Â鶹ĘÓƵ

Graphic Novelist Derf Chronicles May 4 Tragedy

On this campus, 50 years ago, a protest against the Vietnam War resulted in the death of four students. In all, 13 were shot by the Ohio National Guard. Nine were injured. One was paralyzed from the waist down.

Although this is a story that is well known throughout the Kent community, it also had a significant impact on surrounding communities, and the nation as a whole. An 11-year-old boy, now known as Derf Backderf, was profoundly affected by the turn of events at Â鶹ĘÓƵ, and it challenged his perceptions of order, fairness, and safety. Years later Backderf, an accomplished artist, graphic novelist and biographer—whose works include Trashed and My Friend Dahmer, which was adapted as a film—explores the events that led up to the shootings. His latest work is a touching and detailed commemoration of this tragic moment entitled, Â鶹ĘÓƵ: Four Dead in Ohio, which recounts the story from the perspective of the students who survived it.

Â鶹ĘÓƵ Professor Vera Camden and Valentino Zullo, Ph.D., both experts on the graphic novel and the history of comics, recently interviewed Derf about this book, his insights and his extensive research on the topic. In his own words,

“My claim to fame is footnotes.”

This is an excerpt of the full interview with Derf published in the Journal of Graphic Novels and Comics.


“My Claim to Fame is Footnotes”: An Interview with Derf Backderf

Can we begin by thinking about the act of cartooning such a well-known event?

The Â鶹ĘÓƵ shooting is commonly associated with and represented by photography with one of the most recognizable images, which you recreate in your book, being of Mary Ann Vecchio kneeling over the body of Jeffrey Miller. This event is rarely—if ever— subject to illustration or cartooning.

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Photo: Mary Ann Vecchio kneeling over the body of Jeffrey Miller

How does changing the medium affect how we receive these images?

Derf Backderf: That scene is a tough one because that image is so well known. What I focused on to capture that moment of terror was not the girl, but the sound of her scream, which carries across three pages. Because you »ĺ´Ç˛Ô’t get the scream in the photo.

So that was my thinking there. That was a challenge. The two images that are the most well known are the scream, and the guard turning and opening fire, and you’ve got all sorts of sound effects on that page, too. My approach is the same with both images, to try to create a different sensory reaction, if that makes sense. I’m trying to depict the shock and horror, but in a different way.

Camden: It’s a different kind of representation, too. You’re also appealing to the comics form which has a tradition of rendering sounds through script.

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Figure 1

Did you draw from the photo and other photos?

Derf: Well, I look at the photos and then interpret the visual. A lot of the photos were really lousy, that’s just the way news photos are, so a drawing can be much clearer. In terms of what happened in the three days before the shootings, there are almost no photos because everything happened at night. With the photo technology of the time, you couldn’t shoot at night, certainly not big crowds, certainly not people moving. Those night scenes— and I draw a really good night scene, I’m proud of my night scenes—I think those were very effective pages and they bring something new to the story.

Those images didn’t exist until now, but with comics, using accounts, using reference, I can recreate those scenes very clearly. So that’s what comics brings to this.

Camden: Recreating these images of the events at night does capture the anticipatory horror of the event.

Zullo: That horror is very clear. Being a student at Â鶹ĘÓƵ, I learned the story, but this is the first time that I feel that I truly understand the horror of the event beyond a list of facts.

Derf: Good. That’s who I wrote this for, the people who »ĺ´Ç˛Ô’t know the story. Â鶹ĘÓƵ is really a cautionary tale.

What’s scary is our current problems circle right back to around 1970, in terms of political rancor and in terms of distrust of each other, and we have apparently learned nothing along the way.

Fake news and all the rest of that applies there too. We’re back in 1970. All that is missing is the people in the streets. The mobs are all online now. I »ĺ´Ç˛Ô’t know if that’s better or worse, and there certainly are, still, huge protests, the Women’s March, for example.

Camden and Zullo: Right, as we’ve said, there is so much feeling in this volume and you capture the loss of each individual person. I think we often remember them as the “four dead in Ohio.” And, of course, the Crosby, Stills, Nash and Young song is an anthem. But here the comics form kind of gives each person their stories back. You’re telling the stories that were not in photographs, it is that sense of reclaiming the lives of these four victims that is so important for the story and for anyone who went to Â鶹ĘÓƵ.

