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Comprend aussi: Jonathan Shapiro (1)

Crédit image: Zapiro (Jonathan Shapiro) at the Göteborg Book Fair, 2010

Œuvres de Zapiro

Oeuvres associées

Africa Comics (2004) — Contributeur — 11 exemplaires
50 People Who Messed up the World (2017) — Catoonist — 11 exemplaires

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Feels more and more like Zapiro has an agenda to push...
 
Signalé
rendier | Jan 25, 2024 |
Imagine how much poorer life would be if Jonathan Shapiro had confined his love of sport to table tennis - a game at which he excelled – or if hockey and netball were what really floated his boat?

Luckily, Zapiro is an avid follower of soccer, rugby and cricket, and the politics and personalities branding them uniquely South African. For nearly 20 years he has produced witty and acerbic cartoons for most sporting victories, defeats and scandals, proving indisputably that a picture is worth a 1000 words.

Vuvuzelanation is an incisive and colourful sporting history of South Africa and the world since 1995, containing Zapiro’s best cartoons, including the one that won him the CNN African journalist of the year for 2001.

Louis Luyt, Caster Semenya, Hansie Cronje, they’re all here, the heroes and the villains, plus the smiling figure of their number one fan, Nelson Mandela. A perfect 10 for Zapiro!
… (plus d'informations)
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Signalé
adpaton | Jun 21, 2013 |
How quickly we forget issues that dominated the headlines just a few short months ago, and how wonderful that we have cartoonists like Zapiro to remind us with their annuals of potted and ascebnic political and social comment. 2012 will certainly be remembered more as the Year of the Spear than for the mediocrity of Mangaung so it's fitting that Zapiro chooses Brett Murray's painting of the presidential jewels to grace the cover of his recent collection.
This might also be the last year in which Julius Malema is given such prominence and one hopes also to see no more of former police commissioners Selebi and Cele, both noted for their corruption and extravagant uniforms. Selebi, wanting medical parole, was shown golfing with none other than Shabir Sheik, another name one hopes will sink into infamous ignominy.
Zapiro also highlights issue that are, unfortunately, unlikely to go away - like the annihlation of the rhino population by poachers, the e-tolling scandal and the education debacle ruiled over by the less than competent minister of basic education Angie Masego, who was responsible for the non-delivery and later dumping of text books for the entire Limpopo province.
Small wonder that Jacob Zuma retains his shower head and we trust that the much vaunted secrecy bill will never still the voice or the pen of South frica's cleverest cartoonist.
… (plus d'informations)
 
Signalé
adpaton | Feb 4, 2013 |
Zapiro is consistently good and there is no better way of reminding yourself of the events that have bedeviled or – in very rare cases – enlightened the past year than by buying his cartoon annual, showing the work that appeared in The Sunday Times, the Times and the Mail & Guardian.

When Jacob Zuma became president of South Africa Zapiro, one of his most vociferous critics, did not tone back as so many others did: his only concession was that Zuma’s trademark cranial shower attachment – in homage to the infamous shower he took to avoid contacting Aids after allegedly raping an HIV positive woman who was a guest in his house – was detached.

It became a barometer of Zapiro’s – and by extension the public’s – opinion of Zuma performance and reaction to certain situations. If he behaved in a presidential fashion, the shower rose some way above his head, if his behaviour was dodgy it sank until it hovered, like a sword of Damocles, just above his shiny bald pate.

Although Zapiro is still being sued by Zuma over last year’s rape of Justice Cartoon, none of this year’s batch has been – as far as I am aware – offensive enough to result in legal action, but that is not to say they are not offensive. Many of them are, in the extreme.

Africa will be protected from Aids only when Pope Benedict is himself encased in a condom, the Israeli’s continue to bomb schools and hospitals in Gaza, Julius Malema – while not depicted as a tantrumming toddler in a nappy – is a male chavenist pig [literally] in a leather jacket and Helen Zille is mocked mercilessly for having had Botox injections during the run-up to the elections.

Swine ‘flu, the soccer Confederations Cup, the death of Michael Jackson, the formation of Cope, Cholera, the first post-apartheid white South African to be granted status as a political refugee plus the old faithfuls, crime and corruption, this album has it all and more. An essential addition to your library…

For a nation with such deeply joyless Calvinist roots, South Africans have a surprisingly Catholic sense of humour.

Recent international incidents, not to mention events in the personal and political life of our President, an ordained man of the cloth himself, have rendered this hat trick of humour a little out of date but no less amusing.

We can chart Jacob Zuma’s popularity by the height at which Zapiro makes the dripping shower rosette [now firmly re-attached] hover irresolutely over the Presidential dome, while poor Lady Justice still has a hard time of it.

If political satire is a little too caustic for your taste, stick to Madam and Eve: Strike while the Iron is hot presents the usual gently hilarious view of our society, featuring everyone from the prawns of District 9 to Tokyo Sexwale to old favourites like the Mielie Lady and the tokoloshes.

Finally, Sarah Britten’s third collection of South African insults: far from being a nation renowned for having honed the art of the insult until it is rapier sharp, we tend to rely on bludgeons.

But those blunt instruments have been put together by one of the funniest writers in the country, with the help of quotes by noted wits such as Andrew Donaldson, David Bullard, Barry Ronge and many others.

So if you need cheering up in the face of the ever increasing petrol price, crime rates, and brood of presidential progeny inflicted on the long-suffering tax payer, look no further.
… (plus d'informations)
 
Signalé
adpaton | Dec 16, 2009 |

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Œuvres
23
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2
Membres
104
Popularité
#184,481
Évaluation
3.8
Critiques
8
ISBN
22

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