PHIT Blog
Eugene V. Debs  A Graphic  Biography

Eugene V. Debs A Graphic Biography

To be published in Sept. 2019

Paul Buhle, Steve Max, Dave Nance and Noah Van Sciver have produced a new and delightful biography of Eugene Victor Debs, the iconic American socialist, told in a comic book format, although these days, the proper term is graphic book.  For Debs, who created and constantly evolved new approaches to the battle against capital and injustice, approaches that were always peculiarly American, a graphic book is the perfect vehicle to tell his biography.

Eugene Victor Debs is an icon of American Socialism.  The man spoke of an American socialism in an American context in words that still resonate today.   A labor organizer, he was one of the first to insist on industrial unionism.  He was the primary organizer that helped create the Industrial Workers of the World, the legendary IWW.  He was the driving force behind the formation of the Socialist Party.  He supported women’s right to vote and defended their right to birth control.  He was imprisoned for his pacifist speeches in WWI.  

During those troubled years, Debs was an American moral force that is still largely unrecognized.  And this biography presents, graphically, the direct line of succession of that moral force from Eugene Debs to Bernie Sanders.

In 1912, Debs received more votes as a Socialist than any Socialist candidate has since that time.  1912 was the high mark.  The story of how that happened and why it faltered needs to be understood.  And this graphic novel is a short and excellent portrayal of the story.

Most histories of Debs’ life start out with his working life, toiling on the railroad as a fireman, shoveling coal into a furnace.  And, indeed, artist Noah Van Sciver has some exquisite panels of Debs that depict his time working on the railroad.

But Paul Buhle begins his script, his graphic biography, with an earlier and more hopeful start in which Debs’ French immigrant parents name him after two French humanist novelists—Eugene Sue and Victor Hugo.  It turned out to be exceptionally appropriate.  Eugene Victor Debs had the ability to write and deliver amazingly stirring and memorable speeches.  Those who heard his speeches say he was as mesmerizing as his namesakes.

Perhaps the most eloquent and endearing and essential element of the Debs story is the end of his long and productive life in which he is imprisoned for speaking out against the stupidity of World War One.  This is, again, the peculiarity of American Socialism.  The European Socialists eagerly jumped  the militaristic nationalist bandwagon, but Debs, the American Socialist, was imprisoned for loud and vocal pacifism and when sentenced gave his impassioned speech, still remembered—“If one person is of the lower class, then I am of the lower class.  If one person is in prison, then I am not free.”

A labor unionist, a socialist, a pacifist, a supporter of women’s right to vote, an advocate of minorities rights, Eugene V. Debs was a towering figure in America.   

This little graphic book is as much the story of American democratic socialism as it is the story of Eugene V. Debs.  In the final section, it follows the Socialist saga from Eugene Debs to Norman Thomas to Michael Harrington to Bernie Sanders.  A direct line of impassioned pleaders for justice and equality.   The Socialist Party that was never successful politically but always pointed the way to the next set of changes. In one panel, Norman Thomas reflects that the New Deal was effectively the platform of the Socialist Party. 

Understanding Eugene Debs story and his approach to an American socialism is vital to understanding the process of change in America.

A graphic novel is an oddly successful way of achieving this.  Debs, shown in his trademark bowtie and his slouching way of walking and his determination to continue the fight in spite of his deteriorating health, is clearly illustrated and clearly sympathetic.  

Debs is not the macho male revolutionary with the correct political strategy.  Debs is the moral force of change. Debs saw wrongs and tried to make them right.  Labor unions, women’s rights, racial equality, peace.  He fought the good fight for decades.

The graphic pictures show the story as only a graphic book can.  Hitting the highlights and trouncing quickly from peak to peak, it tells the story and tells the story effectively.

Since this is also a People’s History in Texas blog cross-post, the Texas connection must be pointed out.  In the last section, where the historical lines are drawn to the present day, one panel depicts the Oleo Strut.  The Oleo Strut was a GI Coffeehouse in Killeen, Texas that offered support to antiwar soldiers.  It was enthusiastically supported by Students for a Democratic Society activists from Austin.  The peaceniks, apparently,  were the sons and daughters of Debs and beautiful descendants of his pacifism in WWI.  

The PHIT documentary THE RAG, an Underground Newspaper talks about the Oleo Strut.

As a final minor note, and of interest only to Texas historians and to People’s History in Texas, it must be pointed out the Wilson’s Postmaster General, the one who denied second class mailing permits to the socialist press, was not Albert Burelson, but Albert Burleson.   Burleson was from San Marcos and a friend of Colonel House.  He is buried in Oakwood Cemetery in Austin if anyone wants to drop by and say a few words to him.