We need to know the story: that is what makes us able to recover the lives of these people.

Derf: That’s why I made it personal, that’s why I made it about the four kids. When they are cut down, and I show exactly how they were cut down, it really is a gut punch for the reader. There was no reason for it to happen. It was completely inexplicable. All of these great political forces of the era came crashing together in that one place. It could have happened anywhere, like Ohio State, where the protests were much larger and far more violent. It sort of happened at Berkeley, but not the shootings. The National Guard at Â鶹ĘÓƵ was already exhausted when they arrived on campus, and these are all things we know, but of course, needing a nap is no excuse for manslaughter. The guys who shot into the crowd, and there were only a handful of them, there was something else going on. It was malevolent.

Camden and Zullo: This brings us back to the point that the feeling lies in this anticipatory terror. We know what is going to happen, we all know what is going to happen, the way you set it up they are unsuspecting as they were.

And as a reader you almost feel like you could stop it.

I felt like: “Don’t, »ĺ´Ç˛Ô’t do that!” “Stop!”

Derf: Like a slasher film.

Zullo: Yes, for example, when Jeff was putting on his bandana, we know that this is one of his final moments. It’s that feeling of helplessness that does make it feel like a slasher film. Reading the book, physically, also gives you that feeling, as you get closer to the end—as you hold fewer pages in your right hand you realize you are closer to the moment that these kids will die. The story almost implicates you or brings you in as a participant—as all good comics do.

Derf: It is weird—the way the story played out is interesting, because every day starts very quietly, and then the tensions build. It climaxes with an explosion, tensions dissipate, and then the tension builds again the following day. But each day it gets a little more tense.

You also have a lot of quiet moments, but this is where you find the humanity of the story, where Jeff is hanging out with his friends or Allison is walking around campus with her boyfriend.

These moments are where we learn about these kids, about their hopes and dreams and fears, etcetera. So, those quiet moments are very, very important.

Camden: They’re filled with innocence. They’re college kids. They’re just having fun and finding themselves and it’s a wonderful time of life and it was taken from them. In particular, Jeff as an innocent figure in all of this. He ·É˛ą˛ő˛Ô’t an SDS* and he ·É˛ą˛ő˛Ô’t a Weatherman**.

* An "SDS" refers to a member of the Students for a Democratic Society.
** The "Weatherman" was a faction of the SDS that believed in violent revolution.

Derf: No, no, not at all. This was his first protest, probably. His first active protest.

Camden and Zullo: This leads us to our next question: cartooning is such an affective mode of representation, inviting the reader to connect with the characters and scenes being depicted. This story cultivates our empathy toward the students as you bring their lives into focus in ways that we have not seen before. You also draw horrifying moments such as the shooting itself, but also Nixon’s announcement to invade Cambodia. These iconic images of Nixon on the television screen or the National Guard on Â鶹ĘÓƵ campus pervade our imaginations.

How do you capture these iconic images with fresh perspective?

How do you use your cartooning process to distance the reader and reinforce the evil of, say, Nixon’s invasion?

Derf: The war spilled out into the living room, that's the classic description of how America processed the Vietnam War, so that scene of the televised address is very important, and accurate. Nixon sent, what, 30,000 young men to their deaths, essentially to further his political ambitions, so it’s hard to find anything good in that guy. I »ĺ´Ç˛Ô’t think there was anything good. And Jim Rhodes was a lesser version of Nixon, an incompetent version of Nixon. What I find satisfying about that was that Nixon threw Rhodes under the bus after the shootings, because he had no further use for him. Not that it hurt Rhodes; I mean he was reelected twice, so he didn’t pay a heavy price at all.

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Figure 2

Like I said earlier, most people »ĺ´Ç˛Ô’t know what really happened on May 4. They may have heard of the shootings, something happened, and some protestors got killed, and that's the sum total of what they know. They »ĺ´Ç˛Ô’t grasp that the government was actually shooting dissenters to silence them. I think that Â鶹ĘÓƵ had a very big, lasting impact on protests. At least as far as engaging the authorities violently. It’s not necessarily a bad thing. Nothing good comes from violent protest. It didn’t accomplish what they wanted it to do. I think it’s much more effective just to fill the streets and do it peacefully.

