Friday Open Thread ~ "What are you reading?" edition. Volume 6

Joe Sacco Shows What’s Been Taken from the North — and What Remains
In ‘Paying the Land,’ the renowned artist and journalist brings the words of the Dene people to an international audience.

[video:https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Xh6LBdYLfL4]

Sacco was born in Malta on October 2, 1960. His father Leonard was an engineer and his mother Carmen was a teacher. At the age of one, he moved with his family to Melbourne, Australia, where he spent his childhood until 1972, when they moved to Los Angeles. He began his journalism career working on the Sunset High School newspaper in Beaverton, Oregon. While journalism was his primary focus, this was also the period of time in which he developed his penchant for humor and satire. He graduated from Sunset High in 1978.

Sacco earned his BA in journalism from the University of Oregon in 1981 in three years. He was greatly frustrated with the journalist work that he found at the time, later saying, "[I couldn't find] a job writing very hard-hitting, interesting pieces that would really make some sort of difference." After being briefly employed by the journal of the National Notary Association, a job which he found "exceedingly, exceedingly boring," and several factories, he returned to Malta, his journalist hopes forgotten. "...I sort of decided to forget it and just go the other route, which was basically take my hobby, which has been cartooning, and see if I could make a living out of that," he later told the BBC.

He began working for a local publisher writing guidebooks. Returning to his fondness for comics, he wrote a Maltese romance comic named Imħabba Vera ("True Love"), one of the first art-comics in the Maltese language. "Because Malta has no history of comics, comics weren't considered something for kids," he told The Village Voice. "In one case, for example, the girl got pregnant and she went to Holland for an abortion. Malta is a Catholic country where, at the time, not even divorce was allowed. It was unusual, but it's not like anyone raised a stink about it, because they had no way of judging whether this was appropriate material for comics or not."

Eventually returning to the United States, by 1985 Sacco had founded a satirical, alternative comics magazine called Portland Permanent Press in Portland, Oregon. When the magazine folded fifteen months later, he took a job at The Comics Journal as the staff news writer.This job provided the opportunity for him to create and edit another satire: the comics anthology Centrifugal Bumble-Puppy (a name he took from an overcomplicated children's toy in Aldous Huxley's Brave New World), published by The Comics Journal's parent company Fantagraphics Books.

But Sacco was more interested in travelling. In 1988, he left the U.S. again to travel across Europe, a trip which he chronicled in his autobiographical comic Yahoo (also published by Fantagraphics). The trip led him towards the ongoing Gulf War, and in 1991 he found himself nearby to research the work he would eventually publish as Palestine.

The Gulf War segment of Yahoo drew Sacco into a study of Middle Eastern politics, and he traveled to Israel and the Palestinian territories to research his first long work. Palestine was a collection of short and long pieces, some depicting Sacco's travels and encounters with Palestinians (and several Israelis), and some dramatizing the stories he was told. It was serialized as a comic book from 1993 to 1995 and then published in several collections, the first of which won an American Book Award in 1996 and sold more than 30,000 copies in the UK.

Sacco next travelled to Sarajevo and Goražde near the end of the Bosnian War, and produced a series of reports in the same style as Palestine: the comics Safe Area Goražde, The Fixer, and the stories collected in War's End; the financing for which was aided by his winning of the Guggenheim Fellowship in April 2001. Safe Area Goražde won the Eisner Award for Best Original Graphic Novel in 2001.

Sacco in Iraq in 2005 with the 1st Battalion, 23rd Marines inside the Haditha Dam
He has also contributed short pieces of graphic reportage to a variety of magazines, on subjects ranging from war crimes to blues, and was a frequent illustrator of Harvey Pekar's American Splendor. In 2005 he wrote and drew two eight-page comics depicting events in Iraq published in The Guardian. He also contributed a 16-page piece in April 2007's issue of Harper's Magazine, entitled "Down! Up! You're in the Iraqi Army Now". In 2009, his Footnotes in Gaza was published, which investigates two forgotten massacres that took place in Khan Younis and Rafah in November 1956. In June 2012, a book on poverty in the United States, Days of Destruction, Days of Revolt, co-written with journalist Chris Hedges, was published.

Sacco currently lives in Portland, Oregon.

[video:https://vimeo.com/46103639]

In this 12-page excerpt Sacco talks with Chief Dolphus Jumbo and indigenous activists about the terrible impact of Canada’s residential schools and the push-pull of traditional and modern life. Sacco is there to learn about the history of Canada’s First Nation peoples and their tragic conflict with the Canadian government—and to understand their new struggle with mining, oil, and fracking companies looking to exploit their traditional lands.











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the variety of form in the written word
you showcase is refreshing

thanks

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phillybluesfan's picture

@QMS @QMS Thanks. I'll keep doing it until it becomes a chore, instead of a pleasure, which my experience tells me eventually happens with most everything. No task within the C99% community should ever become a lifetime [of either the writer or the blog itself] appointment. There is too much talent and too many perspectives here for that to become the case.

My fourth University of Louisville class, Writing Creative Non-Fiction, started this week. It's an online class or I would not be part of it. The challenge of participating with young whipper snappers is always interesting. Fortunately, my longer collection of life experiences compensates for my lack [deliberately so] of connection to pop culture.

See you next Friday!

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Few are guilty, but all are responsible.”
― Abraham Joshua Heschel, The Prophets

Raggedy Ann's picture

Thanks for bringing Sacco to us. Such an interesting genre to get the message out. So very creative!

Smoky day in New Mexico as our skies are filled with smoke from the Colorado fires. We cannot see the beautiful mountains these days. We need rain so very badly. The monsoon season never really materialized here. September is supposed to be wetter - fingers crossed.

