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Published On: Oct 15, 2004 10:50 PM
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Will Eisner Draws a Rebuttal
Will Eisner Draws a
Rebuttal Richard
Patterson for The New York
TimesThe comic book veteran
Will Eisner, in his Tamarac, Fla., studio, where he is finishing "The
Plot."By STEVEN LEE
BEEBERPublished: February 23,
2004AMARAC, Fla. —
What do you do 25 years after creating a new artistic genre? If you are Will
Eisner, you do the same thing again in your late
80's. "A Contract With
God," set in the tenements of his Bronx youth and published in 1978, established
Mr. Eisner as the father of the graphic novel. Now he has taken the adult
comic-book format a step further, with a graphic history that applies his dark,
1930's-style illustrations to real events of a century
ago. This latest work,
called "The Plot," tells the story behind the creation of "The Protocols of the
Elders of Zion," the infamous Russian forgery that purported to reveal a Jewish
plan to rule the world. Mr. Eisner, the son of Jews who fled Europe, has reached
into the past to say something about the present: a time, he says, when
anti-Semitism is again on the
rise. "I was surfing the
Web one day when I came across this site promoting `The Protocols' to readers in
the Mideast," said Mr. Eisner, 86. "I was amazed that there were people who
still believed `The Protocols' were real, and I was disturbed to learn later
that this site was just one of many that promoted these lies in the Muslim
world. I decided something had to be
done." Sitting in his
studio-office, surrounded by the paraphernalia of 70 years in comics —
honorary plaques, statues in the shape of a certain cartoon mouse, an Al
Hirschfeld drawing of his profile — Mr. Eisner began his research. It did
not matter that he was in a strip-mall office building outside Fort Lauderdale,
while other elderly former New Yorkers trooped by on their way to the dentist.
He was fighting for justice in a bleak world, the way his most famous comic-book
character, the Spirit, did in American newspapers throughout the
1940's. Soon Mr. Eisner
realized that the story behind "The Protocols" was too confusing and myth-ridden
to rely on the Internet. Enlisting the help of N. C. Christopher Couch, who
teaches a course on graphic novels at the University of Massachusetts, Amherst,
the two began piecing together the facts, helped by a French comic-book fan,
Benjamin Herzberg.
Historians say "The Protocols," first published in 1903, were fabricated in
Russia by the czar's secret police as a way of undermining a growing social
reform movement. Jews figured prominently in this movement, and the police
theorized that they could discredit it by making it appear to be a front for a
sinister Jewish agenda. Mathieu Golovinski, a propagandist, concocted the 24
fraudulent "protocols" or minutes, of an international meeting of Jewish
bankers, journalists and financiers outlining a purported Jewish-Masonic plot to
dominate world affairs. The
forgery was revealed in 1921 when the Times of London published a series of
articles demonstrating that the actual source for the text was a a French
political satire published in 1864 by Maurice Joly, in which Machiavelli and
Montesquieu discuss a plan for world domination by Napoleon
III. "Golovinski simply
took sections from Joly's `Dialogue in Hell' and claimed they were conversations
from this alleged secret meeting," Mr. Eisner said. "In many cases he merely
copied large segments of Joly's satire verbatim while substituting the phrase
`the Jews' for `Napoleon
III." In "The Plot," which
is about 100 pages, Mr. Eisner reveals this fabrication through three different
methods that draw on all phases of his 70-year career. In a short introduction
he provides an account of how he came upon "The Protocols" and learned the truth
behind them. In the main
body of the work he depicts the creation and unmasking of "The Protocols"
through a comic-book-like series of panels and text. In the concluding section
Mr. Eisner displays numerous excerpts from "The Protocols" alongside examples
from the text in Joly's
satire. Like other Jewish
artists Mr. Eisner entered comics in the mid-30's because he was restricted from
more respectable fields like graphic design or illustration. Yet once he was
there, he introduced ambitious techniques and themes. From this platform he
developed his new genre to take on more serious and personal subjects. In many
of these later works he dwelled on the anti-Semitism that had shaped him. His
most recent work "Fagin the Jew," published last year by Doubleday, was an
effort to construct a back story to "Oliver Twist" in which Fagin's struggles as
a Jew help turn him into a
criminal. Denis Kitchen,
Mr. Eisner's agent and onetime publisher, described "The Plot," which is still
being inked, as more subtle and intellectual than his other creations. "It's
closer to a documentary" than an action film, he
said. One sequence of
panels depicts a fateful meeting at a Constantinople cafe between a bearded,
valise-toting "White Russian émigré with something to sell" and a
mustached, pipe-smoking patron with a newspaper sticking out of his pocket, who
turns out to be Phillip Graves, the correspondent for The Times of London who
exposed the fraud. "The
great irony of `The Protocols' ' continued existence is that they were proven to
be false as early as 1921," Mr. Eisner said, remarking that by now the real
story had been relegated largely to the realm of scholarship. "I wanted to
create a work that would be understood by the widest possible
audience."
Posted: Mon - February 23, 2004 at 08:08 AM
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