Sunday, July 3, 2011

How Orwellian : The Pie of Slavery

from the Colossus story in Marvel Comics Presents #10 (Jan 1989).

scan of Marvel Comics Presents #10 p25
click to embiggen


Colossus says "You in this country have free press. You can say whatever you please!"




Sounds good so far!


Colossus : "Your constitution gives you that treasured freedom. So must you slap your government in the face with pornography? Why abuse your freedom?"

As a kid I laughed when I read that. It seemed silly to suggest that free speech should be limited (besides by the illegal) by anything that is an affront to the government (and however that might be defined). I find that view of free speech more distressing now that I'm older.

At least lèse majesté is narrowly limited to offense aimed at a monarch. It is interesting that it shouldn't be respect and politeness to one's neighbors and fellow citizens that might provoke a want for discretion but an insult to a faceless institution.



and a few pages later...
scan of Marvel Comics Presents #10 p30
click to embiggen


and Colossus thinks to himself "But... are the two countries that different?"

Colossus is a university sophomore?

Colossus : "Russia's media is suppressive, but America's is exploitative!"

So, censorship and a not enough censorship are practically the same thing? I imagine the writer, Ann Nocenti, still cackles with laughter at the thought that she is still exploiting me after all these years.


Colossus : "Americans on a picnic, eating American pie. They look so happy."
Colossus : "Are they? Are they really free?"

Perhaps not. I blame it on their grabbing the wrong pie and bringing a telepathic mutant pie of slavery to the picnic by mistake. It seems like a better explanation than blaming distant, two dimensional boobies and a lack of crushing censorship.

Altogether, the story isn't without a certain charm and I think the artwork by Rick Leonardi & P. Craig Russell is exceptional. There is a lovely economy of line.

The meat of the story is based on the abuse of government power, hardly who I would want to entrust censorship based on the degree of affrontedness the government might "feel."

Monday, June 27, 2011

An early vision of ancient man

And it looks like that ancient man is Homo Erectus.
Study of an Antique Relief by Johan Tobias Sergel c.1769
click to embiggen


Study of an Antique Relief by Johan Tobias Sergel c.1769

Although it is identified as being part of the Pergamon Altar (circa 200 B.C.) I haven't seen this section in photos from the Pergamon Museum.

Friday, April 1, 2011

Soviet Propaganda


A Soviet Union propaganda poster from 1954 : Say NO to vodka!

That's not just an unamerican attitude but an unrussian attitude too.

It didn't seem to work very well. And it is no surprise. Note the complete lack of explanation – only a command : Nyet!

Sunday, March 27, 2011

cartoonily accurate

still from the MGM Tex Avery cartoon One Cab's Family
still from the MGM Tex Avery cartoon One Cab's Family

it isn't cartoony exaggeration. It is an observation.


Photograph by Jacques Henri Lartigue of a car in motion. The camera shutter moved from bottom to top so as the shutter moved the car moved forward and a different part of the car was exposed.

Saturday, March 12, 2011

A Nazi Corn Palace?

The Corn Palace of Mitchell, South Dakota in 1905 with a non-Nazi swastika on the front
click to embiggen


The Corn Palace of Mitchell, South Dakota in 1905 with a swastika on the front. A Nazi Corn Palace? It does have a swastika on the front but the photo is from 1905. So it is a non-nazi swastika.

The Corn Palace is a building decorated with ears of corn all over the exterior. "WTF" you say? I was there once as a kid and that was my thoughts exactly.