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GRAPHIC
VIOLENCE
CASUALTIES FROM THE WAR ON CARTOONS
by David Wallis
Adolf Hitler
understood the power of cartoons. They made him crazy ... crazier.
Long before World War II, David Low of Britain's Evening Standard
routinely depicted Hitler as a dolt, which infuriated the Führer
so much that the Gestapo put the British cartoonist on a hit list.
The CIA also
appreciated the influence of little drawings. Declassified documents
detailing the 1953 U.S. overthrow of Iran's Prime Minister Mohammed
Mossadeq reveal that the "CIA Art Group" produced cartoons to turn
public opinion against the democratically elected leader.
Meanwhile, over
at the FBI, J. Edgar Hoover placed Alfred E. Neuman under surveillance.
According to Britain's Independent newspaper, after a 1957
spoof in Mad magazine mocked Hoover, two FBI agents turned
up at the magazine's office to "insist that there be no repetition
of such misuse of the Director's name." More than a decade later,
in a memo titled "Disruption of the New Left," Hoover proposed commissioning
cartoons. "Consider the use of cartoons," he wrote. "Ridicule is
one of the most potent weapons which we can use."
As the humorist
Art Buchwald observed, "Dictators of the right and the left fear
the political cartoonist more than they do the atomic bomb." The
political cartoon acts as a democracy barometer, and when despots
rule, cartoonists die. In the 1970s, during Argentina's "Dirty War,"
Hector Oesterheld enraged leaders of the military junta that ruled
his country by depicting them as space aliens. He and his four daughters
disappeared in 1976.
In 1987, unknown
assailants murdered Palestinian cartoonist Naji Salim al-Ali on
the streets of London. More recently, the Danish cartoonists who
created the infamous Muhammad cartoons were forced into hiding because
of death threats from the likes of Osama bin Laden. Incidents of
cartoonists being intimidated, imprisoned and exiled are too numerous
to mention.
In North America,
cartoonists don't face banishment, jail cells or assassinations.
Suffering for art here means killed cartoons, not killed
cartoonists. Still, just like their colleagues in more repressive
parts of the world, our editorial artists frequently struggle with
censorship. Except here it's newspapers and magazines that do most
of the censoring. Work deemed controversial, sacrilegious, risqué,
politically incorrect or simply bad for business often gets killed
before publication.
It merits mention
that understandable motives can drive editors to kill. The world
changes so fast that a political cartoon drawn today can become
dated tomorrow, and sometimes a promising idea just doesn't work
on paper. Editors also keep their creative types from breaking libel
laws, flouting industry ethics and gratuitously offending people.
Insult should be a byproduct of a reasoned argument rather than
a goal in itself.
Too often, editors
fail to make that critical distinction. They squelch compelling
cartoons out of fear of angering advertisers, not to mention blacks,
Asians, Hispanics, gays, Catholics, Jews, Muslims and Midwest grannies.
They even fear getting noticed. Cartoonist Milt Priggee remembers
what an editor told him soon after he joined The Spokesman-Review
in Spokane, Washington: "If you want to survive at this paper, you've
got to stay under management's radar. Don't do anything good. Don't
do anything bad."
Internal politics
dooms many compelling cartoons. Consider Kirk Anderson's 2002 cartoon
on the Catholic Church's sex abuse scandal, which portrays a Vatican
"fireman" rescuing a priest from a burning church while ignoring
a screaming child trapped in the flames. Anderson's paper, The
St. Paul Pioneer Press had irked the local diocese for several
years. But it repaired relations with the church by publishing an
essay by the city's new archbishop. Anderson, who was later downsized,
believes his editor spiked his cartoon rather than risk "rocking
the boat" even though that is arguably the cartoonist's job.
Admittedly,
religion and cartoons can make for a volatile cocktail. In 2005,
the Danish newspaper Jyllands-Posten unleashed an unimaginable
fury by publishing 12 cartoons featuring the prophet Muhammad. Flemming
Rose, the editor who conceived the project, intended to bring attention
to increasing intimidation of the free press by Islamic extremists.
