Interview: Art Spiegelman on Maus and free speech: 'Who's the snowflake now?'
Sat 5 Feb 2022 02.00 EST
Since his early days in the underground comix scene, Spiegleman has reveled in saying the unsayable and subverting convention
Sat 5 Feb 2022 02.00 EST
In 1985, at the height of popularity for the faddish baby dolls, the Cabbage Patch Kids, the cartoonist Art Spiegelman debuted a subversive line of trading cards, the Garbage Pail Kids.
Featuring viscerally queasy drawings of, say, a mushroom cloud detonating from the roof of a cheery toddlers skull, or a Raggedy Ann facsimile barfing up dinner into a pot, the Garbage Pail Kids were a sensation among edgy preteens all over the world. They were also swiftly banned in a slew of schools. To this day, Mexico has a law restricting the import and export of Garbage Pail Kids material.
You know how Joe Manchin is a thorn in our side? Spiegelman asked in a phone interview this week. His uncle, A Jamie Manchin, was the state treasurer of West Virginia in the 80s. He said that Garbage Pail Kids should be banned because theyre subverting children. It runs in his family.
It reminds me that things keep changing, but were still dealing with permutations of the same struggles.
More:
https://www.theguardian.com/books/2022/feb/05/art-spiegelman-maus-book-ban-interview-life-career