tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-1752841194995687278.post1401289521528406092..comments2024-03-27T05:22:27.604-05:00Comments on Eddie Campbell: Eddie Campbellhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/02492020671613766729noreply@blogger.comBlogger38125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-1752841194995687278.post-39861776800458438002011-10-16T14:51:10.498-05:002011-10-16T14:51:10.498-05:00"if you put yourself... you must be prepared ..."if you put yourself... you must be prepared for criticism"<br /><br />If you look back you'll see that's the first thing I said. Why are you objecting to me turning the same kind of criticism on the critics? Why should they be immune, as you seem to be suggesting? or are you just saying that I should have a higher standard of decorum?Eddie Campbellhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/02492020671613766729noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-1752841194995687278.post-67376982479764450712011-10-16T07:52:06.621-05:002011-10-16T07:52:06.621-05:00I like that image. Maybe I'll make a cartoon o...I like that image. Maybe I'll make a cartoon of it.<br /><br />I don't detect 'rage and loathing' in Suat's review of Glidden's book; he simply states that he thinks it's a failure. Harsh, perhaps, but that's a necessary privilege of criticism.(I haven't read it myself, but I'm not persuaded by Suat's takedown from the excerpts he posts.)<br /><br />If you put yourself front and centre in your work, you must be prepared for criticism that overlaps onto yourself. Eddie, you of all people know this.<br /><br />Besides, in your work the character'Eddie Campbell' isn't Eddie Campbell; I doubt 'Sarah Glidden' is Sarah Glidden.<br /><br />Bah, it's all blood under the bridge anyway...<br /><br />--Alex BuchetAnonymousnoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-1752841194995687278.post-90303883790802247192011-10-15T15:54:48.300-05:002011-10-15T15:54:48.300-05:00Don't leave out the Glasgow smile:
http://en....Don't leave out the Glasgow smile:<br /><br />http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Glasgow_Grin<br /><br />A critic who loses his civilized manners over a book has made it personal no matter what the book is about<br /> <br />"Any reviewer who expresses rage and loathing for a novel is preposterous. He or she is like a person who has put on full armor and attacked a hot fudge sundae." - Kurt VonnegutEddie Campbellhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/02492020671613766729noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-1752841194995687278.post-13888899387592409782011-10-15T10:16:58.538-05:002011-10-15T10:16:58.538-05:00Eddie:
'One more thing, Alex,
"Suat did ...Eddie:<br />'One more thing, Alex,<br /><br />"Suat did not attack ... Glidden personally."<br /><br />oh yes he did. She was naturally upset and wondered why on earth anyone would turn a book review into such a personal attack. And I felt the same way on her behalf.'<br /><br />Eddie, Glidden was the central character of this autobiographical work. It would be impossible to write critically about it without writing critically about Glidden.<br /><br />As for Glasgow, yes, I concede that this former European Capital of Culture is no mean city. <br /><br />And I encourage all visitors from overseas to solicit the sweetness of a Glasgow Kiss from any helpful Glaswegian passerby; with some luck, he or she will be willing to accommodate you.<br /><br />--Alex BuchetAnonymousnoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-1752841194995687278.post-66219742538451193292011-10-14T23:28:44.589-05:002011-10-14T23:28:44.589-05:00Ray, thanks
Milo, I just realized what you'r...Ray, thanks <br /><br />Milo, I just realized what you're referring to, on account of this copy here is coverless. I forgot I had liked that cover so much I trimmed it off and filed it in my permanent archive. Sturm needs wider recognition. he's doing a great job with that school, so he's not at the drawing board. that's life.<br /><br />http://www.comicsbulletin.com/news/images/0211/tcj251.jpg<br /><br />also on the cover:<br />'mean spirited reviews, polarizing opinions, and long-winded discourse on comics minutiae'<br />who'd a thunk the comics journal had a sense o' humor?Eddie Campbellhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/02492020671613766729noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-1752841194995687278.post-82627699648336064432011-10-14T21:44:17.137-05:002011-10-14T21:44:17.137-05:00For red-blooded Americans, "cunt" carrie...For red-blooded Americans, "cunt" carries only pleasant-to-sublime associations. ("The genitals Beauty," as the fellow who invented superhero lycra said.) In my red-blooded American experience the most effective way to short-out critical hissy fits has instead been to inquire in a moronic tone "Why for you be so mean?" or "Was that the human thing to do?"