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Noys, Benjamin. "Fascinating (British) Fascism: David Britton's Lord Horror." Rethinking History 6.(2002): 305–18. 
Added by: joachim (10/08/2009, 23:39)   Last edited by: joachim (06/01/2010, 18:43)
Resource type: Journal Article
Language: en: English
Peer reviewed
DOI: 10.1080/13642520210164526
BibTeX citation key: Noys2002a
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Categories: General
Keywords: "Lord Horror", Benjamin. Walter, Britton. David, Fascism, History comics, Memoria, Representation, United Kingdom
Creators: Noys
Collection: Rethinking History
Views: 15/790
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Abstract
Although we are familiar with films and novels as sites of ‘fascinating fascism’ (Sontag) there has been comparatively little attention paid to comics or the graphic novel. David Britton's Lord Horror forces us to confront this absence. These graphic novels offer an historical fantasy based on the life of the pre-war fascist and wartime traitor William Joyce, better known as Lord Haw Haw. This disturbing representation of fascism is an explicit challenge to the anti-fascist consensus in post-war British culture. Lord Horror operates as an act of ‘counter-memory’ in recovering a repressed British fascism. It also represents fascism as a carnivalesque transgression. In doing so it uses the hybrid form of the comic book (that mixes text and images) to explore the penetration of fascism into both high and low culture. This representation inverts our sense of fascism as a limited historical phenomenon and also raises questions concerning the politics of history itself. Through an engagement with the work of Walter Benjamin these highly unusual graphic novels scramble the codes on which historical representation rests. This scrambling raises the question of ‘fascinating fascism’ with an extreme urgency and, at the same time, suggests that it cannot be resolved.
Added by: joachim  Last edited by: joachim
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