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What others are thinking about the latest Zapiro/Zuma cartoon

Thu, Sep 11, 2008

Democracy, Resources

Thought leader blogger Christi van der Westhuizen slams Zapiro for using rape as a metaphor and thinks that Zapiro and the Sunday Times owe South Africans an apology.

BizLinks wonders what all the furore is about and provides some good links for more information about Zapiro, cartoons and the current issues around the Jacob Zuma trial.

Young Communist League Secretary-General Buti Manamela accuses Jonathan Shapiro of “raping freedom of expression”. (2min 46s into the video)

Andrew La Grange thinks that Jacob Zuma ” should be a big boy about these things, and let it go” because all figures are equal before the law in a democracy.

Watch a video where Julius Malema states that the ANC “will never allow a situation where Zapiro is untouchable in this country”.

On Zapiro’s official website you can listen to Zapiro himself (Jonathan Shapiro) defending his cartoon. Click here to visit Zapiro’s Official Website.

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This post was written by:

Lauren Rosenberg - who has written 97 posts on History Matters.

Lauren Rosenberg is a postgraduate student at the University of Cape Town. Her interests, passions and qualifications lie in radio production, community development, South African current affairs, Open education and business models and gift culture.

Contact the author

7 Comments For This Post

  1. hoh Says:

    history matters – fabulous site
    it’s layed out so beautifully
    love the grafix

    yr a genius
    would you consider putting a site together for me?!

    will be adding you to my blog roll

    may i suggest you break down the time line into yrs
    10 yrs for all yr dates is way to big
    i had to stop the page uploading as it went on and on and on and on and on!
    can’t wait to look at the 86? 7 when ANC started talks with SA gov in zim or was it 90’s
    to find that out would take hrs with the 10 yr chunks!
    cheer

  2. Lauren Rosenberg Says:

    Thanks a lot!

    Are you referring to the Zimbabwe time line of events?

  3. Murray Hunter Says:

    You know, as a political cartoonist who will always look up to Shapiro, I find my view of the rape cartoon differs slightly from other views I’ve heard.

    The cartoon sparked a range of criticisms that can be viewed in their entireity elsewhere. As a crude summary:

    There have been many variations on the theme that Shapiro’s use of the rape metaphor is a callous cheapening of the sheer viciousness of actual rape, the real horror of gender/sexual violence in SA. Many Zuma supportors have, sometimes rather ironically, expressed their anger at what they view as Shapiro’s patriarchal disregard for the sanctity of women. Some people just think rape is something you can’t put in a cartoon.

    Zapiro, and his supporters, say that it’s the job of the cartoonist to draw metaphors that explain the world. Thus, it’s not an actual rape being depicted in the cartoon, just a metaphor. Besides which, it’s also the job of the cartoonist to go where the more earnest dare not tread — to slaughter the holy cows. Zapiro and others often speak about this as a kind of moral imperative for cartoonists. So by that argument, Zapiro would have been shirking his duty if he’d ’softened’ his approach.

    I’ve decided it doesn’t matter whether or not Zapiro should be allowed to draw a rape, metaphorical or not. My conclusion is that he’s bungled this one, either way. The spirit of the comment is fair — that political leadership in SA appear to be giving justice the old one-two — but even if it’s not in bad taste, the rape metaphor is inapt because of its ambiguous association with Mr Zuma’s rape trial.

    Irrespective of your views of the man, to suggest that Mr Zuma is a rapist is to assume guilt despite the findings of the court, and, in fact, an insult to the integrity of the justice system we say he’s abusing. The rape trial revealed some very unattractive features of Mr Zuma’s personality, but it did not reveal, in any empirical sense, that he is or was a rapist. Yet many voices in society still seem very eager to call him by that name.

    Zapiro wasn’t referring to the rape trial in this cartoon (or at least, he says not), but the association is still made by many readers — and reasonably so — which is just as harmful even if he didn’t intend it. In fact, Zapiro is tapping into the “Zuma’s a rapist” mentality, if only by including that shower-head which was a symbol drawn straight from the trial evidence. It makes his REAL argument, that Mr Zuma and supporters are violating the institutions of democracy, less poignant. Therefore, the cartoon was a whoopsie, and Zapiro can give us better.

  4. Lauren Rosenberg Says:

    I agree with you Murray, Zuma was proven innocent and Zapiro’s cartoon would have been more effective had he respected this fact yet still addressed the issue at hand – which needs to be addressed.

    Speaking about issues, what’s coming up in the next Globalist?

    http://ctglobalist.za.org/

  5. Murray Hunter Says:

    No cartoons of rape, that’s for sure.
    Thanks for the response, Lauren. I’d welcome any criticsms of my argument, incidentally.

  6. Murray Hunter Says:

    p.s. Today, Franz Kruger summed up a similar argument in far greater depth and clarity: http://www.mg.co.za/article/2008-09-12-a-licence-to-cheek

  7. Ina Botha Says:

    Zapiro is one of the best social critics South Africa has ever had.

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