Afterimages *By* Maurice
Isserman<http://www.thenation.com/directory/bios/maurice_isserman>

This article appeared in the June 29, 2009 edition of The Nation.
<http://www.thenation.com/doc/20090629> June 10, 2009

 [image: © CHRISTOPHER NASH]




On October 9, 1967, a Bolivian army communiqué from La Paz announced that
Ernesto "Che" Guevara, the Argentine-born Cuban revolutionary
*comandante*turned itinerant guerrilla, had been hunted down by
soldiers and killed in
battle. The *New York Times* responded editorially, and with evident
satisfaction, that if the report proved true, "as now seems probable," then
"a myth as well as a man has been laid to rest." It was not the *Times*'s
most accurate prediction.

 *Che's Afterlife: The Legacy of an Image* by Michael Casey

   -

   Maurice Isserman<http://www.thenation.com/directory/bios/maurice_isserman>
   *:* The radical individualism of the New Left was hardly un-American: A
   batch of new memoirs show the Weatherman followed a distinctly American
   tradition.

Photographs of Che's lifeless body soon appeared in newspapers around the
globe, putting to rest doubts about his death. Perhaps the most famous image
was one taken by Freddy Alborta, showing Che's corpse being displayed to the
press by Bolivian army officers. Yet controversy over the circumstances of
Che's death continued to brew. Was he killed in combat, or in cold-blooded
execution? The latter. Did the soldiers who killed him amputate and preserve
his hands and then cremate the body? His amputated hands were smuggled to
Cuba in 1970, and his bones were discovered by a Cuban forensic team in
Bolivia in 1997 and returned to Cuba for state burial.

In *Che's Afterlife: The Legacy of an Image*, Michael Casey reports that
local peasant women who paraded by Che's corpse on October 9 with the
permission of triumphant Bolivian officers "surreptitiously clipped locks of
hair from Che's head, saving themselves a future talisman." A few weeks
later, the journalist and novelist Jose Yglesias, reporting on Che's death
for *The Nation*, indulged his readers with a different sort of memorabilia.
Yglesias wrote that like the relics of St. Teresa of Avila, a
sixteenth-century Carmelite nun and mystic, Che's hands "may well be with us
for a long time to strengthen the nonreligious but barefoot Order--like
Saint Teresa's stoical Carmelites--of the guerrillas of South America." The
mythic appeal of the slain revolutionary, known to many today in Latin
America as "San Ernesto," has only grown in subsequent years. "Unwittingly,
the Bolivian military delivered the world a lasting and sympathetic picture
of the man they'd hunted down," Casey writes. "They gave it a crucified
Che." Indeed, John Berger and other art critics have argued that Freddy
Alborta's photo of Che's corpse bears a startling resemblance to Renaissance
depictions of Jesus Christ at the moment he was brought down from the cross
by the Romans.

Che hardly ever sat for a bad photo--even in death. But of all surviving
photographs of him, one in particular stands out: the head-and-shoulders
portrait of a bearded, longhaired, 31-year-old Che, wearing a bomber jacket
and his trademark beret emblazoned with the *comandante* star. Casey makes
this image the central concern of *Che's Afterlife*, and in the book's
opening chapter he offers a vivid re-creation of the "frozen millisecond"
when the photo was taken. The date was March 5, 1960; the location a spot
near Havana's Colón cemetery; the occasion a public funeral sponsored by the
revolutionary government. The previous day a French munitions ship
delivering arms to Cuba had mysteriously blown up in Havana harbor, killing
scores of people and wounding hundreds. CIA involvement was suspected but
never proven. Che, who had been at a meeting nearby in downtown Havana when
the ship exploded, rushed to the docks and helped provide medical aid to the
wounded and the dying.

On March 5, Che was standing on the speaker's platform while Castro
harangued the crowd. He was gazing upon the assembly when photographer
Alberto "Korda" Díaz Gutiérrez snapped a picture of him for *Revolucíon*,
the official newspaper of Castro's 26th of July Movement. At the moment the
shutter clicked, Che was hunched inside his bomber jacket against the
unseasonable cold of that March day. The tension in his posture, combined
with his piercing gaze ("angry and grieved" was the impression that Korda
had of his subject's mood), made for a formally dynamic image. Citing art
historian David Kunzle, Casey notes the "aesthetic magnets" of hair, beard
and star, all of which both "steer the eye's attention" when looking at the
photograph and "provide reference points for derivative art," allowing for
simplified forms of "mass reproduction as a two-tone icon."

