{"title":"Art Spiegelman","description":"","products":[{"product_id":"12-de-setembro-a-america-depois","title":"September 12: America After","description":"Ten years after the September 11 attacks, what has happened to the United States, and how does the world view the American soul in the wake of the tragedy? Do the fears and paranoia that inhabit the imagination of American citizens still make the terror of a decade ago seem real? Two presidents and two wars later—Bush and Obama, Iraq and Afghanistan—and the country must continue pursuing a restructuring plan that is much more about the American dream than economics or foreign policy. And it is precisely this debate, about the lost identity of the post-September 11 United States, that journalists Pascal Dellanoy and Jean-Christophe Ogier felt compelled to participate in, even though they were born on the other side of the ocean. That's why they invited other journalists, cartoonists, writers, and even musicians and architects—all citizens of the world—to gather in these pages the global community's impressions of the attack and what came after. In this fascinating collection of thoughts in the form of comics, interviews, essays, and letters, the idea is not to revisit what happened, but to look forward and avoid the \"memorial.\" In Miles Hyman and Jerome Charyn's comics, what we see is a portrait of the panic of the day after. With the potential enemy hidden in anyone on the streets, the lines depict the first months of a country invaded much more by mass hysteria than by the actual number of letters containing anthrax. The next step is hopelessness. Whether in writer Russell Banks' letter to his grandson—depicting a country that has collapsed—or in the futuristic story drawn by Joe Sacco—imagining an unbridled and unconstitutional government—\"tomorrow\" is America's most controversial topic. Internationally renowned cartoonists, Frenchman Plantu and American Daryl Cagle, engage in a dynamic and moving dialogue through illustrations and caricatures about the future of the United States. In their correspondence, at once witty and depressing, mockery, satire, brilliant synthesis, and shocking imagery serve as paragraphs. In an interview illustrated with drawings by Lorenzo Mattotti, Art Spiegelman—Pulitzer Prize-winning author of the graphic novel Maus—says he believes that ordinary Americans, after decades of poor education, can still live the American dream; that as long as they have affordable homes, universities, and cars, and children don't become addicted to crack cocaine, the country can be saved. On September 12: America After, 19 artists, whether born in the United States or not, show soldiers fighting in front of the cameras, the intimate life of the political front, the prospects of a new life in an old country, to prove that nothing that has happened so far has been a dream.","brand":"Totvsrj-record-dc","offers":[{"title":"Default Title","offer_id":47176729690364,"sku":"9788501095350","price":79.9,"currency_code":"BRL","in_stock":true}],"thumbnail_url":"\/\/cdn.shopify.com\/s\/files\/1\/0722\/9197\/5420\/files\/7e84dcb3f819f27f3f0a1b1c3fda3266_039c155e-55a7-4a3a-8328-12b4dac9f12e.jpg?v=1778324781"}],"url":"https:\/\/www.record.com.br\/en\/collections\/art-spiegelman.oembed","provider":"Editora Record","version":"1.0","type":"link"}