Camden: That was a big debate in terms of civil rights.

Derf: And a counter-argument from the radical fringe. The Weathermen wanted to turn the streets of America into war zones. They wanted violent revolution. They somehow convinced themselves that this could happen in the United States. It seemed like it was happening in places. When you’re sitting here in Cleveland in 1968 you see plumes of smoke coming out of Glenville, yeah, I imagine that looked like revolution. Violent protest was counterproductive. That’s when a lot of people fled the city. It didn’t accomplish anything. It made the situation in the inner city worse. It made the lives of people who lived there worse. A peaceful protest, that may have done something, may have not, who knows. It’s hard to say. Â鶹ĘÓƵ similarly had a chilling effect on the protest movement for years and years and years.

Zullo: Let’s talk more about your relationship to the Ohio history of protests.

Can you tell us more about why the Â鶹ĘÓƵ shootings? What brought you to this project?

Derf: Sure. Well the opening scene of the book explains my connection. Just before trouble flared up at Â鶹ĘÓƵ, the same national guard unit occupied my little hometown Richfield, Ohio. That really affected me when I was a kid. It was a huge event in my life.

Camden: To have those soldiers there?

Derf: Oh yeah.

It seemed as if we were under martial law. The soldiers camped in a rec field right across the street from my elementary school.

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Figure 3

Whenever the school buses would drive by the guard, the driver would make the kids lie on the floor of the bus! And as crazy as this sounds, nobody ever explained anything to us kids. Nobody came in, nobody from the guard, nobody from the town government, I »ĺ´Ç˛Ô’t even remember the principal explaining anything. We were left to process it on our own. All of the kids in school were scared. A lot of them were Teamster kids*, so these were their dads and uncles at risk. These were men who were my neighbors. They were my friends’ fathers, they were my little league coaches, and cub scout leaders. They ·É±đ°ů±đ˛Ô’t union boogeymen to me, the way they were to Rhodes and his base. It was very disturbing, but it sparked something in me intellectually. It really got me more interested in the news and thinking about things. It was like all the problems of the world came rushing in with the guard. They had always been an abstract before, in that clueless kid way. They were a constant in my life. I didn’t remember a time when the Vietnam War ·É˛ą˛ő˛Ô’t happening. I didn’t remember a time when there ·É±đ°ů±đ˛Ô’t street battles, or cities in flames.

*"Teamster kids" refers to children whose parents were members of the Teamsters labor union, led by Jimmy Hoffa.

So, this really was a smack across the face. It spurred my interest in the news and other things, and that led to me becoming a journalist and going to school as a journalism major and all that stuff. I trace all of that back to Â鶹ĘÓƵ. That’s my connection. And it’s weird, I mean it’s not like having bullets whizzing over my head, or seeing my girlfriend lying on the ground in a pool of blood, but that’s how history affects people; it fans out into society in different ways.

Camden: But it’s immediate and also at an age when it’s really formative; I would think there is some way in which it provides a kind of distancing or dislocation, all of a sudden you’re recognizing this is a feeling of being invaded. It is not trustworthy; it makes you anxious.

Derf: Yeah, very much so. And all the parents were anxious. It was a tense period.

Camden: But your response—which is cool—is to start to research and to start to think and to start to formulate your ideas through cartooning.

Derf: Yeah, right, I began reading more. I was a paperboy then, an Akron Beacon Journal paperboy. I was reading the comics page before that, of course. After May 4, I started reading the political cartoons, trying to figure them out. I was like “well, they’re cartoons, so I should like them.” Then I started reading the news sections of the paper. I know this sounds obnoxiously precocious, but I went on to work for my junior high and high school newspapers, and then to Ohio State on a Journalism scholarship, so it’s not that preposterous.

Zullo: You’ve probably been asked many times, but who did you like to read in those newspapers?

Who were you reading when you were a kid?