Korda knew he had taken a good picture, but his editors failed to agree: the
photograph did not run in the following day's *Revolucíon*. Over the next
few years it would enjoy only a few low-key appearances in Cuban
periodicals. Eventually, someone in a position of influence recognized the
image's iconic possibilities. Shortly before Che's death, the photo--by then
known as "Guerrillero Heroico"--was made a centerpiece of official Cuban
propaganda. It adorned the hall at an international gathering of artists and
writers in Havana in May 1967 and later that summer was displayed at the
founding meeting of the Organization of Latin American Solidarity (OLAS).
Korda's "Guerrillero Heroico" became routinely coupled with Che's famous
slogan calling on the international left to "create two, three...many
Vietnams." In the aftermath of Che's death, the Korda photo, or various
graphic derivations, became a staple of radical newspapers and left-wing
poster art in North and South America and Western Europe. And in an ironic
post-1960s development, the image took on yet another life--this time as a
marketing device, used to sell everything from air fresheners to condoms to
an ice cream bar called Cherry Guevara.

Michael Casey, bureau chief for Dow Jones Newswires in Buenos Aires and a
frequent correspondent for the *Wall Street Journal*, seems especially to
relish the commercial taint of recent appropriations of Che's image, the
"commoditization of an anticapitalist rebel who opposed all that his
hyper-commercialized image now represents." As Casey sees it, the issue is
not that Che's image is without continuing political appeal but that it has
too many diverse meanings to be the symbol of any coherent ideology. As one
would expect, the Korda photo remains "the symbol of choice" for
contemporary Latin American rebels, "wherever regional activists give the
middle finger to the U.S.-backed free market system." It has also shown up
in recent years as movement iconography in Palestine, Nepal, East Timor and
many other locales caught up in radical insurgencies. But its appeal is not
limited to conventional left-wing movements; it has been embraced, for
instance, by "U.S.-backed Christian rebels in Sudan who are fighting a
Muslim regime." He argues shrewdly that the contemporary meaning of Che's
image ultimately isn't about communism or anti-imperialism: it's about
attitude, and it's about sacrifice. "A man, a teacher, lays down a code of
personal conduct from which to build a just society, a utopia, and then
proceeds to live and die according to it."

In *Che's Afterlife*, we learn almost as much about the photographer who
captured the image "Guerrillero Heroico" as we do of its subject. Before the
revolution, Korda established a reputation as Cuba's best fashion
photographer, and his studio became "a meeting place for the beautiful
people of Havana." As someone who devoted his leisure hours to collecting
models, actresses and fine automobiles (an MG convertible and a Porsche),
Korda might have seemed a likely prospect for an early exodus to Miami after
Castro and Che's triumph in 1959; instead, he "made a surprisingly smooth
transition from the world of glamorous models and film stars to that of
Castro's scrappy soldiers." But perhaps the transition wasn't a surprise
since, as Casey suggests, revolutionary Havana retained a streak of hedonism
for a few years amid the asceticism of the new order: "If Korda's
extravagant lifestyle ran counter to the discipline of Che Guevera," he
writes, "it was in keeping with the mood of the early years of the
revolution." *Revolución*, where many of Korda's photos appeared, favored a
freewheeling iconoclasm, with "a bright, distinctly American aesthetic" that
"borrowed some of the sex appeal of pre-revolutionary Cuba and planted it in
the framework of what many assumed would be a politically liberating new
era."

Unfortunately, that promise would go unrealized as Communist Cuba hardened
in the shadow of its Soviet big brother. In the early days of the new
regime--and in a moment most at odds with the Guerrillero Heroico
legend--Che did a stint as a prison commander at La Cabaña fort in Havana,
where a number of political prisoners were executed. (Estimates of the
victims range widely, from a few hundred to many thousands.) Many of *
Revolución*'s editors and writers would themselves become exiles before the
decade was over. As for Korda, he remained a revolutionary true believer
throughout the difficult years that followed. He also became a savvy enough
legal tactician to succeed in reclaiming the property rights of his famous
photo and some of the profits generated by its unexpected commercial success
in the late twentieth century. In a September 2000 legal settlement, an ad
agency in Britain agreed to pay $75,000 for unauthorized use of "Guerrillero
Heroico" in a Smirnoff vodka advertisement, and Korda donated the money to
the Cuban healthcare system. The court's decision removed the photo from the
public domain, establishing the aging photographer as the clear copyright
owner. Korda died the next year, leaving various Cuban heirs to squabble
over the newly valuable estate.

