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Jeff Danziger:

Sole American In New Documentary
On Political Cartoonists Of The World

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CARTOONISTS - FOOT SOLDIERS OF DEMOCRACY.jpg

Political cartoonist Jeff Danziger is well known for his scathing pen and ink portrayals of public officials, cultural controversies and just about any current event that's ripe for satire. Vermonters know Danziger from his work in the Rutland Herald and Times Argus. He also had a career teaching English at U-32 High School in East Montpelier. But he tried out film recently when he was interviewed for a French documentary,

 

The movie was selected for the Cannes Film Festival, and Danziger went to France to walk the red carpet with the other cartoonists featured in the film. “It was wonderful. It was a sell-out crowd. Everyone in Cannes was very enthusiastic about it,” he said. The film is a study of 12 cartoonists from around the world, and looks at the different challenges the cartoonists face. Danziger said that the problems that his cohorts face in other parts of the world are much more serious than in the United States.

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CARTOONISTS- FOOT SOLDIERS OF DEMOCRACY from Cinextra Productions on Vimeo.

“The one cartoonist in Denmark who was attacked by Muslims, and then another one who actually was in Algeria and had his hands broken by the security police. So the film goes through their lives and shows a good deal of their work. And I was the American,” he said. The film tries to impress on the viewers a sense of the importance of freedom of expression and what cartoonists do to protect it. And Danziger said that in some parts of the world, cartooning holds more power. 

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“We tried to point out that the governments that try to push back on cartooning and the same people who try to push back, government leaders, who try to push back on writers, poets and musicians, they really are going about it the wrong way because it simply increases the power. Once some of these cartoons, or music, or any of it gets through, it has that much more power,” Danziger said.  

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Danziger says that in the United States, cartoonists don't face the same consequences, and there’s more competition for political humor, satire and commentary. “Everybody, from Jon Stewart to the people who are making movies and television shows about the government and politics, I almost have to not watch them because it influences the way I think about it,” he said. Still, some things don’t end up in his cartoons.

The film tries to impress on the viewers a sense of the importance of freedom of expression and what cartoonists do. And Danziger says that in some parts of the world, cartooning holds more power than it does in the U.S.
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“There are things that are just off the table right away, for example, these two horrible stories that have just come out, in Pakistan about the woman being stoned and the story about the rape in India. These things are just, I don’t have anything to say about them,” Danziger said. “And I almost, with the slaughter story in California, I almost was willing to let it go, but again, we have the same issue about gun control and who should be able to get guns, and what the second amendment really means. I can do things on that.”

Danziger just released a sizeable book called The Conscience of a Cartoonist with the Center for Cartoon Studies in White River Junction, which includes cartoons and essays.

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