<br /><br />However, even the most peaceable of us occasionally need an <a href="http://www.pseudopodium.org/search.cgi?usersearch=Coppola" rel="nofollow">outlet</a>.Ray Davishttps://www.blogger.com/profile/15998321016748928251noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-1752841194995687278.post-40706325352206397022011-10-14T13:01:04.315-05:002011-10-14T13:01:04.315-05:00Hey, isn't the issue with your Harv letter the...Hey, isn't the issue with your Harv letter the one with the "I wonder if James Sturm exaggerated his ... let's say hands" cover? The circle is complete, although I would still like to find out about Scot/Oz cunts. We don't have that word in the US, you know.Milo Georgehttps://www.blogger.com/profile/06720405599066763805noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-1752841194995687278.post-38378086174351802252011-10-14T06:26:21.949-05:002011-10-14T06:26:21.949-05:00Ng Suat Tong shows his colours from the start; it ...Ng Suat Tong shows his colours from the start; it was only after reading Nadim Damluji’s review of Habibi that spurred him to read it himself, 'The generous tone of his article convinced me that Thompson’s comic was still worth reading despite its flaws.'<br /><br />Which means that Ng Suat Tong had already made up his mind of what he thought about 'Habibi' and his apparent revulsion, turns of phrase, and moral-outrage-once-removed is more about Orientalism, with the book as its latest exponent. I suspect the same goes for Glidden's work. They are focal points on which to expound (though the ironing of a critic calling an artist's work as onanistic AND masturbatory, that ironing is delicious). <br /><br />If one is sensitive to occidental appropriation of exotic motiefs, then you will see Orientalism everywhere (Alice, tea, pajamas), and if you make the conclusion that such appropriation is always about the Western urge to dominate in a post-colonial era, well, that's an assertion of first principles based on a political stance. <br /><br />Where I come from, you use it to beat people over the head with, either sincerely or in oneupmanship.<br /><br />I read Habibi and found it to be a sustaining, grabbing narrative. The many transmutations and transformations that take place don't fit well with one another, at least to my taste. But maybe I'm reading it with Western eyes, and Craig Thompson has already absorbed too much of the idiom of the Other for me to be satisfied with his graphic analogies. <br /><br />So I don't think I'll read it again, not in the way I reread some of Hugo Pratt's stories (by the way, if there's one thing I lay awake at night thinking about, it's that scene in 'How to be an Artist' in the big Alec, for fuck's sake, HP wants to ask you something and you never get around to it?). <br /><br />It's only comics. Bye bye.h.n.https://www.blogger.com/profile/14252947832976530597noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-1752841194995687278.post-68592634066667710032011-10-14T00:12:55.346-05:002011-10-14T00:12:55.346-05:00'Who produces the most percussive-sounding &qu...'Who produces the most percussive-sounding "cunt," an angered Scot or an Australian?'<br /><br />Campbell, shall we record ourselves and let others make the judgement between your Caledonian burr and my Antipodean inflection.Michael Evansnoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-1752841194995687278.post-87150883684914800202011-10-13T23:39:16.404-05:002011-10-13T23:39:16.404-05:00ha! yes, the danger of being lured off the main ar...ha! yes, the danger of being lured off the main argument. I should get out of here.<br /><br />nobody saying anything in anger that I can hear.<br /><br />what starts as a good humoured call for decorum ends up acquiring a moral fixity. we should call it a day at "it's just comics." <br /><br />I looked for that issue of the Journal and didn't find it, but I did find the one after it, in which Charles Hatfield and I each spent an entire 4-column page getting mad at RC Harvey for entirely different reasons and over separate articles by RC., who considered it a matter of professional pride that he was still entitled to his opinions on both arguments no matter what we had to say. And that ends up being the real currency, in place of knowledge and ideas and the uncovering of the connections between things. opinions and "the mass-addiction to page-hit counts", as you say. I notice mine went up after i called everybody a wossname. And certainly the saliva on the lapels was a horror-image designed to aggravate. What else would you expect of a comic book artist? Or a comic-book critic calling the result of somebody's honest labour a 'rotting carcass'?Eddie Campbellhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/02492020671613766729noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-1752841194995687278.post-8681956483021540392011-10-13T22:30:32.785-05:002011-10-13T22:30:32.785-05:00I just borrowed my roommate's copy of TCJ #250...I just borrowed my roommate's copy of TCJ #250 to reread the war section of Suat's EC piece; he specifically grounds his assessment of them as children's comics and not as Goya's competition, although Goya and a few other folks are brought in a bit at the tail end of the section but not in the high/low art way you imagined. Sorry, Eddie.