Casey has gotten hold of a good story and has some interesting things to say
about it. His later chapters, exploring the meaning of Che's "afterlife" in
contemporary Argentina, Venezuela, Bolivia and Miami, are his most original,
packed with reports of fascinating encounters with Che admirers, cultists,
exploiters and vilifiers. Particularly gripping is his interview in Miami
with Felix Rodríguez, a CIA agent sent to Bolivia in 1967 to train the
troops fighting against Che's small band of guerrillas, who encountered the
commander in captivity on his last day alive. According to Rodríguez's
autobiography, *Shadow Warrior* (1989), after failing to persuade the
Bolivians to spare their captive's life, he embraced Che before his
execution. "His moment of truth had come, and he was conducting himself like
a man. He was facing death with courage and grace." Casey is agnostic on the
question of whether the CIA really wanted Che kept alive, though he signals
some skepticism by noting that Rodríguez had spent "a life that constantly
skirted the shadier moments of US history," including the Bay of Pigs,
attempts on Castro's life and involvement with the Nicaragua Contras. In his
interview with Casey, Rodríguez reiterates his admiration for the doomed
revolutionary: "Look at what people write: The far right say that he was
crying, which wasn't true. And then on the other hand, you have the far left
saying that I tried to slap him in the face and that he spat on me, which is
also not true.... The man conducted himself with respect to the very end. No
matter what, everybody has to respect that."

There's much to like about *Che's Afterlife*, but the book would have
benefited greatly from a sturdier historical frame. Perhaps reflecting his
training as a business reporter, Casey seems overly enamored with the
language of advertising and consumption. The popularization of Che's image,
he writes, was "one of the Cuban revolution's greatest marketing
accomplishments." On October 18, 1967, standing before an enormous
reproduction of "Guerrillero Heroico" in downtown Havana, Castro delivered a
speech eulogizing Che as a role model and hero. Casey describes the event as
a "brand launch":

There, in the Plaza de la Revolución, the Cuban revolution's world
headquarters, its leader converted the hitherto little-known Korda image
into a powerful mnemonic, a lasting logo. Castro combined the Cuban
revolution, Che's stellar qualities, and the Guerrillero Heroico image into
a single attractive product.... Just as urban sneaker-wearing teenagers seem
susceptible these days to advertisers who encourage them to identify with
brands such as Nike or Tommy Hilfiger, in late 1967 radicalized students
across the Western world were ripe for the Che brand.

The flaw of Casey's approach is not its irreverence or its cynicism--both of
which might seem to be merited by the less than inspiring outcome of the
Cuban Communist experiment--but rather its ahistoricism. Che was not, in
fact, an unknown "brand" in student circles in the Western world that burst
upon the scene in October 1967 like a hot new rock group (or a snazzy and
well-promoted pair of sneakers). There is no indication in *Che's
Afterlife*that Casey has read
*Where the Boys Are: Cuba, Cold War America and the Making of a New
Left*(1993), in which historian Van Gosse argues for the inspirational
role of
the Cuban Revolution for at least some American New Leftists at the very
start of the 1960s. Casey does not mention either C. Wright Mills's
influential and bestselling polemic *Listen, Yankee: The Revolution in
Cuba*(1960), widely read in student circles in those years, or Malcolm
X's praise
of Che as "one of the most revolutionary men in this country right now,"
when the Cuban leader visited New York City in 1964 and denounced racism in
South Africa and the American South in an address to the United Nations.

Casey's determination to pinpoint the moment of the "brand launch" of
"Guerrillero Heroico" is simply irrelevant to the actual political history
of the 1960s. Even though the image had gone unpublished outside obscure
Cuban newspapers, the mainstream American media, as well as the radical
press, had kept Che's name and face in the public eye for years: from his
days as Castro's sidekick, to his disappearance from view in Cuba in 1965,
to his life as an international man of mystery until October 9, 1967. *The*
*New York Times Magazine*, for instance, ran a four-page feature story in
1966 with the headline ¿Dónde Está? Whatever Became of Che? Although
critical of Che's politics, the article--unmentioned in Casey's
account--quoted a recent graduate of Santo Domingo University in the
Dominican Republic who called the vanished revolutionary "the purest of the
pure," someone who "hasn't been corrupted by power." The Dominican student
concluded, "I bet right now he is fighting the oligarchs and the
*yanquis*not far from our country." The subsequent launch of the Che
brand is already
encapsulated in those words, which have nothing whatsoever to do with the
marketing instincts of the Castro regime.

Casey also displays an uncertain grasp of US history in the late 1960s,
claiming that "the culture and politics of the '68 youth movement in the
United States were dominated by the antiwar, pro-peace hippies." Casey
believes that the version of Che embraced by the American left in 1968 had
been thoroughly defanged by peaceniks. There were certainly lots of hippies
involved in antiwar activism in 1968; but there were also lots of intensely
political radicals in groups like Students for a Democratic Society (SDS)
and the Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee (SNCC)--the first
unmentioned in *Che's Afterlife*, the second appearing only in a footnote.
And, for better or worse, these radicals already knew a great deal about
Comandante Guevera, and they weren't engaged in any of the "softening" Casey
attributes to the hippie peaceniks. Greg Calvert, SDS national secretary,
told a reporter from the *New York Times* in May 1967 that "Che's message is
applicable to urban America as far as the psychology of guerrilla action
goes.... Che sure lives in our hearts." Two months later, in July 1967, SNCC
chair Stokely Carmichael traveled to Havana, where he was elected as an
honorary delegate to the founding meeting of OLAS. According to the account
published in the *Times*, "Mr. Carmichael said that he had decided to come
to Cuba because of a message last April attributed to the vanished Cuban
guerrilla leader, Maj. Ernesto ('Che') Guevara. This message called on
Latin-American revolutionaries to create two, three or more Vietnams. He
said that the guerrilla leader was an inspiration to American Negroes."
Following the Columbia University student strike in April 1968, SDS founder
Tom Hayden adapted Che's "two, three" Vietnams slogan to the struggle on
American campuses in a manifesto published in *Ramparts* calling for the
creation of "Two, Three, Many Columbias."

Casey also lacks a basic understanding of the chronology of the era.
"Especially after the death of Martin Luther King on April 4, 1968," he
writes, "civil rights leaders such as Stokely Carmichael, Eldrige [*sic*]
Cleaver, and Malcolm X became vocal advocates of a more militant struggle
for black Americans." Malcolm, of course, had been assassinated more than
three years before King (and shortly after praising Che), while Carmichael
and Cleaver had been vocal advocates of "militant struggle" for quite some
time before April 1968. For the sake of his pet marketing analysis, Casey
seems to want to infantilize and trivialize all '60s radicals, depicting
them as just so many naïve groupies bowled over by the Guerrillero Heroico
consumer style: "Guevara the warrior fit the hippie stereotype of
beauty--strong and handsome, but sensitive and loving at the same time." No
doubt there were youthful communards who pinned silk-screened posters of Che
on the wall next to one of Jimi Hendrix and couldn't quite tell the two
apart after a few tokes of Panama Red. But is that really the appeal and
meaning Che held for Carmichael or Hayden--neither one a hippie softie--or
their numerous followers?

Casey can't answer the question, because his study lacks a comparative
dimension. Che's image was not uniquely popular among Western radicals in
the 1960s--it was not the undisputed "defining icon" of the era, as Casey
would have it. There was the famous photo of Malcolm X in full rhetorical
flight, finger pointing in accusation. There was Huey Newton sitting in a
wicker chair, with a rifle in one hand and an African spear in the other.
There were anonymous Vietcong soldiers, men and women, clutching AK-47s, the
Guerrilleros Heroicos of another struggle, their images a regular feature in
the pages of *New Left Notes* and similar publications. There were even
enough posters of Chairman Mao to provoke the Beatles to sing in 1968, "If
you go carrying pictures of Chairman Mao/You ain't going to make it with
anyone, anyhow." Could John Lennon not think of anything to rhyme with
"Che"?

Jose Yglesias died in 1995, late enough to have watched the Che myth evolve
through its later manifestations but too soon to have seen an undoubted
expert on the subject also use religious imagery to define Che's legacy. On
the occasion of John Paul II's 1998 visit to Cuba, where he preached in a
Havana plaza dominated by a steel sculpture of the "Guerrillero Heroico"
visage, a journalist is reported to have asked the pope for his thoughts on
Che Guevara, a "protagonist in recent Cuban history." His Holiness is said
to have replied, "He is now before God's Tribunal. Let's let our Lord judge
his merits. I am certain that he wanted to serve the poor."

Che was a hard man--a fighter, a zealot, an idealist with blood on his
hands. History is full of similar figures--Oliver Cromwell, John Brown, Leon
Trotsky. And yet I still understand why some of their examples, and
especially Che's, might appeal to contemporary young activists (and ones far
less bloody-minded than I once was). Even Casey rejects the idea that those
drawn to Korda's photo in the twenty-first century can be classified simply
as the useful idiots of a failed totalitarian experiment or, contradicting
his earlier emphasis on style and marketing, as passive consumers of Che's
charismatic appeal: "It is not only Guevara's high cheekbones, long
eyelashes and cool bomber jacket that make this photo desirable. Its appeal
also lies in its spirituality, in its ability to feed people's longings for
a better world and to encourage them to dream of defeating death.... Korda's
Che keeps hope alive."

About Maurice Isserman
Maurice Isserman was a big fan of Che Guevara circa 1967-68. He is James L.
Ferguson Professor of History at Hamilton College and the author, with
Michael Kazin, of *America Divided: The Civil War of the 1960s* (third
edition, 2007).
  http://www.thenation.com/doc/20090629/isserman/print

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