Sacco, Morris, and Playing with Representation

by ajacart

When talking about Spiegelman’s Maus these past few weeks in class, I kept being drawn back to thoughts about the works of Joe Sacco. Primarily concerned with the Israel-Palestine conflict in his graphic novels Palestine  and Footnotes in Gaza, he has also touched on the Yugoslav wars (Safe Area Gorazde) among other things. His book Safe Area Gorazde is hailed on its amazon page as a ‘Landmark of New Journalism’, which was a movement in the ’60s and ’70s which was characterised by unconventional methods of reportage, wherein fiction would be interwoven with stories about real-life events. This methodology, of course, has similar issues surrounding it as does the subject of representing memory in life narrative (such as Maus). There was much debate over New Journalism for its potentially haphazard representation of truth, they held the position that “Their works challenged the ideology of objectivity and its related practices that had come to govern the profession. The New Journalists argued that objectivity does not guarantee truth and that so-called “objective” stories can be more misleading than stories told from a clearly presented personal point of view.” (Encyclopedia Britannica). A similar argument that raged approaching the ’90s, in the time-period Sacco was operating in, was that surrounding Errol Morris’ 1988 film, The Thin Blue Line. This was the first documentary film to use recreations, and many found them overly laden with persuasive tactics and not nearly objective enough to constitute a documentary. 

When artists of any genre or medium take it upon themselves to represent a tragedy, be it the Holocaust, the Israel-Palestine Conflict, or the murder of a police officer, to what extent are they tied to being absolutely objective. A wholly objective account of any occurrence would not only be impossible within the limits of any medium’s representation, but would also most probably be mechanically boring. There ought to be lee-way for any sort of journalism wherein allowances are made for a more evocative explication of a subject. Passing on inherited memory which feels engrained.