{"id":170983,"date":"2025-06-06T12:29:03","date_gmt":"2025-06-06T16:29:03","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/www.theparisreview.org\/blog\/?p=170983"},"modified":"2025-06-06T12:29:03","modified_gmt":"2025-06-06T16:29:03","slug":"the-enemy-is-a-bowl-of-soup-on-quinos-mafalda","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.theparisreview.org\/blog\/2025\/06\/06\/the-enemy-is-a-bowl-of-soup-on-quinos-mafalda\/","title":{"rendered":"The Enemy Is a Bowl of Soup: On Quino\u2019s <em>Mafalda<\/em>"},"content":{"rendered":"<p style=\"font-weight: 400; padding-left: 40px;\"><img loading=\"lazy\" decoding=\"async\" class=\"aligncenter size-large wp-image-171015\" src=\"https:\/\/www.theparisreview.org\/blog\/wp-content\/uploads\/2025\/06\/img-8516-1024x317.png\" alt=\"\" width=\"1024\" height=\"317\" srcset=\"https:\/\/www.theparisreview.org\/blog\/wp-content\/uploads\/2025\/06\/img-8516-1024x317.png 1024w, https:\/\/www.theparisreview.org\/blog\/wp-content\/uploads\/2025\/06\/img-8516-300x93.png 300w, https:\/\/www.theparisreview.org\/blog\/wp-content\/uploads\/2025\/06\/img-8516-768x238.png 768w, https:\/\/www.theparisreview.org\/blog\/wp-content\/uploads\/2025\/06\/img-8516-1536x475.png 1536w, https:\/\/www.theparisreview.org\/blog\/wp-content\/uploads\/2025\/06\/img-8516.png 1932w\" sizes=\"auto, (min-width: 62.5em) 67vw, 100vw\" \/><\/p>\n<p style=\"font-weight: 400;\">The cartoon character Mafalda, with her massive round head, sixties bob, triangular dress, and black Mary Janes, appears innocent. But this inquisitive girl-against-the-world is no ingenue\u2014Mafalda often fires off sharp, incisive, and cynical observations about the political world around her. In Latin America, the comic strip named after her is legendary: although it ran for only nine years, from 1964 to 1973, this creation of the cartoonist Quino, the pen name of the illustrator Joaqu\u00edn Salvador Lavado Tej\u00f3n, captured how a society\u2019s irony and humor survived one of Argentina\u2019s darkest political chapters (a coup d\u2019\u00e9tat initially led by Juan Carlos Ongan\u00eda that took place between 1966 and 1970 and, later, Juan Domingo Per\u00f3n\u2019s third government, which oversaw the paramilitary anticommunist project that would set up the state for a dictatorship beginning in 1976).<\/p>\n<p style=\"font-weight: 400;\">This June, a collection of early <em>Mafalda<\/em> strips will be published in English for the first time by Archipelago\u2019s children\u2019s book imprint, Elsewhere Editions, and its ideas still sound oddly current. In one famous image, published in 1965, Mafalda ponders her family\u2019s globe. She then leaves, and returns to stick a sign on it that reads <small>WARNING: IRRESPONSIBLE MEN AT WORK<\/small>. When her mom asks her to dust off the globe, she wonders, \u201cDo I clean all the countries, or just the ones that have dirty governments?\u201d After a while, Mafalda realizes the globe might be sick. She covers it with bandages and brings it medicine. When her friend comes to visit, she asks for silence, out of respect for the convalescent. \u201cIs your dad sick?\u201d her friend asks, and she says no. \u201cYour mom?\u201d Neither of them. It\u2019s the globe, she says, and brings her friend into her room, where Earth is resting peacefully. In later strips and in a similar spirit, Mafalda will debate the war in Vietnam and \u201cplay government\u201d with her peers. \u201cDon\u2019t worry,\u201d she exclaims when her mom walks in, \u201cwe have lots of policies, but we don\u2019t actually do anything.\u201d Her tiny body contrasts with her grandiloquent statements, both mocking the adult world around her and interpreting its political ideas with genuine concern.<!--more--><\/p>\n<p style=\"font-weight: 400;\"><em>Mafalda<\/em>\u2019s first run coincided with a period in Argentine history in which a series of military dictators\u2014Juan Carlos Ongan\u00eda, Roberto Marcelo Levingston, and Alejandro Agust\u00edn Lanusse\u2014seized power and exercised both violent repression and brutal censorship of the press. Many of the topics that <em>Mafalda<\/em> touches on were simply not allowed into the public sphere at the time. As a consequence, artists such as the musician and writer Mar\u00eda Elena Walsh, the rock star Charly Garc\u00eda, and illustrators like Quino shifted to making children\u2019s art, which was less scrutinized. In <em>Mafalda<\/em>, Quino found an effective yet apparently inoffensive outlet for his critiques of society. When Mafalda encounters a policeman, for example, she asks him if he\u2019s a good person and he responds, \u201cPolice officers are always good people.