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Willie and Joe (Comic Strip)

 Willie and Joe (Comic Strip)
type
TVTItem
 Willie and Joe (Comic Strip)
label
Willie and Joe (Comic Strip)
 Willie and Joe (Comic Strip)
page
WillieAndJoe
 Willie and Joe (Comic Strip)
comment
A series of single-panel comics, created by Bill Mauldin, which humorously depicts the travails of the eponymous duo of front-line infantrymen as they slog through the foxholes of World War II Europe.Originally created for the 45th Infantry Division's newspaper as Mauldin and his fellow grunts endured basic training stateside, the comic was picked up by Stars and Stripes after the division was sent to Italy. Its creator was eventually moved to full-time staff at the latter paper, and was given a Jeep to tour the front and make comics about his experiences. During its run, which was also syndicated by United Features to hundreds of newspapers back home, the series was both lauded and reviled for its unstinting depiction of actual life at the front, as opposed to the sanitized, rah-rah boosterism that was published in most official channels.After the end of the war, the comics were collected in the best-selling memoir Up Front, and Mauldin became the youngest man in history to be awarded a Pulitzer Prize. He turned to political cartoons, but was forced by popular demand to return to the Willie and Joe characters, placing them back home and showing them trying to readjust to civilian life. From then on, the characters were occasionally revisited (as during the wars in Korea and Vietnam), and were even borrowed in 1998 by Charles M. Schulz, who used them in a Peanuts Veteran's Day strip that year. They even got a Shout-Out from the modern webcomic Delta Bravo Sierra, with a US Army platoon in Iraq (all of them anthropomorphic dogs) shown taking fire and counterattacking, and the next frame revealing Willie and Joe among the soldiers, grumbling that they've been in the Army too long because "I swear them dawgs a'barkin' orders now."In 2008 Fantagraphics Books put out a two-volume work that attempted to definitively collect all of Mauldin's strips from the WWII era, but the originals were put out under such hectic conditions that some are probably lost forever.
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 Willie and Joe (Comic Strip) / int_18a84025
type
Only Six Faces
 Willie and Joe (Comic Strip) / int_18a84025
comment
Only Six Faces: Possibly intentionally, the "dogfaces" infantrymen tend to look very similar to one other with their Perma-Stubble, even after some Art Evolution, while other sorts of characters are more liable to have distinguishing aspects to their appearance by contrast. The titular characters themselves can be difficult to distinguish from one another aside from their nose - Willie's the one with a larger and higher bridge to his nose. The comic set in "th' town my Pappy told me about" features only two faces: Willie, and everyone else.
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 Willie and Joe (Comic Strip) / int_222dc873
type
Black Comedy
 Willie and Joe (Comic Strip) / int_222dc873
comment
Black Comedy: Some of the more insane realities of surviving on a battlefield come up often. A particularly memorable example pops up after our heroes have just survived sprinting across open ground under machine gun fire. Gambling on other people lives? Heinous. Gambling on your own? Hilarious. One strip, featuring a staff sergeant who definitely has his priorities straight, puts a twist on the above joke. There's a grim but comedic cartoon that consists of an illustration of a landing craft headed for the beach during a night assault. The caption:
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 Willie and Joe (Comic Strip) / int_35ae6a23
type
Lethal Chef
 Willie and Joe (Comic Strip) / int_35ae6a23
comment
Lethal Chef: Army rations take a lot of flak in the strip.
 Willie and Joe (Comic Strip) / int_35ae6a23
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 Willie and Joe (Comic Strip) / int_3cf10fcf
type
*Click* Hello
 Willie and Joe (Comic Strip) / int_3cf10fcf
comment
*Click* Hello: Joe, to a German soldier climbing over a barricade.
 Willie and Joe (Comic Strip) / int_3cf10fcf
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 Willie and Joe (Comic Strip) / int_3eee0728
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Captain Obvious
 Willie and Joe (Comic Strip) / int_3eee0728
comment
Captain Obvious: A comic wherein Willie suggests that Joe might need a rest◊ - because he's talking in his sleep(walking). note This was actually a skill many G.I.'s picked up during the European campaign, being able to keep marching in formation while asleep. The speed and regularity of the German retreats meant they often couldn't settle down and sleep properly, so they were forced to adapt.
