Carlos Latuff
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Carlos Latuff | |
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Born | 30 November 1968 |
Died |
Carlos Latuff (born November 30, 1968), in São Cristovo (Rio de Janeiro, Brazil), is a Brazilian political cartoonist of Lebanese origins who works independently. His works are concerned with a wide range of themes, including anti-globalization, anti-capitalism, and anti-Americanism and anti-military intervention. Furthermore, the issue for which he is most famous are his photographs depicting the Arab-Israeli conflict. Lattouf described his work as controversial.[1]
Artwork[change | change source]
Some of Carlos Latuff's controversial artwork.
- Palestinian Intifada
- Neo-Nazi caricature
- Riots in Greece in 2008
- Che Guevara depicted as a Jew
- Nelson Mandela as a Palestinian in Israeli prisons.
- Shared human coexistence: a Jewish boy and a Muslim girl with disabilities.
- The war for oil
- Egyptian Muslims and Christians are one hand.
- The emergence of the Iraqi resistance.
- Memory of the Holocaust and its comparison with reality in Palestine
- Anti-Semitism has become a peg for the survival of the Israeli occupation of the West Bank
- Comparing the Nazis to the Israelis
- America, the Great Satan
Related pages[change | change source]
References[change | change source]
- ↑ ""ناجي العلي" البرازيلي ومشكلته مع معجبين برسومه الكاريكاتورية من العرب". قناة العربية (in العربية). قناة العربية. 30 نوفمبر 2011. Archived from the original on 4 March 2016. Retrieved 6 December 2011.
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Other websites[change | change source]