\u201d Then she looks into the bag that holds his gun and walks away, declaring, \u201cI think I\u2019m starting to figure out how goodness works.\u201d Years later, another classic cartoon would show her standing next to a tall cop with her younger brother and, pointing out his baton, and cynically telling him, \u201cDo you see? This is the little stick they use to crush ideology.\u201d<\/p>\n<p style=\"font-weight: 400;\">When I was growing up in Argentina in the early aughts, in the middle of yet another political crisis, <em>Mafalda<\/em> taught me how to think politically, even when I was too young for it. Children enjoy this\u2014they appreciate it when you don\u2019t underestimate their intelligence, and rise to the occasion as a result. For several generations after its original run,<em> Mafalda<\/em> was published in sets of small, cheap strip books that you could buy at any newspaper stand or kiosk, making it affordable for parents and manageable for kids\u2019 small hands.<\/p>\n<p style=\"font-weight: 400;\">But Mafalda was not the only memorable character in the strip. Quino created a group of neighborhood friends and classmates who inhabited different stereotypes of the time. The original gang includes Felipe, a neurotic, whimsical boy who loves the <em>Lone Ranger<\/em> comic books; Manolito, the son of Spanish immigrants, who works in his dad\u2019s grocery store and is obsessed with money and success; and Susanita, who is proud of her bourgeois aspirations and is stereotypically feminine: she dreams of marrying a doctor, becoming a mother, and vacationing abroad. Later in the strip, toward the end of the sixties, Quino would add Mafalda\u2019s sibling, Guille, who has the self-entitlement and irreverence that only a younger brother can have, and Libertad, the daughter of two left-wing activists, who advocates openly for Marxism and guerrilla warfare.<\/p>\n<p style=\"font-weight: 400;\">The cultural trends of the sixties and early seventies made their way into <em>Mafalda <\/em>through this same humorous effect, the kids\u2019 tastes and mores imbued with a <em>soixante-huitard <\/em>sensibility. Mafalda is a fan of the Beatles, and she and Felipe get mad at Manolito when he insults their long hair, which at the time was a symbol of opposition to military conscription and to the buzz cuts men got while in service. During the space race, Mafalda similarly berates Manolito for not going to nursery school and declares, \u201cSending people into outer space is progress, not your papa\u2019s grocery store!\u201d Manolito responds, \u201cBut I\u2019m also pretty interested in the cosmos! I\u2019ve got plans for satellite stores.\u201d<\/p>\n<p style=\"font-weight: 400;\">In many ways, the children in <em>Mafalda<\/em> are mimicking the different worldviews they have inherited from their parents. Quino\u2019s humor relies on placing adult sentences in children\u2019s voices\u2014an estrangement that has both an endearing and a satirical effect, and that allows him to mock and critique the middle-class values of traditional families, consumption, and conformism. Consider <em>Mafalda<\/em>\u2019s depiction of gender roles: If a grown woman told us in a comic strip that she just wanted to get married and have children, this would sound old-school, boring, even pass\u00e9. In a discussion between Susanita and Mafalda, however, it has a different angle. When Mafalda dreams that her mother went to university and got a degree (at a time when most women were mostly housewives) she describes this enthusiastically to Susanita, hoping to find a match in her excitement. Instead, Susanita asks if her mother got a \u201crich, handsome boyfriend\u201d in Mafalda\u2019s dream. Malfada says no. Susanita, the prototradwife, exclaims: \u201cSo she went to college and everything and she came away with NOTHING!\u201d<\/p>\n<p style=\"font-weight: 400;\">One of the many ways political discourse makes its way into the comic is in Mafalda\u2019s projections onto her archnemesis: a bowl of soup. Throughout the strip, the bowl of soup becomes a hated symbol of the seemingly healthy food that Mafalda is forced to consume\u2014and, by extension, an emblem of what she\u2019s been taught, the middle-class ideologies that suffuse her life. When Mafalda sees her mother clipping a fish soup recipe from a newspaper, she gets mad and imitates a dictator\u2019s voice, shouting, \u201cDOWN WITH FREEDOM OF THE PRESS!