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 Willie and Joe (Comic Strip) / int_4764ce3a
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Military Moonshiner
 Willie and Joe (Comic Strip) / int_4764ce3a
comment
Military Moonshiner: A soldier busily adjusts a still, as an officer looks on. The officer comments:
 Willie and Joe (Comic Strip) / int_4764ce3a
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Funetik Aksent
 Willie and Joe (Comic Strip) / int_48d9e12d
comment
Funetik Aksent: All th' time. Rare is th' Willie n' Joe strip where evvy word is spelt exackly like it's s'pposed to.
 Willie and Joe (Comic Strip) / int_48d9e12d
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 Willie and Joe (Comic Strip) / int_4f4372e9
type
Early-Installment Weirdness
 Willie and Joe (Comic Strip) / int_4f4372e9
comment
Early-Installment Weirdness: During the boot-camp strips, Joe is a Native American who speaks broken English. By Bill's own admission, he accidentally switched Willie and Joe's names towards the end of boot-camp and decided to stick with it. In those same early strips, Willie lacks his distinctive high-bridged nose.
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 Willie and Joe (Comic Strip) / int_4f6cf75
type
Mirroring Factions
 Willie and Joe (Comic Strip) / int_4f6cf75
comment
Mirroring Factions: Whenever British, German or even Russian troops are depicted, they all have the same exhausted, scruffy bearded look that our protagonists do.
 Willie and Joe (Comic Strip) / int_4f6cf75
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 Willie and Joe (Comic Strip) / int_52d1f46e
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Not What It Looks Like
 Willie and Joe (Comic Strip) / int_52d1f46e
comment
Not What It Looks Like: Joe and Willie take cover from German bullets in the front doorway of an Italian bank. One of them comments on how suspicious they must look.
 Willie and Joe (Comic Strip) / int_52d1f46e
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 Willie and Joe (Comic Strip) / int_5aa8d3d8
type
Friendly Enemy
 Willie and Joe (Comic Strip) / int_5aa8d3d8
comment
Friendly Enemy: German soldiers occasionally show up being good-natured about not getting shot at. Mauldin followed the invasion of Italy, which was one of the most amicable fronts in the whole war. The Italians — not just civilians, but also soldiers — were by and large relieved to be "conquered" by the Americans, mainly because it got them out of the war. It also helped that there were a lot of Italian-American soldiers who spoke the language and often used the invasion as an excuse to catch up on old family connections. Mauldin memorialized this in a cartoon after Italy's official surrender where an Italian-American GI embraces a local and says, "Ey, you hear, Guisseppe, you ain't a enemy no more!" One German patrolman catches Willie and Joe raiding an officer's stash of schnapps (right next to a sign declaring said schnapps verboten for enlisted men): "Nein, nein, I wouldn't dream of interfering!" They'll even express some concern over the fates of their foes, such as when Joe is playing a harmonica in a trench and Willie notices something's off. "Krauts ain't followin' ya so good on Lily Marleen tonight... think maybe something happened to their tenor?" One cartoon shows a squad of American soldiers having snuck up on a German tank crew who are busily sabotaging their Panzer before retreating. The commanding officer restrains one of his troops, saying, "No, no, it's a beautiful booby-trap ... it'd be a shame to spoil it." Of course, wartime civility had its limits. One cartoon from late in the war shows Joe reclining in splendor on a fine German bed. All around him there are signs left by the German owners, begging the invaders (in superb English) to treat their home with respect. As Willie passes through the room, his pal mentions, "Be careful. Th' toilet's booby-trapped."
