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HeerJeet's profile
Jeet Heer
Jeet Heer
Jeet Heer
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@HeerJeet

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Jeet HeerVerified account

@HeerJeet

1. Writer, The Nation https://www.thenation.com/authors/jeet-heer/ … 2. email: jeetheer1967 at gmail dot com 3. Twitter essayist 4. Drawn by Joe Ollmann

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Joined June 2012

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    1. Jeet Heer‏Verified account @HeerJeet 7 Apr 2021

      1. From a political angle, the culture wars are dispiriting because actual policy debates get sidetracked, but from a cultural angle they are equally dispiriting because actual culture gets reduced to crassly partisan terms. Consider again Seuss & ethnic caricature.

      11 replies 92 retweets 655 likes
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    2. Jeet Heer‏Verified account @HeerJeet 7 Apr 2021

      2. By reducing the Seuss issue to the nonsensical category of cancel culture, an opportunity was lost to bring up something important, the pervasive impact of blackface & ethnic caricature on popular culture. Only a few informed scholars like @philnel discussed this.

      5 replies 20 retweets 247 likes
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    3. Jeet Heer‏Verified account @HeerJeet 7 Apr 2021

      3. It's not widely understood that blackface & ethnic caricature weren't just popular in early 20th century, they were the very visual language through which America saw itself as a hybrid society.

      6 replies 17 retweets 200 likes
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    4. Jeet Heer‏Verified account @HeerJeet 7 Apr 2021

      4. Blackface & ethnic caricature introduced a gestural expressiveness that changed American comedy. It's main legacy is cartooning. Mickey Mouse, Bugs Bunny etc are heirs. These 1930 comic strips highlight how much Mickey owed to Al Jolson & minstrelrypic.twitter.com/6gPgGWU1lf

      3 replies 19 retweets 161 likes
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    5. Jeet Heer‏Verified account @HeerJeet 7 Apr 2021

      5. This very early Mickey Mouse cartoon from 1930 was written by Walt Disney himself and drawn by Mickey's co-creator Ub Iwerks. It really makes clear the visual debt Mickey Mouse has to minstrel imagery. Not how Mickey is nearly a mirror image of the ooga-booga native.pic.twitter.com/xX7cUnBzPF

      6 replies 11 retweets 142 likes
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    6. Jeet Heer‏Verified account @HeerJeet 7 Apr 2021

      6. Seuss grew up on such images and used them wholesale in his early work. But even as he started to move away from them (as a result of his own political shift during World War II), he repurposed these images into imaginary beings, as @philnel persuasively argues.

      2 replies 6 retweets 133 likes
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    7. Jeet Heer‏Verified account @HeerJeet 7 Apr 2021

      7. In the 19th and early 20th century in the United States (and indeed up till the present in the United Kingdom) it was common to portray the Irish as simians.pic.twitter.com/gSjcAlyfVn

      2 replies 13 retweets 108 likes
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    8. Jeet Heer‏Verified account @HeerJeet 7 Apr 2021

      8. The Irish Simian lives on in two very popular characters: the American everyman Homer Simpson & the Grinch (which Michelle Abate traces back to images like this 19th drawing of Bridget McBruiser).pic.twitter.com/5ZTcKOf9RL

      5 replies 21 retweets 127 likes
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    9. Jeet Heer‏Verified account @HeerJeet 7 Apr 2021

      9. I was dissatisfied with both sides of the Seuss wars. Unlike lunkheads like Ted Cruz, I wouldn't ever show the racist ooga-booga images to kids. But I don't want the books to go out of print either; cultural history is too important. The books should stay in print for adults.

      11 replies 8 retweets 115 likes
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    10. Chandra is tired of the world falling apart‏ @CGioiello 7 Apr 2021
      Replying to @HeerJeet

      What is your line for which books should stay in print? All books ever published? All books ever written? Should publishers publish literally every book ever submitted to them forever? At what point can books no longer be printed? Where is the line drawn?

      1 reply 0 retweets 0 likes
      Jeet Heer‏Verified account @HeerJeet 7 Apr 2021
      Replying to @CGioiello

      It would be good to have digital copies of all books ever printed that anyone can access.

      2:58 PM - 7 Apr 2021
      • 1 Like
      • Persephone Wired
      1 reply 0 retweets 1 like
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        2. Chandra is tired of the world falling apart‏ @CGioiello 7 Apr 2021
          Replying to @HeerJeet

          So free? And not actually published but a digitized library? Do the discontinued Suess books now no longer exist in any form? Because that's very different from "a publisher chooses not to publish physical versions of these books anymore."

          1 reply 0 retweets 0 likes
        3. Jeet Heer‏Verified account @HeerJeet 7 Apr 2021
          Replying to @CGioiello

          All old books should be in an easily accessible digital library. Books of historical and literary interest should be kept in print by enterprises like Library of America, university presses etc. Since Seuss is a historically important creator, he'd be covered by that.

          1 reply 0 retweets 1 like
        4. Show replies

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