Derf: The first comic strip I remember was Peanuts. That was the peak of it too, so it was really good. Doonsebury was added to the comics page sometime in the early Seventies. That fit in nicely with my own political stirrings. And then there was Mad magazine. It spread out from there. By the time I was 11 or 12, I was reading National Lampoon, or trying to read National Lampoon and comprehending about 10% of it, but they had comics too, so, I just kept trying to figure it out.

Camden: It is such an American story, the importance of the newspaper in your youth.

Derf: Back then it was, not anymore. Newspapers were where 90 percent of the news originated in 1970. This ·É˛ą˛ő˛Ô’t necessarily better than the ways news is generated now. For example, the Kent Record-Courier headline on May 4 was “Two guardsmen, one student dead.” They blew the story that was right under their nose and put students in danger in the process! All the locals grabbed their shotguns and got in their cars and drove around looking for students. So, newspapers had the same errors and partisan agendas as cable news does now.

Camden and Zullo: Speaking of reporting and archives, can you tell us about the archives? What were you looking for? What did you find? What did you leave out?

Derf: Well, you have to stay focused, that’s the important thing. At the beginning of the book you sit down and think about it for a while. What’s my book about? I decided to focus on the four, to show it through their eyes and their experiences. Those were my parameters. I didn’t veer from that very often. You’ve got to work in a little context, some of the other things that were happening in 1970 that played a role in May 4, but I really stuck to my premise as much as I could. One of the four was present, or at least watching, every event, so I could tell the story almost completely through them. There have been a lot of books about May 4. Some good, some bad. There are probably 60 books. So, if you want to read about a certain aspect of it, I’ll guarantee there’s a book out there that covers that.

So, I tracked down research material that fit into my concept, looking for friends and associates of one of the four, or accounts of what they were doing.

It is astonishing how much material is in The May 4 Collection at Â鶹ĘÓƵ, and there’s a second archive, The Yale Collection, which contains all the material from the deposition and discovery from the civil trials from the 70s.

The families didn’t want it in Ohio, so they sent it to Yale. It’s just a mountain of material, so the challenge was digging through this material and finding those little pieces of gold. I couldn't use all of it. Some things didn't make it into the book, for space reasons. A few scenes got shortchanged for the same reason. The only one that I really regret was the last scene, with Professor Glenn Frank pleading with the students to leave. It’s just one page. And I would have liked it to have been about 3 or 4. It was just such a dramatic moment. They were heroes, you know, for what they did, standing between the guard and the students. He was quite a character. But I simply ran out of room. I had already gone over my page count.

There are also a lot of oral histories, where people recorded their account.

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Helicopter over Kent

They’re in The May 4 Collection, and a few other places, and I listened to them all, around 140 of them, and took notes. If I had follow-up questions, I would track down the people who gave the oral history and I’d ask them to clarify certain details. Most were happy to do so. For example, there was an account by a student who was with Jeff on Sunday night. They were fleeing Guard patrols and took shelter in her house and the Guard tossed tear gas in her front yard. I originally drew this as a Jeep driving by with a soldier throwing a gas grenade onto the porch. But her account wasn't clear on this, so I tracked her down and asked her for details. She said “Oh no, it was a helicopter.” That's even better visually!

It’s been 50 years, and everyone has told their story at some point, so there are a lot of accounts out there. Well, almost everyone, not the Guardsmen. They can’t, because they perjured themselves, first of all. Secondly, the shooting was probably premeditated, which means it was murder one, and there is no statute of limitations on capital crimes, not on a Federal level.

We »ĺ´Ç˛Ô’t have the political will to prosecute them, certainly not in the current climate, but they’re obviously terrified that such a thing could happen. So, they stay silent. Some have taken their secrets to the grave.

Camden and Zullo: So, this question of war does bring us to our next question. Many comics take on global traumas—the Iranian Revolution, the Holocaust—and bring them into focus through the individual. You look at these regional, local traumatic events in history—Â鶹ĘÓƵ: Four Dead in Ohio, My Friend Dahmer, even Trashed—and show how the daily life in Northeast Ohio can suddenly take on international import.

How do you understand comics to be suited to this process of witnessing and documenting local histories through the timeless lens of art?

