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Footnotes in Gaza: A Graphic Novel by Joe Sacco
January 6th, 2010 by Aldouspi

Here is a look at the political and social environment of the Gaza Strip in graphic novel form…o

  • ISBN13: 9780805073478
  • Condition: NEW
  • Notes: Brand New from Publisher.

Product Description
Amazon.com Review
Book Description
From the great cartoonist-reporter, a sweeping, original investigation of a forgotten crime in the most vexed of places. Rafah, a town at the bottom most tip of the Gaza Strip, is a squalid place. Raw concrete buildings front trash-strewn alleys. The narrow streets are crowded with young children and unemployed men. On the border with Egypt, swaths of Rafah have been bulldozed to rubble. in Rafah―cold-blooded massacre or dreadful mistake―reveals the competing truths that have come to define an intractable war.

In a quest to get to the heart of what happened, Joe Sacco immerses himself in the daily life of Rafah and the neighboring town of Khan Younis, uncovering Gaza past and present. As in Palestine and Safe Area Goražde, his unique visual journalism renders a contested landscape in brilliant, meticulous detail. Spanning fifty years, moving fluidly between one war and the next, Footnotes in Gaza―Sacco’s most ambitious work to date―transforms a critical conflict of our age into intimate and immediate experience. More >>

Footnotes in Gaza: A Graphic Novel


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5 Responses  
  • Green Eagle writes:
    January 6th, 20108:19 amat

    The following review is taken from excerpts of interviews with the author and professionals on this book.

    Sacco’s work has more in common with gonzo journalism than your Sunday comic strip. The American-Maltese artist’s latest book, “Footnotes in Gaza,” chronicles two episodes in 1956 in which a U.N. report filed Dec. 15, 1956 says a total of 386 civilians were shot dead by Israeli soldiers – events Sacco said have been “virtually airbrushed from history because they have been ignored by the mainstream media.”

    Sacco himself admits he takes sides.

    “I don’t believe in objectivity as it’s practiced in American journalism. I’m not anti-Israeli … It’s just I very much believe in getting across the Palestinian point of view,” he said. What I show in the book is that this massacre is just one element of Palestinian history … and that people are confused about which event, what year they are talking about,” he said.

    “Palestinians never seem to have had the luxury of digesting one tragedy before the next is upon them. I’m not pretending to be the all powerful, all knowing journalist god … I’m an individual who reacts to people who are sometimes afraid … On a human level, of course that colors the stories I’m telling.”

    Israeli historians dispute these figures. “It’s a big exaggeration,” said Meir Pail, a leading Israeli military historian and leftist politician. “There was never a killing of such a degree. Nobody was murdered. I was there. I don’t know of any massacre.” Sacco’s passion for the Palestinian cause has opened him up to accusations of bias.

    Jose Alaniz, from the University of Washington’s Department of Comparative Literature, said Sacco uses “all sorts of subtle ways” to manipulate the reader. “Very often he will pick angles in his art work that favor the perspective of the victim: He’ll draw Israeli soldiers or settlers from a low perspective to make them more menacing and towering.” Alaniz also said Sacco draws children “in such a way to make them seem more victimized.”

    Rating: 1 / 5

  • window maven writes:
    January 6th, 20109:25 amat

    Masquerading as history, this graphic novel is a detailed compendium of slanders against Israeli forces engaged in a counteroffensive against Palestinian terrorists in Gaza, an area used as a base for murderous terror raids into Israel since the 1949 armistice. But that fact is ignored by the reviewer, who accepts the author’s single-minded obsession with placing all of the blame on the Jews for the fighting in Gaza at that time and for the entire duration of the Arab-Israeli conflict. The piece claims that it is a “bias against history” that has prevented the publication of more such accounts of Israeli brutality. Yet this book has nothing to do with a genuine search for historical truth and everything to do with anti-Israel bias. Indeed, the core accusation of Sacco’s book–that these incidents in 1956 “planted hatred” in Palestinian hearts against Israelis–is absurd.

    Sacco’s use of crude pictures to tell a one-sided story of Jewish evil will, no doubt, remind some readers of similarly crude anti-Semitic graphics employed by the Nazis. We need not linger on this obvious comparison to dismiss Footnotes from Gaza as the nastiest sort of polemic that sheds little light on either the origins of the current conflict or the nature of war. At a time when anti-Israel invective and Jew-hatred is on the rise around the world, the publication of works like encourage hate; they do not expose it.

    Rating: 1 / 5

  • C. Hurwitz writes:
    January 6th, 201011:45 amat

    The author openly admits that he is biased against Israel. Yet this blood libel receives rave reviews from the New York Times. I think that says more about the period that we are living in than anything else. After this maybe the author can do a book about the massacre of the Jews in Gush etzion by the Palestinians or the massacre of hundreds of Christians by the Palestinians in Damoun Lebanon. Oh I forgot, that will make the Palestinians look bad so he won’t do it.
    Rating: 1 / 5

  • carol irvin writes:
    January 6th, 20102:11 pmat

    This attempt at illuminating the Palestine-Israel conflict moves along a very linear, plodding line handling a very depressing story line. It is the endless killing of one set of people by another set of people and vice versa. The drawing is good but lacks punch to make it excellent. A less linear, more poetic, less plodding handling of this material might be able to lift it from having such a hugely depressing impact. It can be done. I am thinking of Art Speigelman’s MAUS trilogy, also a very harrowing subject, the Holocaust. I loved it. Speigelman did one thing that raised his work into the extraordinary. He had a character everyone one would love and remember forever, his grandfather, a survivor of the Holocaust. Personally I don’t think you can do material this depressing without having some charismatic, redeeming, love inspired figure.
    Rating: 2 / 5

  • Cary B. Barad writes:
    January 6th, 20102:25 pmat

    I’m giving this book 4-stars because the art work and interactive detail, which are exceptionally good for a graphic novel. Politically, however, there are some problems, since Sacco clearly has an overriding intrest in promoting the grievances and claims of one side over the other side in the Mideast conflict. Hence, we see a group of hopeless, helpless and sympathetic victims brutalized by sadistic and unfeeling brutes, who are caricatured in these graphics as big, brawny and ugly. Nothing about the hurtful bigotry and exterminative philosophy of the so-called innocents.
    Rating: 4 / 5


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