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1 Work 84 Membros 17 Críticas

Obras por Nancy Goldstein

Etiquetado

Conhecimento Comum

Data de nascimento
20th century
Sexo
female
Relações
Goldstein, Laurence (husband)

Membros

Críticas

A dry but informative biography of a pioneering cartoonist.

The best part of the book is the generous sampling of Ormes' cartoons from her four major comic strips that appeared from the 1930s through 1950s. Most of the selected strips are humorous gags or romantic soap opera, but some are politically based criticism of very specific events that require explanation by the author to help make sense of them.

Nancy Goldstein came at the project from an interest in the Patty-Joe doll that was licensed from Ormes' Patty-Jo 'n' Ginger comic panel, so there are a lot of details about Ormes' involvement with the Terri Lee company that didn't do much for me.

My interest in Ormes comes from two recent picture books:
Holding Her Own: The Exceptional Life of Jackie Ormes by Traci N. Todd and Shannon Wright
Jackie Ormes Draws the Future: The Remarkable Life of a Pioneering Cartoonist by Liz Montague

I hope someday someone is able to produce a definitive collection of all Ormes work that does justice to the glamorous and independent women she showcased.

FOR REFERENCE:

Contents: Preface -- Introduction -- Chapter 1. Small-Town Roots, Big-City Ambitions -- Chapter 2. The Chicago Years -- Chapter 3. Newspapers, Comic Strips, Cartoons -- Chapter 4. Torchy Brown in "Dixie to Harlem" -- Chapter 5. Candy -- Chapter 6. Patty-Jo 'n' Ginger -- Chapter 7. Torchy in Heartbeats -- Chapter 8. The Patty-Joe Doll -- Conclusion -- Correcting the Record -- Excerpts from the FBI File of Jackie Ormes -- Notes -- Selected Bibliography -- Acknowledgments -- Index
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Assinalado
villemezbrown | 16 outras críticas | Aug 27, 2023 |
Though the writing is repetitive, this is a fascinating book with reproductions of many of Ormes’ comic strips. She was a trailblazer in both the medium and the message of her art.
 
Assinalado
steller0707 | 16 outras críticas | Sep 26, 2020 |
In Jackie Ormes: The First African American Woman Cartoonist, Nancy Goldstein discusses the current dearth of scholarship on non-white comics creators, writing, “Largely missing from many of the scores of histories, retrospectives, and anthologies of comics and cartoons is work that documents and surveys the artistic production of African Americans” (pg. 2). Her work demonstrates how Jackie Ormes used the medium of newspaper comics to tell entertaining stories and debate social issues relevant to her readers. In addition to tackling issues including restrictive covenants, environmental pollution’s affects on the urban poor, and lynching, Goldstein argues, “Especially remarkable is the extent to which Ormes in Patty-Jo ’n’ Ginger boldly critiques American foreign and domestic policy during the cold war years,” including HUAC (pg. 4). Goldstein continues, “Regardless of their subject, many of Ormes’s cartoons and comics served to advance the cause of racial uplift, important to the [Pittsburgh] Courier’s editors and columnists, community leaders, and other African Americans” (pg. 4). Looking ahead to future scholarship, Goldstein writes, “An encyclopedic study of African American cartoonists needs to be undertaken. As the only black woman cartoonist of the time, Jackie Ormes seems an exceptionally fitting subject with whom to begin that effort” (pg. 5).

Linking Ormes’s art to the Chicago Renaissance of the Great Depression, Goldstein writes, “The topics that she chose for her cartoons reveal that Ormes had much in common with others who were using their art to address the many obstacles facing African Americans” (pg. 25). Ormes’s later political activism in the 1940s and 1950s brought her to the attention of the FBI, as many of the civil rights causes she supported were also supported by the Communist Party. According to Goldstein, Ormes’s “complete [FBI] dossier stands at 287 pages, surpassing baseball star Jackie Robinson’s 131-page brief, but it is considerably outstripped by Eleanor Roosevelt’s 3,371-page FBI file” (pg. 30). Goldstein continues, “In spite of the possibility that the FBI might use her art against her, and at considerable risk to her privacy, Ormes continued to express her outrage at foreign and domestic policy, racism, and class bigotry. Had the FBI scrutinized the cartoons, their strongly polemical messages alone may have spurred investigation” (pg. 31). As to the manner in which Ormes used her characters as extensions of herself, Goldstein writes, “Her [character Patty-Jo’s] comments, humor, and opinions are decidedly Ormes’s, expounding, for instance, on taxes, labor strikes, McCarthyism, and the vagaries of abstract art, as well as fashions and relations between the sexes” (pg. 40).

