![]() It reminded me that, 2 years ago, former CBR contributor Augie deBlieck ran the following review of the mid-90s story "All at Sea" on Pipeline, where he took issue with how the black member of the recurring pirate ship crew was depicted, or was addressed by the captain:Īnd while we’re not getting anything too misogynistic in this book, there is the matter of this sequence. I get the feeling this too will fall victim to the wokeness propaganda of modern times. All because of how blacks are drawn in a manner not all that different from Ebony White in the Spirit comic strips by Will Eisner. Everybody is skewered happily.”This seems almost deliberately confusing, but it sounds like we may discover that "The Mansions of the Gods", one of the stories that made the most notable anti-slavery statements and beliefs that workers should be paid and be able to earn a living, has been omitted from the entries Papercutz will bring to the US market. The Gauls themselves are portrayed as a brawling lot that can’t get together,” Nantier said. volumes remove such horrific images and sticks to the original notion that no one people are better than any other. While the world of “Asterix” is not immune, the new U.S. The series seems less dated than its contemporary “Tintin,” which often depicted people of color in racist ways. The New Haven Register reports that Papercutz is going to publish new translations of Rene Goscinny and Albert Uderzo's famous comic starring a diminutive Gaul, but if the following is correct, there may be moral panics accompanying their editions: ![]()
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March 2023
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