<br /><br />You should snag a copy of #250, by the way; you needn't read Suat's piece to continue your fantasies [saliva on his lapels?], but the issue is packed with great stuff. Did anyone else forget that there's a conversation between Carl Banks and John Stanley in this thing? Man.<br /><br />I need to know: Who produces the most percussive-sounding "cunt," an angered Scot or an Australian?Milo Georgehttps://www.blogger.com/profile/06720405599066763805noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-1752841194995687278.post-12351055440966437102011-10-13T21:20:52.717-05:002011-10-13T21:20:52.717-05:00One more thing, Alex,
"Suat did not attack ....One more thing, Alex,<br /><br />"Suat did not attack ... Glidden personally."<br /><br />oh yes he did. She was naturally upset and wondered why on earth anyone would turn a book review into such a personal attack. And I felt the same way on her behalf.<br /><br />Some critics (I'm not addressing Alex here. he writes with good manners, and there are plenty who do) seem to think they are dealing with archival material, that there isn't a human being at the other end. I know, because I am guilty of it myself. (I did it as recently as yesterday's post). Imagine yourself saying it in a room full of sensible people before you hit that send button. What Suat said would have been unacceptable behavior in such a room. Somebody would have pointed it out to him, perhaps in the terms I have suggested above. Then perhaps he would have wiped the saliva off his lapels and changed a few phrases.Eddie Campbellhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/02492020671613766729noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-1752841194995687278.post-78536208169345106872011-10-13T20:31:16.504-05:002011-10-13T20:31:16.504-05:00a couple of things overlooked.
Michael, I didn...a couple of things overlooked.<br /><br />Michael, I didn't miss the lightness in your words, indeed I was on your side there. Why troll through the history of comics asking them to be other than cheap entertainments (as Suat was doing I presume)? If the critic wants serious commentary about war, why is he looking for it in comic books? Read Wilfred Owen, or look at Goya, or Grosz. Kurtzman's books are worth keeping because they're well made comics. To want other than that is to be disappointed in snow because it's cold.<br /><br />As Chalks points out, wittily, what Alex says in paraphrase is much more 'orrible than either I or Aaron intended. Whose side are you on, Alex?<br /><br />as for the remark about Glasgow, I have explained that to our Spanish friend Pepo in an email. That's just in case anyone thinks it's still a loose end. Glasgow in the popular imagination is a thuggish and dangerous place.Eddie Campbellhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/02492020671613766729noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-1752841194995687278.post-55673424549273693002011-10-13T20:21:10.601-05:002011-10-13T20:21:10.601-05:00I'm a quarter of the way through HABIBI now an...I'm a quarter of the way through HABIBI now and enjoying it, and I already feel that a lot of the accusations I've encountered are off base. It's a comic, a broad-canvas movie, a cleverly witty display of 'comic book' tropes meshed with more typically sombre subject matter (i.e it's a book where something will go 'Bonk!' if it lands on somebody's head), a fascinating mix of all the experimental and stylistic devices that EC outlined a short while ago, and probably much more. Ng Suat's aggressive hate reminds me of some of the film reviews you'll find at FilmFreakCental, where Walter Chaw hateshateshates the majority of movies that he writes about. HABIBI is fine so far and I'm not expecting things to change for the worse as I get further through it.Anthony Thornenoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-1752841194995687278.post-66820688615015429002011-10-13T18:19:51.586-05:002011-10-13T18:19:51.586-05:00I resent the implication that people sporting hair...I resent the implication that people sporting hair ringlets are neurotic, insane nuts. Frankly, we can do without that sort of fallacious follicle folly.Chalksnoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-1752841194995687278.post-80900014547498870622011-10-13T17:13:29.781-05:002011-10-13T17:13:29.781-05:00I'm with you, Eddie. I wrote that guy off year...I'm with you, Eddie. I wrote that guy off years ago. There's a chasm of difference between hyper-critical and mean spirited, and I can't walk away with anything constructive from the later.<br /><br />Yeah… Berlatsky too. Won't go near his site.Lou Copelandhttp://phantomprojector.com/noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-1752841194995687278.post-7295952444721178372011-10-13T16:13:00.753-05:002011-10-13T16:13:00.753-05:00Well said Eddie.
Mortal KenWell said Eddie.<br /><br />Mortal KenAnonymousnoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-1752841194995687278.post-16262395736987725222011-10-13T16:07:56.974-05:002011-10-13T16:07:56.974-05:00Dead right. Usually you get called a cunt after a ...Dead right. Usually you get called a cunt after a few pints, to which the answer is either a fight (not with my physique and courage) or agree and stop being one, accompanied by getting the round in.<br /><br />On the comics side, HU does seem to exisit purely to moan about how crap comics are. There appears to be little joy in the hobby.Anonymoushttps://www.blogger.com/profile/17404473802647212036noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-1752841194995687278.post-11890038354940216692011-10-13T15:43:08.171-05:002011-10-13T15:43:08.171-05:00Look, Alex, as a doctor he may be a great humanita...Look, Alex, as a doctor he may be a great humanitarian, but as a critic, somebody's got to tell him to stop being a cunt. It's always the right thing to do. My daughter Hayley once told me to stop being a cunt. "Dad, You're being a cunt", she said. I immediately recognized the error of my behaviour and I bought my wife a bunch of flowers and I resolved to be less of a cunt from that moment on, though I know there have been relapses. My pal Evans was once such a cunt that he had to buy two people a bottle of Scotch all in one day, and I know because I was one of them. Believe me, if we are all forthright about this, the world will be a much better place. You go out and try it.Eddie Campbellhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/02492020671613766729noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-1752841194995687278.post-17730495928054732942011-10-13T14:10:46.462-05:002011-10-13T14:10:46.462-05:00"Suat did not attack either Thompson or Glidd..."Suat did not attack either Thompson or Glidden personally"<br /><br />I'm not agree, Alex. There are many ways to attack "personally". But... That's the rules of the game. It's called criticism.<br /><br />And, BTW, <br /><br />what happens to Glasgow?Pepo Pérezhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/03197611776595524925noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-1752841194995687278.post-48656467074389440902011-10-13T14:01:55.972-05:002011-10-13T14:01:55.972-05:00A severe judgement, I hope.
; )
Am I the only o...A severe judgement, I hope. <br /><br />; )<br /><br />Am I the only one who has caught the tongue-in-cheek mode or what?Pepo Pérezhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/03197611776595524925noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-1752841194995687278.post-40773187187224192922011-10-13T12:58:20.862-05:002011-10-13T12:58:20.862-05:00Pepo, Campbell personally attacked Suat as a neuro...Pepo, Campbell personally attacked Suat as a neurotic, insane nut. Poehler attacked him personally as a venomous, bitter, lying, jealous wannabe.<br /><br />Suat did not attack either Thompson or Glidden personally.<br /><br />Frankly, I'm disappointed at Campbell's oikishness in this post.You can take the boy out of Glasgow, but you can't take Glasgow out of the boy.<br /><br />(And how's THAT for stupid, prejudiced, ad hominem attacks?)<br /><br />As of writing, I'm halfway through reading Habibi, and will reserve judgement on the book itself. <br />--Alex BuchetAnonymousnoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-1752841194995687278.post-17117765487636291122011-10-13T11:17:36.342-05:002011-10-13T11:17:36.342-05:00Alex, I'm sure that Sarah Gidden or Craig Thom...Alex, I'm sure that Sarah Gidden or Craig Thompson are also lovely, lovely people. But they had to fit the criticism. This isn't personal. At least as I see it.Pepo Pérezhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/03197611776595524925noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-1752841194995687278.post-51047199415048762192011-10-13T09:47:03.950-05:002011-10-13T09:47:03.950-05:00I haven't read Habibi yet (I just reserved it ...I haven't read Habibi yet (I just reserved it at our library), but I got to ask: does it really have no sympathetic Arabs?Will Shetterlyhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/08539053268352597627noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-1752841194995687278.post-25315736147997337182011-10-13T08:41:30.808-05:002011-10-13T08:41:30.808-05:00I am a bit appalled at the venom directed at Suat ...I am a bit appalled at the venom directed at Suat in some of these comments. He's a tough critic, yes, but an honest and thorough one, no hatchet man.<br /><br />When I had my column at HU Suat went out of his way, above and beyond, to help me-- a stranger-- with scans, advice, and technical help. A lovely, lovely guy. But one with strong aesthetic and ethical standards.<br /><br />Mr Poehler, you trot out again the cheap jeer at critics that they're jealous of the artists. That's dead in the water.<br /><br />And has it occurred to you that Suat has other things to do with his time-- such as saving lives as a doctor?<br /><br />-- Alex buchetAnonymousnoreply@blogger.com