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COLUMNISTS
TODAY'S STORIES
15.06.2008
Nostalgia for Killers


I've loved Spain for decades, and Catalonia, especially. I first went there when Franco was still in power and the favored slogan on public buildings was "todo por la patria." We came back many times, and the last time was for my son's wedding. In the 45 years since our first visit, Barcelona had become one of the most happening cities in the world, maybe behind London and ahead of Tel Aviv, but way, way up there. Visually gorgeous, demographically mixed, temperamentally intense...And now, you could talk politics -- if that is what you wanted to talk about- without casting your eye over your shoulder to see if you were being watched.

So an Ha'aretz article about a Nazi bookstore in Barcelona this morning surprised me. I suppose phenomena such as this are the wages of freedom.

Another article in Sunday's Boston Globe about a monumental sculpture in memory of Che Guevara, erected by leftists in Argentina, also stunned me.  But it shouldn't have. The left still has nostalgia for killers -- a nostalgia for killers buttressed by Andy Warhol and merchandisers of T-shirts -- that has itself killed repugnance for ideological murder.

Posted: Sunday, June 15, 2008 4:18 PM with 8 comment(s)

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scire said:

I think many who wear those Che Guevara t-shirts are ignorant about him. Knee-jerk idealism of the young.

June 15, 2008 5:50 PM

fougasseu said:

Warhol's sins are like an oil spill that goes on and on and on. His peculiar strain of nostalgia is a very special curse.

June 15, 2008 7:45 PM

blackton said:

scire, I agree, I have students who wear his shirt but know nothing really about him. Personally, I think his image being used as a form of Capitalist kitsch would be a nice ironic twist, like Mao lighters in China, but while no one in China cares about Mao at all, you still have a lot of really poor latinos who still might buy into Che's insanity.

June 15, 2008 7:47 PM

mollysimon said:

You're right about the oil spill, fougasseu.   Steven Soderberg is directing a Che biopic.  My guess is the executions in Cuba get no play.  The guy was a thug.  I don't see the glamor there.  And when I see some twentysomething walking around in that repugnant t-shirt (wow, cool graphic!), I have to fight from asking the idiot what he knows of Che's actual life--and legacy (gay concentration camps! Yeah!).  Sorry I can't be more ironic on this topic.  Flat-footed anger can be so tedious.

June 15, 2008 9:03 PM

sleepyavl said:

It would be nice to se T-shirts with Reinhard Heydrich. Heydirch was a the SS chief and Nazi Germany No. 3. Like Che Guevara, he was a very handsome man and an educated one. Similarly, he was killed at age 38 by Czech partisans. I had fun asking a Che t-shirt person at a party why wasn't he wearing a Heydrich T-shirt. What followed was quite fun...

June 15, 2008 10:37 PM

ginzy said:

So let's start a pool... How long until Arafat T-shirts become the next hot fashion item for the truly radical chic?

hg

e/J

June 16, 2008 4:23 PM

ginzy said:

Post script to the Arafat T-Shirt...

surely it will be de rigueur to be worn a red checkered Kaffiyah, fashionably folded on the shoulder to resemble a map of British Mandatory Western Palestine.

After all, radical chic won't be radical chic without the radical...

hg

June 17, 2008 5:21 AM

sleepyavl said:

Arafat won't fly. The bastard on the T-shirt has to be young and handsome and preferably to have died early. Check out Reinhard Heydrich. Best candidate in my mind after Che Guevara.

June 19, 2008 11:14 PM

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