The Quiet Revolution of “Charlie 2015”: A Study in Digital Empathy and Political Satire
In the post-attack world, Charlie Hebdo faced a brutal paradox. To stop drawing Muhammad would be to surrender to terror. But to continue drawing him risked alienating the very moderate Muslims whose solidarity was needed to isolate extremism. The surviving staff chose defiance. The “Survivors’ Issue” (January 14, 2015) featured a cartoon of the Prophet holding a “Je suis Charlie” sign, with the caption “All is forgiven.” To many, it was brave. To many others, it was a deliberate provocation. charlie 2015
Thus, the essay on “Charlie 2015” ends not with a conclusion, but with a comma. For as long as there are pens, and as long as there are those who fear them, Charlie will be reborn—year after year, attack after attack, cartoon after cartoon. And we will have to decide, once more, whether to be him. The Quiet Revolution of “Charlie 2015”: A Study
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