Week 2 Question: What is the alleged connection between Hergé’s early comics and propaganda?

2. What is the alleged connection between Hergé’s early comics and propaganda?

The early works of Hergé have come under fire for many different reasons all of which regarding the controversial content in Tintin like Hergé’s depiction of race, gender, ethnicity, sexuality, and the alleged connection between those comics and propaganda. For years critics have discussed and debated the connection between Hergé’s early comics and propaganda and whether it is emblematic of his politics. The newspaper where Hergé worked was the Le Petit Vingtième, a French publication that continued to publish under the Nazi occupation at the time when many other publications did not. As a result, Hergé’s early works are littered with Nazi propaganda, in Paul Mountfort’s Tintin as Spectacle: The Backstory of a Popular Franchise and Late Capital (Mountfort, 2016) he explicitly states that “The first two Tintin albums are pure right-wing propaganda. Soviets was doctrinaire anti-Bolshevism, Tintin au Congo/Tintin in the Congo (1930–31) a sustained valorization of the appalling Belgian colonial enterprise.” (Mountfort, 2016).

Hergé’s comic art propaganda would continue to infect later Tintin albums up until L’Étoile mystérieuse/The Shooting Star (1941–42). Tintin’s very inception was designed as a way to sell comics and the rapid gain in popularity that Tintin had, shows that it was successful in this regard, Mountfort points out that the comics were “from the outset part of a commercial enterprise designed to sell copy as well as ideology” (Mountfort, 2016). One reason as to how Tintin was able to gain such massive popularity fast was that it was published as a full novel-length album which, as Mountfort states, pushed Tintin “into a sphere quasi-independent from its parent magazine where it could be read in more novelistic terms than a “mere” strip cartoon” (Mountfort, 2016). The connection between Hergé’s early comics and propaganda is blatantly clear and since then an apologetic but quite defensive Hergé would tone down certain aspects of the comics but shrugged off the alleged connection to anti-Semitism. Hergé’s main excuse being that was the style back then. The bigger issue with the connection to propaganda in these earlier comics was the fact that Hergé was publishing at all during this time when many other publications shut down during the war rather than collaborate with Nazi propagandists. It puts Hergé in a position where it is very difficult to not see him as a Nazi collaborator. Thus, the connection between these early comics from Hergé and the alleged propaganda that is featured within them is all but apparent when their origin is understood.

References

Mountfort, P. (2016). Tintin as Spectacle: The Backstory of a Popular Franchise and Late Capital.

Remi, G. (1942). The Shooting Star. Casterman.

Week 1 Questions

1. How has the academic reception of popular genres changes over time?

Popular genres have been a point of contention in literature canon and have often been excluded from the literary canon that scholars have authorised, while genres like poetry and other prose literature in the classical mega-genres are label as having great importance and hold an incredibly privileged position in literature. Popular genres such as comics, science fiction, anime, and fantasy novels in the said canon have not been taken as seriously as other more classical literature. This is because of the may stereotypes surrounding popular genres with the prevailing ideas being that popular genres use formulaic plot structures, the characterisation is seen as being incredibly two-dimensional with little character development, and that because many exist in imaginary worlds they are difficult to take seriously. Over time, however, the reception to popular genres has shifted significantly and their gradual acceptance mirrors that of writing from minorities, and these days popular genres are studied in great depth alongside more classical literature.

 

2. What might the value be of studying them?

There is immense value in studying popular genre as they allow us to view a different perspective than that of classic literature which predominately came from very similar perspectives of older men. Popular genres show us the perspectives of people in minorities who have been unable to present their stories and critics like Terry Eagleton (Prof. Of Cultural Theory at the University of Manchester) argue that popular genres tell us more about society today than class literature. Media is much broader than what is deemed high art and it is all worth discussing as it has a great amount of influence on how we perceive issues present in society as they can broach these topics in interesting ways.