Discussing the black press, Goldstein writes, “Cartoons added wit and humor to the colorful mix of the black press in the middle of the twentieth century. But beyond their entertainment value, comics often carried messages of protest, satirizing unjust laws and social norms in ways that at times would have been risky for writers to take on in print” (pg. 54). Goldstein continues, “Comics in the black newspapers were remarkable in their energy, skill, timeliness, and original points of view that were conveyed by every character in the series – whether cowboy, detective, space invader, hero, villain, funny kid, or glamour girl” (pg. 61). In terms of content, Goldstein describes Ormes’s character Ginger, “She remains safely within the erotic boundaries of the time: desirable but never provocative, a charmer but not a seductress, viewed partly unclothed, yes, but only in private spaces like her dressing room or when accidentally slipping on Patty-Jo’s misplaced roller skate, with her skirt flying above her shapely legs. When she gazes directly at the viewer, her look is one of surprise at Patty-Jo’s words, never the sexy come-hither glances of other pinups” (pg. 83). Beyond the unique editorial space that Ormes found for mild sexuality in comparison to more mainstream (read: white) comic strips, Ormes’s use of herself as a model also offered a form of agency. In terms of dialogue, Goldstein writes, “Today some of Patty-Jo’s ongoing complaints and attacks on the status quo would likely be found on a newspaper’s editorial pages. She railed against racism, against restrictions on free speech, and against the confining nature of popular ads, fashions, or styles” (pg. 85).

Discussing the preservation of newspaper comics, Goldstein writes, “Original copies of the Courier’s comic section are nearly impossible to find today. In spite of the good intentions of our nation’s libraries, they must take the blame for many comics that were destroyed, including hard copies of Torchy in Heartbeats missing from the more than two hundred strips that Ormes drew during its four-year lifetime” (pg. 132). Part of this was due to a lack of space and the prioritization of material for microfilming. Goldstein turns to Ormes’s content, writing, “Ormes’s 1953-54 series introduces something entirely new to American comic strips, when Torchy tackles environmental racism… It is this activist story line with which Ormes is most frequently identified in anthologies and encyclopedias today” (pg. 137). In this way, she brought attention to the condition of south side Chicago neighborhoods where affluent communities dumped their waste in neighborhoods that were primarily home to people of color.

Goldstein concludes that Ormes’s “messages of strength, resourcefulness, and humor communicated strategies for people of color in their pursuit of the American dream. When the political associations that nourished Ormes’s opinions became risky – and no doubt unpopular with some people – her strength of character helped her remain steadfast in her activism and hold close her friendships” (pg. 180). Goldstein further cautions that a great deal of progress remains to happen, for while cartoonists like Ormes and others have recently gained scholarly attention, the field remains white-dominated and scholarship focusing on black cartoonists is still lacking. Goldstein uses this book for her own activism, “to call for old African American newspapers with comic strips and cartoons or original art to be offered to the Cartoon Research Library,” the Comic Art Collection at the Michigan State University Library, or the Center for Research Libraries in Chicago (pg. 181).
… (mais)
 
Assinalado
DarthDeverell | 16 outras críticas | May 10, 2019 |
Esta crítica foi escrita no âmbito dos Primeiros Críticos do LibraryThing.
This is a great book about a fascinating woman. It made me realize that I know less about the comics/cartooning industry than I thought. Of course this is more a biography of Jackie Ormes than it is of cartooning and while interesting, it is a bit dry for my tastes. I must admit to being more interesting in the industry than the life of the artists.
I would recommend this to anyone into history and wanting information on one of the female pioneers of cartooning.
 
Assinalado
battlinjack | 16 outras críticas | Sep 19, 2009 |

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Estatísticas

Obras
1
Membros
84
Popularidade
#216,911
Avaliação
½ 3.5
Críticas
17
ISBN
4

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