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 Willie and Joe (Comic Strip) / int_5fff364d
type
Combat Medic
 Willie and Joe (Comic Strip) / int_5fff364d
comment
Combat Medic: Mauldin depicted the hardships of their work, especially in the rugged terrain of Italy, and brought attention to their low salaries:
 Willie and Joe (Comic Strip) / int_5fff364d
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 Willie and Joe (Comic Strip) / int_62ef4163
type
Boot Camp Episode
 Willie and Joe (Comic Strip) / int_62ef4163
comment
Boot Camp Episode: The first three years of the strip, which Mauldin started in 1940.
 Willie and Joe (Comic Strip) / int_62ef4163
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 Willie and Joe (Comic Strip) / int_67f2c837
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The Pig-Pen
 Willie and Joe (Comic Strip) / int_67f2c837
comment
The Pig-Pen: It's a running theme and joke that being on the frontlines ensures you're not going to be able to keep very clean. Sometimes, even when you're trying to be◊. As in real life, the soldiers in the cartoons often prioritize combat effectiveness over staying neat and tidy. In one strip, an officer brings a Jerrycan of water into Willie and Joe's foxhole under heavy fire. As he pours it, he says, "Drink it all, boys, the general what gave them orders about shaving ain't gonna be makin' no inspections today."
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 Willie and Joe (Comic Strip) / int_6fbe3154
type
Shot in the Ass
 Willie and Joe (Comic Strip) / int_6fbe3154
comment
Shot in the Ass: Two cartoons show sergeants trying to teach soldiers not to raise their rear while crawling to avoid this type of injury. One claps a helmet on that part of the body, saying that's where it'd do the most good. The other one goes down the line applying a spiked board.
 Willie and Joe (Comic Strip) / int_6fbe3154
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 Willie and Joe (Comic Strip) / int_71105dfc
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Everybody Smokes
 Willie and Joe (Comic Strip) / int_71105dfc
comment
Everybody Smokes: The excessive amount of smoking in the cartoons is very much Truth in Television. Not only was it socially acceptable at the time, but US tobacco companies donated literal tons of cigarettes to the Army. Soldiers would still hoard smokes, though, memorably demonstrated in one (slightly) hyperbolic cartoon. Willie and Joe are charging up a beach during a landing and they need more ammunition. They both stop to inspect their bandoliers — which are supposed to contain spare Garand clips — and one announces, "That's th' problem. Mine's all fulla cigarettes too."
 Willie and Joe (Comic Strip) / int_71105dfc
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 Willie and Joe (Comic Strip) / int_768ae1c9
type
Les Collaborateurs
 Willie and Joe (Comic Strip) / int_768ae1c9
comment
Les Collaborateurs: The butt of a joke during the liberation of France. A pair of women have had their heads shaved and are being wheeled through town wearing signs proclaiming them as "Collaboratrices". Joe takes the opportunity to snap some photos to remind his girlfriend to be faithful.
 Willie and Joe (Comic Strip) / int_768ae1c9
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 Willie and Joe (Comic Strip) / int_79ba6777
type
Pocket Protector
 Willie and Joe (Comic Strip) / int_79ba6777
comment
Pocket Protector: One cartoon shows a soldier writing to Margaret Mitchell, saying he'd been carrying "[your] big book, Gone with the Wind, under my shirt," while the book sits next to his foxhole with a gaping hole in the cover.
 Willie and Joe (Comic Strip) / int_79ba6777
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 Willie and Joe (Comic Strip) / int_8a295a46
type
Cool Car
 Willie and Joe (Comic Strip) / int_8a295a46
comment
Cool Car: Jeeps pop up every now and again, with the soldiers love of the rugged little machines emphasized, for their speed in combat, all terrain utility and ability to run on almost anything. Almost.
 Willie and Joe (Comic Strip) / int_8a295a46
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 Willie and Joe (Comic Strip) / int_9f80e1da
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Sarcasm Mode
 Willie and Joe (Comic Strip) / int_9f80e1da
comment
One strip, featuring a staff sergeant who definitely has his priorities straight, puts a twist on the above joke.
 Willie and Joe (Comic Strip) / int_9f80e1da
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 Willie and Joe (Comic Strip) / int_ae3d6438
type
Deadpan Snarker
 Willie and Joe (Comic Strip) / int_ae3d6438
comment
Deadpan Snarker: The only way Willie and Joe can even survive out there.
