Saturday, May 15, 2010

Visual Commentary on the Garzón Suspension

The following cartoons appeared today in the Spanish paper Público.

Title: "The winners"
Artist: Manel Fontdevila
Date: May 15, 2010

Here, a group of men gathers to read the news, "Garzón expelled." The first man comments, "Great news! The winners wrote history." And then he states with apparent glee, "And now, we're also rewriting it!" The men clearly represent the "victors" of the Civil War, or at least, the inheritance they left behind.


Artist: Vergara
Title: "Day of the masks"
Date: May 15, 2010

Yesterday, as Judge Garzón left the Spanish Supreme Court, his supporters lined the street, many of whom carried likenesses of the judge ("We are all Garzón"). On the left, we see Garzón in tears, disguised by the old theatrical comedy mask -- perhaps, to symbolize the farce of the suspension and the sham of the justice system, but also because it was reported that initially, the judge appeared to have received good news, which turned out not to be the case. On the right of the drawing we see a Franco-era officer (actually, it looks to be Franco himself), dressed in judicial robes. The mask he is holding up is that of Luciano Varela, one of the Supreme Court magistrates at the head of the charges of "prevarication" against Garzón (and, not coincidentally, someone who strongly opposed the Law of Historical Memory prior to its 2007 passage).

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