\u201d On another day when she is served this soup, a single strip takes over the page, in which a distressed Mafalda announces, \u201cSoup is to childhood what Communism is to democracy!\u201d In soup, Mafalda sees an embodiment of the set of lies that adults are being fed\u2014soup is the enemy, the man, and the hypocrisy of modern postwar life.<\/p>\n<p style=\"font-weight: 400;\">The culmination of Quino\u2019s radical avoidance of censorship took place a day after Ongan\u00eda\u2019s 1966 coup d\u2019\u00e9tat. On the day of the coup, the newspaper <em>El Mundo<\/em>, in which <em>Mafalda<\/em>appeared at the time, was filled with neutral coverage: journalists couldn\u2019t write openly against the regime change. Instead, the most revolutionary voice appeared in the children\u2019s strip. In it, Mafalda seems anguished\u2014this is not the same girl who had so self-assuredly argued against her father\u2019s materialistic desire for a car and her mother\u2019s preoccupation with beauty. Instead, she seems genuinely defeated, confused. In a single, close-up frame, she asks: \u201cWhat happened with \u2026 Everything that we were taught at school \u2026\u201d She implies that the values of democracy, of being \u201ca good person,\u201d and of faith in the government are now deeply disrupted by Ongan\u00eda\u2019s violent seizure of power. And Quino, at the time, was one of the only writers who\u2014in cryptic complicity with his readers\u2014was able to say something about it.<\/p>\n<p style=\"font-weight: 400;\">By the early seventies, tensions in the political climate of Argentina had increased even more. Ediciones de la Flor, Quino\u2019s publisher, became a target of censorship\u2014one of its novels was even removed from print\u2014and Quino stopped producing his comic books in 1973, alleging a \u201clack of new ideas.\u201d In 1975, the Argentine Secretariat of Intelligence tried to appropriate <em>Mafalda<\/em>, and created its own apocryphal version of the cartoon, in which a poorly drawn Manolito incites young men to join the military service. A year after that, Quino\u2019s editors were kidnapped by the military and eventually released under international pressure. Shortly thereafter, the military massacred five Pallottine priests with left-leaning ideas. The forensic photographs taken after the act produced a chilling image: the bodies of two of the priests sat lifeless next to a poster of a Mafalda cartoon the murders had ripped from the wall and placed next to the bodies. Here, the classic image is turned sinister: \u201cDo you see?\u201d Mafalda asks once more. \u201cThis is the little stick they use to crush ideology.\u201d<\/p>\n<p style=\"font-weight: 400;\">Threatened by the political climate in an increasingly militarized country, Quino went into exile in 1976. Until 1973, Mafalda had continued to denounce the decaying values of her milieu, Argentina\u2019s naive cultural dependence on the United States and Europe, the plethora of wars abroad, and the censorship of radical movements in Latin America. She did so in a witty and childlike way that was accessible to kids and parents alike; she was humorous but always sharp. After the return of democracy to the country in 1983, Quino not only went back to Buenos Aires and to his native province of Mendoza, but he also allowed <em>Mafalda <\/em>to be reproduced to promote the values of the new democratic regime. In many ways, the intergenerational battle that <em>Mafalda<\/em> represents still rings true, and is bound to educate nonconformist children in conformist times.<\/p>\n<p>&nbsp;<\/p>\n<p><em>Julia Kornberg is the author of<\/em> Berlin Atomized.<\/p>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"<p>\u201cDo I clean all the countries, or just the ones with dirty governments?\u201d<\/p>\n","protected":false},"author":2600,"featured_media":0,"comment_status":"closed","ping_status":"closed","sticky":false,"template":"","format":"standard","meta":{"_acf_changed":false,"footnotes":""},"categories":[68386],"tags":[],"class_list":["post-170983","post","type-post","status-publish","format-standard","hentry","category-the-reviews-review"],"acf":[],"yoast_head":"<!-- This site is optimized with the Yoast SEO Premium plugin v25.4 (Yoast SEO v25.4) - https:\/\/yoast.com\/wordpress\/plugins\/seo\/ -->\n<title>The Enemy Is a Bowl of Soup: On Quino\u2019s Mafalda by Julia Kornberg<\/title>\n<meta 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