I don't usually do this, but a newspaper columnist in the Orlando Sentinel wrote an interesting column today and I'm pasting it all in. I could provide a link, but you have to be a "member" to read the Sentinel online, and that's too much of a hassle for you. The author of the column is Kathleen Parker. (Don't bother telling me I've violated some law/rule about copyrights. I've met Kathleen, and she's not the type to care as long as she's read.) "Is it just me or does it stink in here?" Get it? Of course you get it. In America we call this bathroom humor. Little boys have been giggling about outhouses and their accompanying olfactory assaults since, well, caveman days. No doubt Johnny Hart's recent "B.C." comic strip depicting same got lots of little-boy giggles from fans of his strip, which he began in 1958 when Americans still had a sense of humor.
But in a bizarre turn that makes even cavemen seem sophisticated, the panel also has provoked howls of outrage from some Muslims, as well as academics and assorted harrumphers, who feel the cartoon was a crude assault on Islam. I know what you're thinking: How could a cartoon about an outhouse insult Islam? Let's just say it helps if you're the sort who can see subliminal sexual messages concealed in the ice cubes of liquor ads.
The strip in question featured three frames, each showing an outhouse, which is distinguished from a plain shed by the traditional outhouse symbol, which is can you take it, Harvard? That's right a crescent moon! The crescent moon is also shown hanging in the sky just outside the outhouse to indicate Yale? Bingo! it's nighttime.
OK, now pay close attention because this part gets tricky. Between frames one and two Hart wedged the vertically written letters S-L-A-M. Anyone? Anyone? Yes, you back there in the CAIR T-shirt.
"Quite obviously, it's a slam against Islam." Allrighty. Anyone else? Yes, you, the young man in the cowboy hat.
"What the heck's he talking about, Is-lam? He slammed the dadgum door. Slam means slam." Well, we'll just see about that. Since Hart's comic strip appeared Nov. 10, he's been the object of the sort of debate that makes one wonder whether we've been transported to an alternate, humorless universe where everything is literal. The stink began when someone posted a comment on washingtonpost.com that the strip made no sense except metaphorically. Crescent moons, you see, are associated with Islam as well as with American outhouses. Therefore, the reader suggested, the strip otherwise unfunny in his view was a veiled attack on Islam. Then CAIR (Council on American-Islamic Relations) jumped on the bandwagon, not literally of course, and noted that vertically stacking "SLAM" between the two frames which could be viewed as the shape of an "I" could be viewed as signifying Islam. The Washington Post even found an expert in symbols to suggest as much. Marshall Blonsky, professor of semiotics (for you cowboys, that's the philosophical theory of signs and symbols) at the New School in New York, found the SLAM perplexing and intriguing:
"Why is the door slamming?" he mused. "You don't slam an outhouse door. . . . You gently close an outhouse door." Hmm, I'm not familiar with Blonsky's comic body of work, but other cartoonists tell me that, owing to space constraints, they often insert vertical words between frames, including "SLAM," "BLAM," WHAM" and, of course, "Thank you ma'am." Oh, and by the way, since we're going literal here, I should probably point out that cavemen didn't use outhouses. Forget slamming the door with, as the Washington Post put it, a melodramatic flourish. On the other hand, is there really another way? Hart, meanwhile, has denied any hidden anti-Islamic message, saying: "My goodness. That's incredible. That's unbelievable."
And then he was forced to explain why it isn't the work of a fevered brow to suggest that a caveman, whose inattention to hygiene is understood, might wonder whether that troubling aroma was "de moi" or "de la toilette." More to the point, what if Hart were poking fun at Islam? We routinely poke fun at Catholicism and fundamentalist Christianity, the group to which Hart happens to belong. Why the kid-glove treatment only for Islam? Hart, whose only real offense was to be not quite funny enough for some who, to their credit, have transcended scatological humor, has a right to express even an unpopular view. Or to be unfunny. But out of the 10,000 or more strips Hart has created over a 45-year career, surely a few are allowed to fall short of knee-slapping hilarity.