And criminal trauma with his previous book, with the Dahmer book, the trauma of that local crime. It’s kind of an intersection in your career.

Derf:

I never think locally. I'm casting a wider net. I think in terms of how this book is going to resonate nationally, and then internationally.

Â鶹ĘÓƵ has already been sold to four foreign publishers. To accomplish this, I look for the universal themes. With My Friend Dahmer, it’s the kid that falls between the cracks, and the infamy of Dahmer and his crimes.

With Â鶹ĘÓƵ, it's the bitter price of dissent.

For example, people in France are very interested in this book because that's what they're experiencing right now.

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Figure 5

So that’s what I look for when I tell a story. I »ĺ´Ç˛Ô’t mind putting in lots of local references, just for Ohioans. When I did my comic strip, The City, I wrote it that way, too. People in Cleveland took it to be very Cleveland because they saw all the little local references sprinkled in there and they knew I lived here. When I published the same strip in LA, or Chicago or Miami, readers thought it was about their city. Because the actual theme of each strip was universal.

Camden and Zullo: In your years of experience, what is it that you think makes comics well-suited to be a medium of witness?

Because that is something that so many comics are doing, they are witnessing or documenting events.

Derf: Comics is just an art form that lends itself to that, especially visually, but I don't think that's all the art form is. I’ve seen all kinds of different comics; I »ĺ´Ç˛Ô’t see any particular one leaping forward. Memoir is still around, as is fantasy, and everything else. It’s such a wide tapestry. Some of it is great, some awful, some just mediocre. Memoir is especially tricky, as popular a genre as it is. I thought a lot about the dangers of relying solely on memory when I was doing My Friend Dahmer. That's why I sought out corroboration for everything. With Â鶹ĘÓƵ, even with so many eyewitnesses, people remember the same event very differently, and some of their memories are all over the place.

Camden and Zullo: That’s an interesting idea.

So, in your book, how do you deal with it if two people remember the same event in different ways, what did you end up drawing?

Derf: Well, I just looked for more accounts until I found consensus. I also compared them with other research material and with news reports, and some of those are very good, for example from the Akron Beacon Journal, or the Daily Â鶹ĘÓƵr. I’d look through the news archives to find the factual narrative of the scene, then I’d compare it to the memory someone had of that same scene to see how it synced up. If it was way off, then it was a red flag, although maybe you can still get something useful out of the emotion of it or something else. It's not like you have to throw the whole thing away.

We’re talking about a half a century ago, so some memories now are only a lingering feeling.

Camden and Zullo: How did you capture the distortion? Did you capture the way that some people can distort?

Derf: Well sure, the rumors, some of the townies with their crazy rumors and beliefs. Paranoia played a big part in the story. Not just the townsfolk, but also law enforcement, the government, and the guardsmen were all hearing rumors, just these ridiculous rumors. They had a 24-hour guard at the water plant because there was a rumor the Weathermen were going to spike the water with LSD! That’s why everything is sourced. I mean, the final footnotes are 25 pages long. Every scene, almost every panel, is sourced. So, if you want to disagree with a source, okay, but here's the footnote that lists where that scene came from. I did the same thing with My Friend Dahmer. My wife, who was a reporter for many years, was very insistent on that.

Camden: I think that’s a true distinction with the footnotes because that would not be the case with say Persepolis, which is entirely a memoir; it seems to me that this is truly a documentary comic, as you say.

Derf: My claim to fame is footnotes. There is no other creator who has footnotes like I do, for good or bad.

Camden: As we think about comics and your work in particular, can we turn to a recent deeply flattering New Yorker article on Roz Chast where she is said to have a full collection of your work. Adam Gopnik remarks in that article that comics is “gawky, confessional truth-telling and boundary-crossing.” Indeed, he seems to highlight your work as particularly exemplary of this quality.

Do your feelings on comics as a form resonate with this description?

Derf: It’s all of those things and a couple hundred more. You know, it’s the New Yorker. [laughter]. It’s also the only time I’ve ever gotten the slightest recognition from the New Yorker, because it was brought up by Roz, their biggest star, whose work I love, of course. Otherwise, I »ĺ´Ç˛Ô’t exist to the New Yorker.

