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Father and Son
ISBN/GTIN

Father and Son

BuchGebunden
Verkaufsrang4731146in
CHF30.90

Produktinformationen

Cartoons from the height of a promising career tragically cut shortE. O. Plauen created a rascally family strip in "Father and Son." A gentle pantomime strip published in the German weekly "Berliner Illustrierte Zeitung "in pre World War II Germany, "Vater und Sohn "was an immediate success and ran for three short but popular years, from 1934 to 1937. Plauen used a simple, clear cartooning style to tell his funny vignettes about a father who is just as much of a troublemaker as his little boy a setup unique compared with the predictable scolding-father-versusunruly-scamp scenario seen in most humor strips of the time.Working against the stereotypical portrayal of a precocious kid and a doofus father, he expertly gave both titular characters their fair share of brilliance and clumsiness. Plauen's own story ended tragically in 1944 when he took his life the day before he was scheduled to appear in the People's Court for expressing anti-Nazi views. In memory of him and his talent as a cartoonist, this Drawn & Quarterly edition of "Father and Son "presents a selection of his strips, placing Plauen's work alongside archival projects such as Frank King's "Walt & Skeezix "and Tove Jansson's "Moomin," which bring these admirable repertoires to a new generation of readers."
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Details

ISBN/GTIN978-1-897299-65-4
ProduktartBuch
EinbandGebunden
Erscheinungsdatum01.03.2010
Seiten224 Seiten
SpracheEnglisch
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Über die Autorin/den Autor

E. O. Plauen (1909 44), born Erich Ohser, started working as an illustrator at the Sachsische Sozialdemokratische Presse in 1928. In his early work for the democratic magazine "Vorwart"s, he often made satirical drawings of political figures like Hitler and Goebbels. Because of his criticism against the ruling party, he was eventually banned from working by having his professional license suspended. From that time forward, he used the pseudonym E. O. Plauen, combining his initials with the name of the city he was raised in."

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