He never imagined what would follow.
The Muhammad
cartoons sparked riots that caused more than 100 deaths worldwide.
Mobs torched the Danish embassies in Lebanon and Syria. Protesters
in Nigeria destroyed more than a dozen churches. Palestinian gunmen
chased Danish aid workers from Gaza. And Saudis boycotted Danish
cheese.
Meanwhile, Islamic
extremists in Denmark fanned the flames by taking the cartoons on
what amounted to an outrage tour of the Middle East. But these bad-will
ambassadors did something else that has not been widely reported.
They not only circulated the 12 controversial Danish cartoons but
also three appalling drawings that had nothing to do with Jyllands-Posten.
One portrayed Muhammad as a pedophile; another placed a pig snout
on the Prophet's face; the third cartoon depicted a dog raping a
praying Muslim. By reproducing the three foul images, one blogger
noted that the Muslim activists "have managed to out-blaspheme the
infidel Danes."
Most American
publications, including The Phoenix (Boston), refused to
reprint any of the 12 Danish cartoons to accompany their news stories
about the riots. The Phoenix editors forthrightly
revealed to readers that they feared "retaliation from the international
brotherhood of radical and bloodthirsty Islamists."
By publicly
proclaiming its fear, The Phoenix showed a measure of courage.
Most other major publications played down any concerns about violent
protests or costly boycotts, and denounced the Danish cartoons as
anti-Muslim, juvenile or badly drawn.
Some of the
Muhammad cartoons certainly could have been stronger; others fulfilled
the journalist's mission: confronting insanity with honesty. One
clever cartoon showed Muhammad in heaven, warning a long line of
suicide bombers "Stop, stop, we ran out of virgins," an allusion
to the sales pitch given to potential "martyrs."
Unquestionably,
the so-called "intoonfadah" prompted many publications to soften
coverage of Islamic extremism. Several cartoons about the controversythat
in no way depicted Muhammadwere nevertheless killed.
At the St.
Louis Post-Dispatch, the paper's publisher took the unprecedented
step of vetting all work about the controversy by staff cartoonist
R.J. Matson. His first cartoon on the topic was a send-up of art
schools that advertise on the back of matchbooks. The "Fatwa Art
Instruction School"which tested prospective "infidel cartoonists"
by having them not draw Muhammadfailed to make the
grade at his paper despite its lack of jihad-worthy images.
As the violence
overseas intensified, Matson started receiving angry letters from
readers demanding that he draw Muhammad to "stick it to the Muslims."
While Matson personally deplored the attack on free speech by extremists,
he didn't approve of the Danish cartoons, viewing them as an unnecessary
provocation. To express his ambivalence, Matson drew a self-portrait
of himself straddling a pen-shaped missile.
Initially, a
cartoon entitled "Suicide Cartoonists" was also spiked. But Matson
persuaded his publisher to reconsider. He argued that he had a duty
to address the biggest story about cartooning since Thomas Nast
took down Tammany Hall.
Pulitzer Prize
winner Doug Marlette felt less conflicted about the Muhammad cartoons.
He likens cartoonists to "canaries in the coal mine." Once mob rule
silences cartoonists, who's next?
"Those who have
attacked my work," Marlette told Jylland-Posten, "whether
... Protestant, Catholic, Jewish or Muslim, all experience comic
or satirical irreverence as hostility and hate, when all it is,
really, is irreverence. Ink on paper is only a thought, an idea.
Such people fear ideas. Those who mistake themselves for the God
they claim to worship tend to mistake irreverence for blasphemy."
The response
to the Muhammad cartoons has, to date, been loud rather than enlightening.
One somewhat hopeful sign: a group of prominent French Muslims recently
sued a satiric magazine that re-printed the Danish cartoons. While
the Muslim activists will certainly lose their case, a court of
law is a surely a better place to battle about ideas than the streets.
Of course, in a society that truly cherishes a free press, a more
appropriate action would have been a letter to the editor.
Not that editors
love to get letters. Though the Internet provides cartoonists with
a way to distribute censored cartoons, it also makes it easy for
activists to register protests.
