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Ben Passmore

    Cet auteur aborde des sujets complexes tels que le crime, les monstres et l'anarchisme, se plongeant souvent dans les domaines de la dysfonction sexuelle et de la brutalité policière. Son œuvre explore également des aspects théoriques de l'art et des états émotionnels intimes. Par son style distinctif, il offre des aperçus troublants et provocateurs sur la vie contemporaine.

    Your Black Friend
    Black Arms to Hold You Up
    Sports Is Hell
    Bttm Fdrs
    • Bttm Fdrs

      • 288pages
      • 11 heures de lecture
      3,9(1477)Évaluer

      An Afrofuturist horror-comedy about gentrification, hip hop, and cultural appropriation. Once a thriving working class neighborhood on Chicago’s south side, the “Bottomyards” is now the definition of urban blight. When an aspiring fashion designer named Darla and her image-obsessed friend, Cynthia, descend upon the neighborhood in search of cheap rent, they soon discover something far more seductive and sinister lurking behind the walls of their new home. Like a cross between Jordan Peele’s Get Out and John Carpenter’s The Thing , Daniels and Passmore’s BTTM FDR S (pronounced “bottomfeeders”) offers a vision of horror that is gross and gory in all the right ways. At turns funny, scary, and thought provoking, it unflinchingly confronts the monsters―both metaphoric and real―that are displacing cultures in urban neighborhoods today. Full-color illustrations throughout.

      Bttm Fdrs
    • Sports Is Hell

      • 60pages
      • 3 heures de lecture
      3,5(421)Évaluer

      Some wars are for religion and some are for political belief, but this one is for football.

      Sports Is Hell
    • Black Arms to Hold You Up

      • 208pages
      • 8 heures de lecture

      A whirlwind graphic history of Black life in America, from the award-winning political cartoonist Ben Passmore It’s the summer of 2020, and downtown Philly is up in flames. “You’re not out in the streets with everyone else?” Ronnie asks his ambivalent son, Ben, shambling in with arms full of used the works of Malcom X, Robert F. Williams, Assata and Sanyika Shakur, among others. “Black liberation is your fight, too.”So begins Black Arms to Hold You Up, a boisterous, darkly funny, and sobering march through Black militant history. From Robert Charles’s shootout with the police in 1900, to the Black Power movement in the 1960s, to the Los Angeles and George Floyd uprisings of the 1990s and the aughts, readers will tumble through more than a century of armed resistance against the racist state alongside Ben—and meet firsthand the mothers and fathers of the movement, whose stories were as tragic as they were heroic.What, after so many decades lost to state violence, is there left to fight for? Deeply researched, vibrantly drawn, and bracingly introspective, Black Arms to Hold You Up dares to find the answer.

      Black Arms to Hold You Up
    • Your Black Friend

      • 11pages
      • 1 heure de lecture

      "An open letter from your black friend to you about race, racism, friendship, and alienation"--Back cover.

      Your Black Friend