In answer to the question he posed in "B.C.," it's not the outhouse that stinks. It's our virtuous "sensitivity" and the demand for tolerance by the manifestly intolerant that reeks.
Top answer
Tony Cooper wrote on 04 Dec 2003: [nq:1]More to the point, what if Hart were poking fun at Islam? We routinely poke fun at Catholicism and fundamentalist Christianity, the group to which Hart happens to belong. [/nq] Because only some fanatical leaders and followers of Islam are insane enough to actually kill people for what they believe are insults to their religion.
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Tony Cooper wrote on 04 Dec 2003: [nq:1]More to the point, what if Hart were poking fun at Islam?
We routinely poke fun at Catholicism and fundamentalist Christianity, the group to which Hart happens to belong.
[/nq] Because only some fanatical leaders and followers of Islam are insane enough to actually kill people for what they believe are insults to their religion.
It would probably not have been mentioned if Hart were not such an obvious fundie, though.
[/nq] Islamists take their religion seriously enough to kill over it.
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Tony Cooper wrote on 04 Dec 2003: [nq:1]More to the point, what if Hart were poking fun at Islam? We routinely poke fun at Catholicism and fundamentalist Christianity, the group to which Hart happens to belong. Why the kid-glove treatment only for Islam?[/nq] Because only some fanatical leaders and followers of Islam are insane enough to actually kill people for what they believe are insu
(Email Removed) (Donna Richoux) wrote on 04 Dec 2003: [nq:2]"Is it just me or does it stink in here?"[/nq] [nq:1](snip discussion of anti-Islamic accusations) The cartoon itself can be found here: [/nq] And the cartoon itself has the crescent moon facing in the wrong direction and sans star. The crescent moon symbol has always been a symbol for an outhouse in American cartoons. The Is
[nq:2](snip discussion of anti-Islamic accusations) The cartoon itself can be found here: [/nq] [nq:1]And the cartoon itself has the crescent moon facing in the wrong direction[/nq] Wrong, how? (1) It's possible in nature, if, for example, it was before dawn and the sun was going to come up on the left. (2) Most of the flags showing a crescent moon symbol, show it in the C-position, altho
[nq:1]Wrong, how? (1) It's possible in nature[/nq] "O Lady Moon thy horns point to the east. Shine, be increased. O Lady Moon thy horns point to the west. Wane, be at rest." (Good for N hemisphere only).
Paul My Lake District walking site (updated 29th September 2003):
[nq:1]I don't usually do this, but a newspaper columnist in the Orlando Sentinel wrote an interesting column today and I'm ... the door slamming?" he mused. "You don't slam an outhouse door. . . . You gently close an outhouse door."[/nq] Prof. Blonsky may be unaware of the theory and practice of the American privy, developed as a vaudeville monologue by Chic Sale and published in 1
[nq:1]Prof. Blonsky may be unaware of the theory and practice of the American privy, developed as a vaudeville monologue by ... copy in England in the 1940s, remembered as the only book in the house their children were forbidden to read.)[/nq] My parents, OTOH, gave me a copy. I still have it somewhere ...
(Email Removed) (Donna Richoux) wrote on 04 Dec 2003: [nq:1]Wrong, how? (1) It's possible in nature, if, for example, it was before dawn and the sun was going to ... the flags showing a crescent moon symbol, show it in the C-position, although there happens to be some variation: [/nq] [nq:2]and sans star.[/nq] [nq:1]True, no star, or stars. (It always bothers me when anyone puts a sta
( . . . ) [nq:1] there is no good reason for Hart to have added "SLAM"; whoever is using the outhouse is not running up the hill to get there before he dumps his load in the middle of the road.[/nq] I remember hearing at a family gathering when I was a lad about a man racing for the outhouse in the dark of night, running into a low clothes-l