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War's Comic Side
World War II has been exhaustively studied,
but Duke professor Clare Tufts is investigating one aspect of the
war that has received little attention: the French comics front.
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| Le Journal de Mickey;
licensed from Walt Disney by French Company until 1944 |
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After Germany subdued France in the summer of 1940, the country
was divided into a German-occupied North, including Paris, and
a southern territory overseen by the French Vichy administration.
The French Resistance, based in London, opposed both governments.
One way each group sought to win the hearts and minds of French
citizens, especially children, was through comics.
That is the conflict that Tufts, a Romance studies professor of
the practice, is researching. And with help from Duke Libraries,
she is also creating a collection of French comics from 1937 to
1947 that, when complete, could well be the largest public collection
of its kind, she says.
"Comic books and comic art are actually an enormous part of
French culture," Tufts says, "much more important than
in this country." Before the war, American comics, such as
the Walt Disney-licensed Le Journal de Mickey, were popular. Domestic
comics were also successful, with most being published in Paris.
When the Germans conquered the country in 1940, publishers of a
number of comics had to make political accommodations. Some, including
the publisher of Le Journal de Mickey, fled to Vichy. A few of
the comics, such as the Catholic-supported Coeurs Vaillants (Valiant
Hearts), overtly endeared themselves to the Vichy administration
by printing Vichy political propaganda.
Other publishers stayed in Paris and were tolerated or even supported
by the Germans. The pages of Vincent Krassousky's comic Vica, which
was created in Paris during the occupation, reveal a Nazi influence.
Vica comics depict a French sailor who travels the world and uncovers,
according to its author, Jewish conspiracies to turn the Allied
countries against Germany.
The French Resistance used comics, as well. One communist-influenced
comic, which began appearing in 1944 after the Germans retreated
from Paris, was called Vaillant (Valiant). One issue of Vaillant
shows its young French hero, "Fifi," ambushing a German
convoy.
After the war, Vica and Coeurs Vaillants were shut down by the
post-liberation government as punishment for their political support
of the Nazis and the Vichy government, and some cartoonists were
singled out for their actions. Krassousky, for instance, was tried
for breach of state security, sentenced to a year in prison, and
fined 1,000 francs. Tufts tells his tale in the Spring 2004 issue
of the International Journal of Comic Art.
Tufts recently returned from Paris with another five comics and
a children's book. (Her best sources are a pair of small shops
in Paris that cater to comic collectors.) Her collection of wartime
publications now stands at sixty-eight items, including comic books,
newspaper supplements, and weekly comic magazines.
www.dukenews.duke.edu/comics_0704.html
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