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How to Read Donald Duck

How to Read Donald Duck (Spanish: Para leer al Pato Donald) is a 1971 book-length essay by Ariel Dorfman and Armand Mattelart that critiques Disney comics from a Marxist point of view as capitalist propaganda for American corporate and cultural imperialism.[1][2] It was first published in Chile in 1971, became a bestseller throughout Latin America[3] and is still considered a seminal work in cultural studies.[4] It was reissued in August 2018 to a general audience in the United States, with a new introduction by Dorfman, by OR Books.

How to Read Donald Duck
AuthorsAriel Dorfman
Armand Mattelart
Original titlePara leer al Pato Donald
TranslatorDavid Kunzle
CountryChile
LanguageSpanish
Publication date
1971
Published in English
1975
Media typePrint

Summary edit

The book's thesis is that Disney comics are not only a reflection of the prevailing ideology at the time (capitalism), but that they are also aware of this, and are active agents in spreading the ideology. To do so, Disney comics use images of the everyday world:

"Here lies Disney's inventive (product of his era), rejecting the crude and explicit scheme of adventure strips, that came up at the same time. The ideological background is without any doubt the same: but Disney, not showing any open repressive force, is much more dangerous. The division between Bruce Wayne and Batman is the projection of fantasy outside the ordinary world to save it. Disney colonizes the everyday world, at hand of ordinary man and his common problems, with the analgesic of a child's imagination".

— Ariel Dorfman and Armand Mattelart, How to Read Donald Duck, p. 148

This closeness to everyday life is so only in appearance, because the world shown in the comics, according to the thesis, is based on ideological concepts, resulting in a set of natural rules that lead to the acceptance of particular ideas about capital, the developed countries' relationship with the Third World, gender roles, etc.

As an example, the book considers the lack of descendants of the characters.[5] Everybody has an uncle or nephew, everybody is a cousin of someone, but nobody has fathers or sons. This non-parental reality creates horizontal levels in society, where there is no hierarchic order, except the one given by the amount of money and wealth possessed by each, and where there is almost no solidarity among those of the same level, creating a situation where the only thing left is crude competition.[6] Another issue analyzed is the absolute necessity to have a stroke of luck for social mobility (regardless of the effort or intelligence involved),[7] the lack of ability of the native tribes to manage their wealth,[8] and others.

Publication history edit

 
Soldiers burning books in Chile, 1973

How to Read Donald Duck was written and published by Ediciones Universitarias de Valparaíso, belonging to the Pontifical Catholic University of Valparaíso, during the brief flowering of democratic socialism under the government of Salvador Allende and his Popular Unity coalition and is closely identified with the revolutionary politics of its era.[9] In 1973, a coup d'état, secretly supported by the United States, brought in power the military dictatorship of Augusto Pinochet. During Pinochet's regime, How to Read Donald Duck was banned and subject to book burning; its authors were forced into exile.[9]

Outside Chile, How to Read Donald Duck became the most widely printed political text in Latin America for some time.[3] It was translated into English, French, German, Portuguese, Dutch, Italian, Greek, Turkish, Swedish, Finnish, Danish, Japanese, and Korean[10] and sold some 700.000 copies overall; by 1993, it had been reprinted 32 times by the publisher Siglo Veintiuno Editores.[11]

A hardcover edition with a new introduction by Dorfman was published by OR Books in the United States in October 2018.[12]

Reception edit

Thomas Andrae, who has written about Carl Barks, has criticized the thesis of Dorfman and Mattelart. Andrae writes that it is not true that Disney controlled the work of every cartoonist, and that cartoonists had almost completely free hands unlike those who worked in animation. According to Andrae, Carl Barks did not even know that his cartoons were read outside the United States in the 1950s. Lastly, he writes that Barks' cartoons include social criticism and even anti-capitalist and anti-imperialist references.[13]