Perhaps the
specter of full in-boxes factored into the Los Angeles Times'
decision to quash Paul Conrad's 1999 cartoon of an angry elephant
mounting a startled donkey, a drawing designed to symbolize the
reality of "Congressional bipartisanship." To slip the "Wild Kingdom"
humping past his paper's decency patrol, Conrad omitted any hint
of genitalia. His editorwho called the cartoon "thigh-slapping
fun" in an interview with a local alternative weeklykilled
it anyway. In doing so, the prudish paper deprived readers of a
vintage Conrad spanking of Republicans, who were bellowing about
bipartisanship while impeaching Bill Clinton over a sex scandal.
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| Copyright
© 1999 Paul Conrad. Used by Permission |
Also instructive
is the 2004 decision by Continental Featuresa consortium that
produces a Sunday comics section for a few dozen U.S. newspapersto
drop Doonesbury. The company's president, Van Wilkerson, asked clients
to vote on whether to keep or cancel the controversial strip. In
a letter to Continental Features' clients, Wilkerson made his position
clear: "I have fielded numerous complaints about Doonesbury," he
wrote "and feel it is time to drop this feature and add another
in its place." Papers voted 21 to 15 to replace Garry Trudeau's
award-winning political strip, replacing it with Get Fuzzy, which
chronicles the misadventures of an advertising executive and his
pets Bucky Katt and Satchel Pooch.
The silencing
of editorial artistshistorically a progressive voice in the
presscomes at a time when the American media is bending over
backward to appease conservatives. The rightward shift became apparent
after Republicans gained control of Congress in 1994. The boot-licking
increased after George W. Bush took office, and in the upsurge of
flag-waving after 9/11, some editorial artists lost their jobs because
of their progressive politics. In North Carolina, a daily newspaper
told its cartoonist that he could dissent from the paper's conservative
policies only on Sundays. That once-a-week autonomy did not last
long; the cartoonist was soon fired. In Pennsylvania, a paper punished
its cartoonist by ordering a moratorium on Bush cartoons. Before
long, that cartoonist was also out of a job.
J.D. Crowe of
the Mobile Press-Register, a conservative paper in Alabama,
admits he treads lightly when taking on the White House. "Any time
I do a cartoon that questions the administration ... it's almost
[viewed] like blasphemy," said Crowe. In 2003, amid the BALCO revelations,
Crowe pitched a cartoon representing Halliburton as a bulked up
baseball player shooting up from a syringe labeled "no-bid government
contracts." Crowe's jab at Dick Cheney's former employer proved
too sharp for the Press-Register.
When war flares,
the media tends to cover the military (and even its contractors)
with extreme caution. "And it stays that way for a good long time,"
says political cartoonist and illustrator Steve Brodner, "until
there's such overwhelming evidence ... that the war was a mistake
and based on lies. Then people can be critical."
Mike Luckovich,
cartoonist at the Atlanta Journal-Constitution, had to wait
awhile before expressing doubts about the Bush administration's
honesty. In 2003, he was blocked from publishing a sketch spelling
out "W LIED" with military coffins. Luckovich's editor told a trade
magazine that she thought "it was too early in the war to lay these
deaths firmly at the president's feet."
By 2005, as
public support for the war plummeted, Luckovich's paper approved
a heart-wrenching cartoon to mark the loss of the 2,000th U.S. soldier
in Iraq. Luckovich hand-wrote the names of every dead soldier to
craft the word: "WHY."
The "Why" cartoon,
which helped Luckovich win his second Pulitzer Prize, reminds us
that when freed to deploy the potent weapon of ridicule, cartoonists
matter. Powerful editorial art reaches out from the pages of newspapers
and magazines to poke readers in the eyes. Cartoons sting us in
a primitive place, forcing us to question our leaders, our neighbors
and our values. 
Bio: David
Wallis contributes to The New York Times Magazine and the
Washington Post. He is the editor of Killed
Cartoons: Casualties from the War on Free Expression (W.W. Norton).
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