 Willie and Joe (Comic Strip) / int_ae3d6438
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 Willie and Joe (Comic Strip) / int_aec3e0b8
type
Glory Hound
 Willie and Joe (Comic Strip) / int_aec3e0b8
comment
Another comic takes a swipe at Gen. Douglas Macarthur, for his perceived egotism and Glory Hound tendencies.
 Willie and Joe (Comic Strip) / int_aec3e0b8
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 Willie and Joe (Comic Strip) / int_b53077b3
type
Take That!
 Willie and Joe (Comic Strip) / int_b53077b3
comment
Take That!: The strip was for, by, and about combat infantrymen. As such, it took shots at rear-echelon troops, officers whose sole qualification was a college degree in nothing related to the Army, and a memorable one against General Patton. Another comic takes a swipe at Gen. Douglas Macarthur, for his perceived egotism and Glory Hound tendencies.
 Willie and Joe (Comic Strip) / int_b53077b3
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 Willie and Joe (Comic Strip) / int_b707726f
type
Hypocritical Humor
 Willie and Joe (Comic Strip) / int_b707726f
comment
Hypocritical Humor: The caption to one comic describes the "fresh, spirited troops bringing in ragged, battle-weary prisoners". Both groups look equally tired and about to pass out on their feet.
 Willie and Joe (Comic Strip) / int_b707726f
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 Willie and Joe (Comic Strip) / int_ba4cfe21
type
Social Engineering
 Willie and Joe (Comic Strip) / int_ba4cfe21
comment
Social Engineering: All sides in WW2 used huge amounts of propaganda. Mauldin took aim at this in one cartoon that showed an exhausted artilleryman reloading his cannon and telling a compatriot, "Tell them propaganda boys the Krauts [Germans] ain't got time to read no pamphlets today."
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 Willie and Joe (Comic Strip) / int_bb18a227
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It's All About Me
 Willie and Joe (Comic Strip) / int_bb18a227
comment
It's All About Me: As noted throughout the page, Mauldin was following troops through the Italian campaign, which got heavily overshadowed later in the war. One comic has Willie reading a newspaper about the Normandy invasion to his buddy in an Italian foxhole, to which Joe snarkily replies:
 Willie and Joe (Comic Strip) / int_bb18a227
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 Willie and Joe (Comic Strip) / int_bf609406
type
New Meat
 Willie and Joe (Comic Strip) / int_bf609406
comment
New Meat: New guys occasionally turn up at the front with strange attitudes, including one who complains that he's been in the Army two days and hasn't been shot at. The Army's system of "replacements" and the often short life of the poor souls brought in to fill out depleted units was also grimly mocked, such as Joe recommending a beefy recruit with duffel bags marked "A" and "B" as he's "...packed wit' vitamins."
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 Willie and Joe (Comic Strip) / int_c313d43a
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True Companions
 Willie and Joe (Comic Strip) / int_c313d43a
comment
True Companions: The dogfaces are always depicted as this.
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 Willie and Joe (Comic Strip) / int_c3c0768c
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Soldiers at the Rear
 Willie and Joe (Comic Strip) / int_c3c0768c
comment
Soldiers at the Rear: A common target of dogface resentment, especially when they lay claim to quarters and amenities in liberated towns. Slightly closer to the front skulks a strange hybrid: "We call 'em garritroopers. They're too far forward t'wear ties, an' too far back t'get shot." One cartoon shows a battle-hardened officer and his orderly driving up to a "liberated" town in their combat-wracked Jeep. They observe a signpost filled with delicate instructions for the behavior of US troops. The enlisted man says, "Hell, sir, let's just go back to th' front."
 Willie and Joe (Comic Strip) / int_c3c0768c
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 Willie and Joe (Comic Strip) / int_c91dcba1
type
Perma-Stubble
 Willie and Joe (Comic Strip) / int_c91dcba1
comment
Perma-Stubble: The titular characters and many other frontline infantrymen as well. It's hard to find time to groom at the frontline. In fact, their full beards became such an iconic part of their faces that, following a rare visit to a barber for a proper shave, Willie remarks in mild shock, "My god, I'm naked."