David Kunzle, who translated the book into English, spoke to Carl Barks for his introduction and came to a similar conclusion. He believes Barks projected his own experience as an underpaid cartoonist onto Donald Duck, and views some of his stories as satires "in which the imperialist Duckburgers come off looking as foolish as—and far meaner than—the innocent Third World natives".[14]

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ "How to Read Donald Duck: Imperialist Ideology in the Disney Comic". Pluto Press. March 2019.
  2. ^ Lazare, Donald (1987). American Media and Mass Culture: Left Perspectives. University of California Press. pp. 16–17. ISBN 9780520044951.
  3. ^ a b Jason Jolley. Ariel Dorfman (1942–). The Literary Encyclopedia (2009)
  4. ^ "Kaalgeplukt en doorgekookt: Ariel Dorfman over Donald Duck". De Groene Amsterdammer. 1 July 2009.
  5. ^ Dorfman A., Mattelart A. Para leer al pato Donald p. 23. 1983. Besides the lack of descendants, there is a complete lack of libido or sexuality. The quote at the beginning of this chapter is remarkable:
    • "Daisy: If you teach me how to skate this afternoon I'll give you what you have always wanted.
    • Donald: Do you mean...?
    • Daisy: Yes... my 1872 coin"
  6. ^ Dorfman A., Mattelart A. Para leer al pato Donald p. 35. 1983.
  7. ^ Dorfman A., Mattelart A. Para leer al pato Donald p. 139. 1983.
  8. ^ Dorfman A., Mattelart A. Para leer al pato Donald p. 53. 1983.
  9. ^ a b Tomlinson (1991), p. 41–45
  10. ^ McClennen (2010), p. 245-279
  11. ^ Mendoza, Montaner, Llosa (2000), p. 199–201
  12. ^ "How to Read Donald Duck". OR Books. 10 May 2018. Retrieved 27 August 2018.
  13. ^ Andrae, Thomas (2006), Carl Barks and the Disney Comic Book: Unmasking the Myth of Modernity, Univ. Press of Mississippi, ISBN 1578068584
  14. ^ Kunzle, David. "The Parts That Got Left Out of the Donald Duck Book, or: How Karl Marx Prevailed Over Carl Barks". ImageTexT. ISSN 1549-6732. Retrieved 2022-06-03.

Sources edit

Further reading edit

  • Robert Boyd. "Uncle $crooge, Imperialist" Comics Journal #138 (October 1990), pp. 52–55.
  • Dwight Decker. "If This Be Imperialism..." Amazing Heroes #163 (April 15, 1989), pp. 55-57. An installment of the "Doc's Bookshelf" column. Analysis by a prominent comic book fan and Carl Barks expert.
  • Dana Gabbard and Geoffrey Blum. "The Color of Truth is Gray." Walt Disney's Uncle Scrooge Adventures in Color #24 (1997), pp. 23–26. Critical analysis by two experts on Carl Barks.
  • How to Read Donald Trump: On Burning Books but Not Ideas A 2017 essay by Dorfman.
  • Dan Piepenbring (June 3, 2019) The Book That Exposed the Cynical Politics of Donald Duck. The New Yorker.
  • Bryan, Peter Cullen. Creation, Translation, and Adaptation in Donald Duck Comics: The Dream of Three Lifetimes, Chapter 1: "A Duck's Eye View of Europe": How to Read Donald Duck. Springer International Publishing, 2021. Examines the scope of the foreign popularity of Donald Duck as compared to the smaller role taken in America.

