Toronto Star

Comic takes an unexpected swing at two critical issues

- Bruce Campion-Smith Public Editor Bruce Campion-Smith is the Star’s public editor and based in Toronto. Reach him by email at publiced@thestar.ca or follow him on Twitter: @yowflier

Many readers saw nothing funny in Tuesday’s Six Chix comic strip.

For those who missed it, the comic depicted a Black person wearing a mask and a T-shirt with the saying “I can’t breathe” written on it. A blue-eyed white woman beside her says, “If you can’t breathe, then take that silly mask off!”

The public editor inbox started to fill with complaints that the single-frame comic was offensive on two critical issues of the day — the pandemic, and diversity and the fight against racism. There were questions how it ever saw the light of day in the Star and demands for an apology.

Most complaints charged that the comic demeaned Black people and the Black Lives Matter movement, which has taken on fresh urgency since the May death of Minneapoli­s resident George Floyd. Floyd, a Black man, was handcuffed and dying as a white police officer knelt on his neck for almost nine minutes even as he repeatedly gasped, “I can’t breathe.” The officer was fired and has been charged with murder.

Readers also criticized what they saw as the comic’s flip response to public health advice to wear a mask to curb the spread of COVID-19.

“Today’s Six Chix ‘cartoon’ was absolutely the most tasteless, ill-informed and racist illustrati­on that I have ever seen in the Star,” wrote David Coates, of Toronto.

“I read the comics and felt the cartoon by Six Chix was completely inappropri­ate and was certainly negative towards both Covid safety and Black Lives Matter,” wrote Kathy Fearn, of Markham. “It was appalling to see both issues being ridiculed so obviously.”

And a reader from Caledon wrote, “It is an attack, not humour or satire, on both public health and the rational movement to end racial discrimina­tion.” There were many more, but you get the idea. I’ll admit my first reaction to the comic was one of puzzlement and dismay, too.

But what if we all missed the point? What if the ignorance and insensitiv­ity of the woman not wearing the mask and her glib response was the artist’s intended message?

Six Chix is the work of six women cartoonist­s who each draw once a week and take turns for Sunday. Tuesday’s cartoon was the work of Bianca Xunise, an African-American cartoonist and one of only three Black women who are nationally syndicated in the U.S., according to King Features, distributo­r of the strip.

I reached out to Xunise via her agent hoping to chat. I was told she wasn’t available but Tea Fougner, the editorial director of comics for King Features, told me that Xunise meant the comic to be a “joke commenting on how Black issues are often disregarde­d as a personal problem and not a systemic issue.”

Xunise herself took to Twitter to explain the comic because, “everyone has been getting it wrong.” She continued, “It’s easy to assume that the white woman talking to me is a racist, that may or may not be true but that is not the point. The point is how white people see issues that (affect) black peoples as trivial,” suggesting that she drew herself in the cartoon.

“The whole mask debate has been compared to oppression which I find incredibly offensive. The fact that white peoples want to claim oppression now for having to do their civic duty of protecting others is not the black struggle whatsoever,” she said on social media.

“Yt ppl have assumed for generation­s that racism is simply about our sensitivit­y & not a systemic issue. Furthermor­e I want this comic to challenge liberal whites who assume that every white person they feel superior over is racist,” Xunise wrote, using a phrase sometimes used to refer to white people.

I passed Fougner’s statement to the readers who had raised concerns. For some, the explanatio­n helped. “I too have now had a chance to rethink my opinion on it, and I agree it was a reflection of what’s happening these days; sad,” replied one reader.

But for others like Coates, the comic still fell flat. “Run this past a dozen Canadians and I think 10 would find it as meanspirit­ed and racist as I did. Pray tell where is the punchline?” he said in a follow-up email.

It was certainly a moment when everyday life found its way into the “funnies.” Instead of prompting a chuckle, it prompted some reflection on assumption­s, viewpoints, and the conversati­ons we need to have.

Interestin­g, too, because it wasn’t an editorial cartoon, where the very purpose is to use pointed caricature­s to persuade and provoke. Readers know those cartoons are likely to be edgy.

Rather, Six Chix is found in the comics section. Packaged with the puzzles, this corner of the newspaper is meant to provide readers with an entertaini­ng diversion to the day’s routines.

On this day, one cartoon packed a punch we weren’t expecting.

 ?? PATRICK CORRIGAN FOR THE TORONTO STAR ??
PATRICK CORRIGAN FOR THE TORONTO STAR
 ?? KING FEATURES SYNDICATE ?? Tuesday’s Six Chix cartoon was drawn by African-American cartoonist Bianca Xunise and intended as a “joke commenting on how Black issues are often disregarde­d as a personal problem and not a systemic issue.”
KING FEATURES SYNDICATE Tuesday’s Six Chix cartoon was drawn by African-American cartoonist Bianca Xunise and intended as a “joke commenting on how Black issues are often disregarde­d as a personal problem and not a systemic issue.”
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada