Abstract

This article considers the comic book Patoruzú in light of the cultural expressions of Argentine criollismo between the 1930s and 50s. It begins by examining the political and class conflicts that informed the meanings of criollo symbols, and how Dante Quinterno’s creation interacts with them. Perón’s political organisation, for example, constantly resorted to discourses and images of a gaucho and rural nature in order to propagate the ideals of nationalist corporatism. From one perspective, the drawings, storylines and characters of Patoruzú articulate the arguments set forth by Perón in his battles with neo-colonial and oligarchic forces. However, as Anthony Cohen and Stuart Hall argue, mass-media products and popular national symbols are dialogic; they enter into a dialogue with different competing discourses. Thus the comic book is also analysed in respect of the different and conflictive uses and potential interpretations of criollo symbols. One such conflict, it is proposed, resides in the understudied effect of modernisation and urbanisation on the rural criollo migrants, who moved to the provinces of Buenos Aires in large numbers in the 1930s. The comic book, therefore, is not understood simply as an expression of Peronist ideals, but as a footprint of the complex political and identity conflicts of the period.

Highlights

  • This article considers the comic book, Patoruzú in light of the cultural expressions of Argentine criollismo between the 1930s and 50s

  • While Quiroga Micheo (1994, 39), Fiorini (2015, 138) and Malatesta (1997, 46) contend that the comic strip and its character express a more innocent type of patriotism.2. These latter articles view the criollo imagery, themes and narratives employed in Patoruzú as an unproblematic and monolithic symbol of national identity

  • What they fail to take into account is the multiple and contradictory forces that have shaped and given meaning to the criollismo phenomenon that dominated much of the cultural production from the 1910s to the 1950s in Argentina

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Summary

Introduction

This article considers the comic book, Patoruzú in light of the cultural expressions of Argentine criollismo between the 1930s and 50s.

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