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How to Read Donald Duck Spanish Para leer al Pato Donald is a 1971 book length essay by Ariel Dorfman and Armand Mattelart that critiques Disney comics from a Marxist point of view as capitalist propaganda for American corporate and cultural imperialism 1 2 It was first published in Chile in 1971 became a bestseller throughout Latin America 3 and is still considered a seminal work in cultural studies 4 It was reissued in August 2018 to a general audience in the United States with a new introduction by Dorfman by OR Books How to Read Donald DuckAuthorsAriel DorfmanArmand MattelartOriginal titlePara leer al Pato DonaldTranslatorDavid KunzleCountryChileLanguageSpanishPublication date1971Published in English1975Media typePrint Contents 1 Summary 2 Publication history 3 Reception 4 See also 5 References 6 Sources 7 Further readingSummary editThe book s thesis is that Disney comics are not only a reflection of the prevailing ideology at the time capitalism but that they are also aware of this and are active agents in spreading the ideology To do so Disney comics use images of the everyday world Here lies Disney s inventive product of his era rejecting the crude and explicit scheme of adventure strips that came up at the same time The ideological background is without any doubt the same but Disney not showing any open repressive force is much more dangerous The division between Bruce Wayne and Batman is the projection of fantasy outside the ordinary world to save it Disney colonizes the everyday world at hand of ordinary man and his common problems with the analgesic of a child s imagination Ariel Dorfman and Armand Mattelart How to Read Donald Duck p 148 This closeness to everyday life is so only in appearance because the world shown in the comics according to the thesis is based on ideological concepts resulting in a set of natural rules that lead to the acceptance of particular ideas about capital the developed countries relationship with the Third World gender roles etc As an example the book considers the lack of descendants of the characters 5 Everybody has an uncle or nephew everybody is a cousin of someone but nobody has fathers or sons This non parental reality creates horizontal levels in society where there is no hierarchic order except the one given by the amount of money and wealth possessed by each and where there is almost no solidarity among those of the same level creating a situation where the only thing left is crude competition 6 Another issue analyzed is the absolute necessity to have a stroke of luck for social mobility regardless of the effort or intelligence involved 7 the lack of ability of the native tribes to manage their wealth 8 and others Publication history edit nbsp Soldiers burning books in Chile 1973 How to Read Donald Duck was written and published by Ediciones Universitarias de Valparaiso belonging to the Pontifical Catholic University of Valparaiso during the brief flowering of democratic socialism under the government of Salvador Allende and his Popular Unity coalition and is closely identified with the revolutionary politics of its era 9 In 1973 a coup d etat secretly supported by the United States brought in power the military dictatorship of Augusto Pinochet During Pinochet s regime How to Read Donald Duck was banned and subject to book burning its authors were forced into exile 9 Outside Chile How to Read Donald Duck became the most widely printed political text in Latin America for some time 3 It was translated into English French German Portuguese Dutch Italian Greek Turkish Swedish Finnish Danish Japanese and Korean 10 and sold some 700 000 copies overall by 1993 it had been reprinted 32 times by the publisher Siglo Veintiuno Editores 11 A hardcover edition with a new introduction by Dorfman was published by OR Books in the United States in October 2018 12 Reception editThomas Andrae who has written about Carl Barks has criticized the thesis of Dorfman and Mattelart Andrae writes that it is not true that Disney controlled the work of every cartoonist and that cartoonists had almost completely free hands unlike those who worked in animation According to Andrae Carl Barks did not even know that his cartoons were read outside the United States in the 1950s Lastly he writes that Barks cartoons include social criticism and even anti capitalist and anti imperialist references 13 David