Dick Giordano, George Tuska, Kurt Schaffenberger—whose work shaped the
Silver Age, TwoMorrows has another series, about which, I’ll talk another time,
after I’ve caught my breath a bit.
UNDER THE SPREADING PUNDITRY
The danger of the “military
industrial complex” that Dwight Eisenhower warned us about—and if he, the last
of the five-star generals, didn’t know, who would? —is that it requires a
society that is constantly at war. The problem with that, as we are finding out
in Iraq, is that you wear out armies that way. Soldiers get shot and die or get
crippled and sent home because they are, from the point of view of a combat
engineer, useless. So you always need more of them. The Bush League has come up
with the perfect solution to this problem. You thought all along that the tax
breaks they keep extending to the rich are intended to make the rich richer.
Not at all. The point of the tax breaks for the rich is to make the poor
poorer. Or, rather, to keep them poor. And then you arrange an economy that
makes it more profitable for industries to send their labor-intensive work
overseas, away from American workers so there are fewer and fewer job
opportunities for poor people to find. Where, then, are these poor people going
to find employment? How will they live? In this situation, military service is
the perfect option: poor people can go into the military, learn a trade, make a
living and a career, earn enough money to marry and have more children, all
destined to enter the military in order to survive, and so on ad infinitum.
It’s a nearly perfect perpetual motion military-industrial machine. Keep the
Army supplied with man power, and you fuel the military industrial complex;
fueling the military industrial complex means more war, which makes the
captains of industry rich. Give them all the tax breaks, and the poor remain so
poor they keep enlisting in the military to survive. Perfect.
For most of the week before last, we were victimized by a
nearly continuous flow of news about Dick Cheney’s shoot-out at the Armstrong
Ranch in Texas. We should be grateful: were it not for Cheney’s dubious
marksmanship, we would have had another unrelieved week of blather about Muslim
riots and caricatures of Muhammad. We had plenty of the latter as it was, but
at least it wasn’t all about Islamist perceptions of the misbegotten West. The
Cheney scandal—largely the invention of a testy press corps, seeking to make up
for its dereliction in the past—is fascinating for the monstrous irony it
manifests. Why does Cheney’s accidental wounding of a fellow gun-toting hunter
deserve more attention than his arranging, behind the scenes, for the deaths of
over 2,000 American military and tens of thousands of Iraqis? If journalists
had been at least as annoying and persistent in their pursuit of the truth
during the run-up to the invasion of Iraq, we might have avoided altogether
this agonizing quagmire. Alas, that sort of journalistic dedication is probably
impossible for today’s childishly fickle news media, which, despite pretensions
to adulthood, persists with the attention span of dogsled canines in sticking
their noses into only what is immediately in front of them. And why did the
Bush League delay the announcement of the shooting for 18 hours? Simple: Cheney
and his fellow shootists were staggering drunk at the time of the incident,
having imbibed generously during a picnic lunch in the field, and after 18
hours, Cheney’s system would have flushed all evidence of alcoholic content. If
you believe that, you’ll believe anything Cheney will tell you. Newsweek for February 27 does its cover
story on the episode and includes a detailed diagram, showing how the accident
purportedly happened. Seems sensible to me. Cheney apparently didn’t actually
see Harry Whittington: Cheney was so “focused on the quail”—in the grip of what
hunters call “target fixation”—that he lost awareness of everything else in his
surroundings. In his blog, Ted Rall said: “Quail hunters are supposed to wait
until the birds take flight before firing their guns. Cheney’s victim was about
30 yards away, indicating that Cheney shot straight across the ground”—before
the quail were much airborne. And the diagram in Newsweek seems to bear out Rall’s assertion. Incidentally, Rall
reminds us that Cheney has a “history of public intoxication, having been twice
convicted of DUI.” Okay: that’s a bit much, all piling on, seems like to me.
All of Cheney’s enemies, of which he has numerous, have been waiting for too
long to let this one escape, however innocently accidental the incident may be.
Too bad. Makes me weep, eh?
And here’s a quote that recently has become quite
infamous: “Now, by the way, any time you hear the United States government
talking about wiretap, it requires—a wiretap requires a court order. Nothing
has changed, by the way. When we’re talking about chasing down terrorists,
we’re talking about getting a court order before we do so. It’s important for
our fellow citizens to understand, when you think Patriot Act, constitutional
guarantees are in place when it
comes to doing what is
necessary to do protect our homeland, because we value the Constitution.” This
gem was uttered, stumbled through, by George W. (“Wiretapper”) Bush on April
20, 2004, at least sixteen months before it was disclosed that he had
authorized warrant less electronic surveillance, beginning in late 2001 or
early 2002, soon after 9/11. See? I told you he was a liar.
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