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Sacco's Comic Book: Visual Account of Palestine

By Amy Feigely

3/07/2003

Joe Sacco’s comic book account of his visit to the occupied territories during the winter of 2001-2002 has been a major success. Palestine, which was originally nine individual comic books, has been published under one cover this year and is heralding a lot of attention as it is being called a “new kind of journalism.”  Sacco’s 285-page visual account of life in the occupied territories is told in the first person, meaning that Joe, a 30 or 40-something cartoonist from Portland, Oregon is included in the story. Palestine is sometimes funny, most of the time devastating, always real.

"In a world where Photoshop has outed the photograph to be a liar, one can now allow artists to return to their original function – as reporters," said Pulitzer Prize- winning cartoonist Art Spiegelman.

In fact, Sacco’s work has been compared to that of Art Spiegelman’s Pulitzer Prize-winning comic, Maus. Published throughout the 1980s, the ongoing comic book Maus told the story of the Holocaust using characters that are that of their stereotypical animal equivalent: the Nazis were represented by cats, the Jews by mice, and the Poles by pigs.

Sacco, however, does just the opposite. His work abolishes stereotypes and hinders simplification. His characters are real, rendered in all their humanity and disgrace. He captures their joy and humility. But ultimately, what makes Palestine so remarkable are the stories and scenarios that Sacco transcribed visually onto paper. 

Sacco held nothing back in his account, as he seemingly did his best to report what he saw. The viewer is able to experience a day on the streets of Rafah or Hebron, or even spend time in Ansar III. Sacco’s portrayal includes his feelings and observations, making Palestine seem more like a diary than something meant for the eyes of an audience.

“The personal point of view, which is literal in the drawings but also in the selection of quotes and events, is a valuable balance to all the news coverage over the years that has anesthetized the general public in the west (USA), and which is too abstract and impersonal to really convey the human experience of this ongoing tragic situation,” says Barbara Roos, American Professor of communications and Middle East expert at Grand Valley State University.

Most people have a really unclear picture of what it is like to be in the occupied territories and have a skewed idea of who is the aggressor and who is the victim.

“I came from a standpoint of ‘Palestinian equals terrorist’; that’s just what filtered down in the course of watching regular network news,” says Sacco.

With a degree in journalism from the University of Oregon, it is no doubt that Sacco knows how to get a story. Winner of the American Book Award in 1996, Sacco has rejected traditional journalism for a more rewarding career. He nonetheless has the ability to get straight to his sources and ask probing questions.

Sacco spends day after day living with families and befriending Palestinian men who speak English. The meticulously rendered and crosshatched illustrations echo the stark reality that Sacco wishes to represent. And the comic book medium makes for the perfect way to tell stories that are wrought with emotion as one box fades into another or one thought is emphasized with graphics that give life to stories that would otherwise be lost in a sea of words.

“I don’t know if it is the medium of the comic book, or simply Sacco’s gifts as a journalist-story teller, but Palestine presents the reality of Israel’s suppression of the Palestinians in a more nuanced, human, and viscerally disturbing way than any documentary, article, or book on the subject I have ever encountered. Says Simeon Eefsting, a graduate student of Sociology at the American University in Cairo.

Sacco visits hospitals, homes, and witness’s casualties and hears stories from mothers first hand about having their entire family killed in a week’s time. He is all the while being served glass after glass of tea and throughout the book chokes down lump for lump the overly sweetened beverage that he seems to consume in payment for stories.

And it is true that Israeli soldiers are sometimes villanized throughout the book, but you believe that this is truly how Sacco perceived them. This is a subjective account, but you can trust Sacco’s story because you know exactly where he stands at all times.

Originally published by Fantagraphics Books, this newly published edition of Palestine features an introduction by one of the world’s most respected authorities on Middle Eastern conflict, the Palestinian-born writer and historian Edward W. Said (Peace and Its Discontents and The Question of Palestine). 

Said heaps praise on Palestine. “Sacco’s art has the power to detain us, to keep us from impatiently wandering off in order to follow a catch-phrase or a lamentably predictable narrative or triumph and fulfillment.”

Sacco’s work doesn’t stop at the occupied territories. He has published numerous novel-length and short strips to match that of Palestine. Published by Fantagraphics, Notes from a Defeatest is a collection of some of Sacco’s previously published shorter pieces including “When Good Bombs Happen to Bad People,” “More Women, More Children, More Quickly,” and “How I Loved the War”. Safe Area in Gorazde is a follow up to Palestine. It tells of the four months in 1995-1996 that Sacco spent in the former Yugoslavia, documenting the lives of people in the Muslim enclave of Gorazde.

To order Sacco’s books or to read more about him visit the Fantagraphics web site at www.fantagraphics.com.

*Images: From Joe Sacco’s Palestine



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