Kunzle who translated the book into English spoke to Carl Barks for his introduction and came to a similar conclusion He believes Barks projected his own experience as an underpaid cartoonist onto Donald Duck and views some of his stories as satires in which the imperialist Duckburgers come off looking as foolish as and far meaner than the innocent Third World natives 14 See also editSeduction of the InnocentReferences edit How to Read Donald Duck Imperialist Ideology in the Disney Comic Pluto Press March 2019 Lazare Donald 1987 American Media and Mass Culture Left Perspectives University of California Press pp 16 17 ISBN 9780520044951 a b Jason Jolley Ariel Dorfman 1942 The Literary Encyclopedia 2009 Kaalgeplukt en doorgekookt Ariel Dorfman over Donald Duck De Groene Amsterdammer 1 July 2009 Dorfman A Mattelart A Para leer al pato Donaldp 23 1983 Besides the lack of descendants there is a complete lack of libido or sexuality The quote at the beginning of this chapter is remarkable Daisy If you teach me how to skate this afternoon I ll give you what you have always wanted Donald Do you mean Daisy Yes my 1872 coin Dorfman A Mattelart A Para leer al pato Donald p 35 1983 Dorfman A Mattelart A Para leer al pato Donald p 139 1983 Dorfman A Mattelart A Para leer al pato Donald p 53 1983 a b Tomlinson 1991 p 41 45 McClennen 2010 p 245 279 Mendoza Montaner Llosa 2000 p 199 201 How to Read Donald Duck OR Books 10 May 2018 Retrieved 27 August 2018 Andrae Thomas 2006 Carl Barks and the Disney Comic Book Unmasking the Myth of Modernity Univ Press of Mississippi ISBN 1578068584 Kunzle David The Parts That Got Left Out of the Donald Duck Book or How Karl Marx Prevailed Over Carl Barks ImageTexT ISSN 1549 6732 Retrieved 2022 06 03 Sources editAndrae Thomas 2006 Rereading Donald Duck Carl Barks and the Disney Comic Book Unmasking the Myth of Modernity University Press of Mississippi ISBN 978 1578068586 Constantinou Costas M 2008 Communications excommunications an interview with Armand Matellart in Constantinou Costas M Richmond Oliver P Watson Alison M S eds Cultures and Politics of Global Communication Volume 34 Review of International Studies Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0521727112 McClennen Sophia A 2010 Ariel Dorfman An Aesthetics of Hope Duke University Press ISBN 978 0 8223 9195 1 Mendoza Plinio Apuleyo Montaner Carlos Alberto Llosa Alvaro Vargas 2000 How to Read Donald Duck Ariel Dorfman and Armand Matellart 1972 Guide to the Perfect Latin American Idiot Madison Books ISBN 978 1 4616 6278 5 Mirrlees Tanner 2013 Paradigms of Global Entertainment Media Global Entertainment Media Between Cultural Imperialism and Cultural Globalization Routledge ISBN 978 1136334658 Mooney Jadwiga E Pieper 2009 Roasting the Duck National Hegemony and Revolutionary Culture The Politics of Motherhood Maternity and women s rights in twentieth century Chile University of Pittsburgh Press ISBN 978 0822973614 Smoodin Eric 1994 Introduction How to Read Walt Disney in Smoodin Eric ed Disney Discourse Producing the Magic Kingdom Routledge ISBN 978 1135216597 Tomlinson John 1991 Reading Donald Duck the ideology critique of the imperialist text Cultural Imperialism A Critical Introduction Continuum International Publishing Group ISBN 978 0826450135Further reading editRobert Boyd Uncle crooge Imperialist Comics Journal 138 October 1990 pp 52 55 Dwight Decker If This Be Imperialism Amazing Heroes 163 April 15 1989 pp 55 57 An installment of the Doc s Bookshelf column Analysis by a prominent comic book fan and Carl Barks expert Dana Gabbard and Geoffrey Blum The Color of Truth is Gray Walt Disney s Uncle Scrooge Adventures in Color 24 1997 pp 23 26 Critical analysis by two experts on Carl Barks How to Read Donald Trump On Burning Books but Not Ideas A 2017 essay by Dorfman Dan Piepenbring June 3 2019 The Book That Exposed the Cynical Politics of Donald Duck The New Yorker Bryan Peter Cullen Creation Translation and Adaptation in Donald Duck Comics The Dream of Three Lifetimes Chapter 1 A Duck s Eye View of Europe How to Read Donald Duck Springer International Publishing 2021 Examines the scope of the foreign popularity of Donald Duck as compared to the smaller role taken in America Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title How to Read Donald Duck amp oldid 1183340904, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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