Live in the present moment and extract all you can from the day, be grateful for that day and what is brings, give love to all so that we may unite in humanity.

Enjoy the day! Pleasantry

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"The “jumpers” reminded us that one day we will all face only one choice and that is how we will die, not how we will live." Chris Hedges on 9/11

phillybluesfan's picture

@Raggedy Ann @Raggedy Ann @Raggedy Ann I'm actually a native of Nuevo Mexico, born in Roswell of all unearthly places, who has a daughter in Albuquerque and a son plus three granddaughters in Las Cruces. Despite living in the Land of Enchantment for years and years, I have never paid a visit to Ghost Ranch or watched the balloon fiesta lift off at first light. Someday I hope to scratch those final two things off my New Mexico to do list.

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4 users have voted.

Few are guilty, but all are responsible.”
― Abraham Joshua Heschel, The Prophets

enhydra lutris's picture

because of too many decades of Batman and Donald Duck. It looks like this guy does good work.

be well and have a good one.

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3 users have voted.

That, in its essence, is fascism--ownership of government by an individual, by a group, or by any other controlling private power. -- Franklin D. Roosevelt --

Shahryar's picture

@enhydra lutris

I guess we're not 7 years old anymore. Oh well. But I get a kick out of those old comics, probably for nostalgia reasons. Probably. And, of course, the 1960s Batman TV show was highly superior to the modern dark version. The difference between the two indicates, to me, how sick our society has become.

Anyway...I've just started re-reading "Absolute Beginners" by Colin Macinnes. I must have read it for the first time about 25-30 years ago. We recently got the movie from the library. It was terrible. I mean, if you don't know the book you might like the movie. Lots of movies, made from books, change the plot, invent new characters and situations. I've never read "The Shining" but I hear the book is quite different from the film.

I remember the first time I encountered this phenomenon. I'd read what I thought was a gritty sci-fi novel by Roger Zelazny called "Damnation Alley". It got turned into a movie with George Peppard. Somehow the movie makers threw in a preposterous happy ending.

So I'm re-reading "Absolute Beginners" to wash away that movie version.

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enhydra lutris's picture

@Shahryar

not much access, I guess, and by the time I probably could've scored the occasional copy I was already more into MAD.

be well and have a good one.

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2 users have voted.

That, in its essence, is fascism--ownership of government by an individual, by a group, or by any other controlling private power. -- Franklin D. Roosevelt --

Shahryar's picture

@enhydra lutris

Speaking of comic books. Starchie, Mickey Rodent, Superduperman.

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snoopydawg's picture

and the air quality is very poor here. Here's the air flow from CAL fires.

Is anyone here affected by the fires?

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Which AIPAC/MIC/pharma/bank bought politician are you going to vote for? Don’t be surprised when nothing changes.

snoopydawg's picture

convention that was pretty much policy free.

Not only did democrat speakers not talk about how a Biden presidency will differ from Trump regarding the economic hole we are in, but there are rumblings that any conseccions Bernie got from Biden are being rolled back because "the cupboard is bear" meaning that austerity policies are on the democrat's horizon. And that will be a return to the Obama era where the rich continue to get richer at the expense of anyone that isn't them. Yippee! Now go risk your lives and spend hours in line to vote for Joe and Kamala. Cuz Trump.

Krystal: "They aren't even trying to connect to the working class"

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Which AIPAC/MIC/pharma/bank bought politician are you going to vote for? Don’t be surprised when nothing changes.

mimi's picture

[video:https://youtu.be/v_F7u90n6KM]
Baby Steve Bannon going to prison? We build the wall project ... itncredible bad idea, must have built the wrong walls, ie walls of their own prisons, may be.

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Granma's picture

Of George Washington Carver again. He was an amazing man. He was born a slave. His mother was kidnapped by slave traders in middle of the night with him in her arms, while he was a tiny baby. The farmer followed in the morning when he discovered her missing. He had only 2 slaves, George’s mother and a farm hand.) He did not catch up with the slave traders, did find baby George abandoned by the side of the road. He took the baby home and he and his wife raised him. They were poor and childless. Carver was a sickly baby and child, did not speak for years. They thought he was not normal.

He was still a child when the war ended. He left the farm when still fairly young because he had a burning desire to get an education. He stayed in touch with and visited the farmer and his wife until they died. To me, his story is amazing and inspiring, not because of his early years, but because of what he did with his education and the rest of his life.

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@Granma He was the only black person taught about in elementary school where i am from. I did essays, gave little speeches to my class about him. What I remember is the focus on farming and peanuts. We were all farmers back then, and peanuts was both for family food and enjoyment, but it was planted to enrich the soil for the production of hay and grass for our cattle.
Dad planted peanuts for "peanut hay" about every 3 to 5 years, but friends and family always got first pick ahead of the cattle herd.
I cannot say how many days of my life were spent shelling peanuts.
It was a lot. A whole lot.

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"We'll know our disinformation program is complete when everything the American public believes is false." ---- William Casey, CIA Director, 1981

you an extra life. I feel like a few minutes in upper Canada gave me a whole lifetime of understanding. Sacco is a genius.

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travelerxxx's picture

Thanks for giving room to Joe Sacco. I believe I'd run into him here and there over the years, but it took finding him with Chris Hedges in Days of Destruction, Days of Revolt before I really got into him.

After reading the bio above, I now understand why his illustrations of native Americans in that book were so poignant and so effective. That same empathy shined through when the subject was the poor of Camden, NJ. He's a treasure for sure.

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