Since meeting with Derf Backderf for this interview, his work was featured in the New Yorker. His book, Â鶹ĘÓƵ: Four Dead in Ohio was featured prominently in Jill Lepore's article, "Â鶹ĘÓƵ and the War that Never Ended."

Camden and Zullo: Your comics appeal to a different audience perhaps. To go back to this question of comics, let’s think about the form in context of contemporary social media, which relies on the rapid-fire tweet as a mode of communication: comics on the other hand slow down time while, one might suggest, revealing truth in gaps, interstices, pauses, and haptic representation.

Can it be said that this medium perhaps attempts to recover our humanity through its slow pace and regenerative gestures?

Derf: Well, I think it’s a very measured way of taking in visuals of an event because you can pause, and you can think it over for a bit before continuing, as opposed to, say, film, which carries you along. I think that’s true, and that’s the power of the comics. If you read them correctly—and a lot of people »ĺ´Ç˛Ô’t—if you just stop and look at the page and what is happening and look at the background and take in all the visuals and try to figure out why the creator made those decisions and how it connects to the story. You just have to take your time with comics. They’re something you really have to spend time with. And that’s unusual. You »ĺ´Ç˛Ô’t do that with most other art forms. Maybe music. Well, you »ĺ´Ç˛Ô’t stop with music, but you listen to it over and over.

Comics is unique in that way; you can just take your time, go at your own pace. The cartoonist is in total control.

Camden and Zullo: One of the last things we were thinking about reflecting on how you have moved from the comic strip to the long form graphic narrative, or documentary comic as you call it,

Where do you think comics will go next?

Derf: Graphic novel sales rose 16% last year. That pretty much answers your question right there. And that’s after virtually every year, double digit rising. Kids comics, like Captain Underpants, are also hugely successful now. Those are everywhere. I saw them in Costco the other day. It’s really such an exciting time to be in comics.

The superhero stuff is just circling the drain. Good riddance.

The big corporations have dominated the conversation for too long, and there’s no longer a reason for them to do so, because their sales »ĺ´Ç˛Ô’t justify that domination. You’ve got comics and you’ve got superhero comics. Everyone loves the superhero movies, but nobody buys the comics. Nobody reads those things. I grew up on superhero comics. I loved a lot of them, but they were much better then. They're played out. I mean, the superdude comics, they lost the kids years ago. They’re not getting back, not with what they’re putting in them now. I’ve always had good instincts about when to bail--this genre is over, time to try something new. I bailed on political cartoons, I went to weekly papers, then I bailed on weekly papers, I went to long form comics. This is it. I »ĺ´Ç˛Ô’t have another reboot in me. I'll ride this one to the end.

Camden: So, what you’re saying is it's long form? The narrative or the book.

Derf: It’s a different market. It’s different economics. You gotta think about these things. And I’m so much better at books than anything else I ever did, which means, of course, I wasted a quarter century back there. But to be fair, this form didn’t exist when I started drawing The City. In 1990, there were no graphic novels. The French had their long form comics, the "albums" that date all the way back to HergĂ©. Other European countries have different comics traditions. The Japanese have Manga. And comics tastes vary from generation to generation, like they do here. But the Europeans have the same issues that we have regarding comics, with it being very much a boys’ club, although that's starting to change. They don't have the nasty political battles that we have here, with Comicsgate but still, there’s still a definite divide, like ours, between mainstream and indie comics. Here, we had to create our own system, because we were locked out at mainstream cons and the mainstream comics press. We had to create our own world for 10 or 15 years. But now our world is thriving, and mainstream comics are on the rocks. We have these two comics worlds that are completely separate. There’s some crossover, but mostly they’re separate. That ·É˛ą˛ő˛Ô’t our choice, but it's working out to our advantage.

Camden and Zullo: Okay let’s stop there, we should push on, but really, this has been such a privilege.

Derf: Oh, sure. My pleasure. Thanks!


Â鶹ĘÓƵ: Four Dead in Ohio is expected to be released on Sept 4, 2020 and is available now for pre-order.

POSTED: Friday, April 17, 2020 01:59 PM
Updated: Friday, December 9, 2022 11:23 AM