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 Willie and Joe (Comic Strip) / int_c9981efb
type
The Engineer
 Willie and Joe (Comic Strip) / int_c9981efb
comment
The Engineer: One of them has this to report from under a bridge he'd built: "Yessir, B Comp'ny broke another bridge-buildin' record. A kraut company is retreating across it!"
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 Willie and Joe (Comic Strip) / int_cbdd9a55
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We ARE Struggling Together
 Willie and Joe (Comic Strip) / int_cbdd9a55
comment
We ARE Struggling Together: Strongly averted. Comics with Allied troops are rare, but they invariably treat Allied soldiers as equally deserving of respect as the American dogfaces. When there is criticism, it is leveled at the Americans as much as their allies: One memorable comic shows a conference of Allied soldiers — scruffy fighting men distiguingishable only by their uniforms — in an Italian cafe. The American GI is upbraiding a British Tommy, telling him "You woulda lost this war if it wasn't for allies like Texas and Russia."
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 Willie and Joe (Comic Strip) / int_cd809603
type
Tank Goodness
 Willie and Joe (Comic Strip) / int_cd809603
comment
Tank Goodness: Willie, glancing at a passing Sherman tank, observes he'd rather be infantry and dig in the mud, as "...a movin' foxhole attracts th' eye."
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 Willie and Joe (Comic Strip) / int_d0b60f23
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GoshDangItToHeck
 Willie and Joe (Comic Strip) / int_d0b60f23
comment
Gosh Dang It to Heck!: The one thing Mauldin couldn't get away with depicting was profanity, which comes into incredibly sharp focus when Willie and Joe stumble across the horrific scene of the cruelty of the retreating Germans: they've trashed the local bar's booze stores.
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Willie and Joe (Comic Strip) / int_d0b60f23
 Willie and Joe (Comic Strip) / int_d0caee40
type
Uncanny Family Resemblance
 Willie and Joe (Comic Strip) / int_d0caee40
comment
The comic set in "th' town my Pappy told me about" features only two faces: Willie, and everyone else.
 Willie and Joe (Comic Strip) / int_d0caee40
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 Willie and Joe (Comic Strip)
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Willie and Joe (Comic Strip) / int_d0caee40
 Willie and Joe (Comic Strip) / int_d29e7760
type
Southern-Fried Private
 Willie and Joe (Comic Strip) / int_d29e7760
comment
Southern-Fried Private: Willie (originally Joe) was described as "...a Chocktaw Indian with a hook nose and a smart mouth", which would peg him as hailing from somewhere between Georgia and Oklahoma.
 Willie and Joe (Comic Strip) / int_d29e7760
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1.0
 Willie and Joe (Comic Strip)
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Willie and Joe (Comic Strip) / int_d29e7760
 Willie and Joe (Comic Strip) / int_d45c0b86
type
Refuge in Audacity
 Willie and Joe (Comic Strip) / int_d45c0b86
comment
Refuge in Audacity: Mauldin dared to show what life was really like for front-line soldiers.
 Willie and Joe (Comic Strip) / int_d45c0b86
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1.0
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1.0
 Willie and Joe (Comic Strip)
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Willie and Joe (Comic Strip) / int_d45c0b86
 Willie and Joe (Comic Strip) / int_d5a1770a
type
British Stuffiness
 Willie and Joe (Comic Strip) / int_d5a1770a
comment
British Stuffiness: Appears in full fig in a comic where a fastidious Tommy, busy cleaning his Lee-Enfield, snarks to Willie and Joe that "you blokes leave an awfully messy battlefield." This was Truth in Television, as America's ridiculous manufacturing base allowed US troops to expend war materiel at a rate that UK troops could merely envy.
 Willie and Joe (Comic Strip) / int_d5a1770a
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1.0
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Willie and Joe (Comic Strip) / int_d5a1770a
 Willie and Joe (Comic Strip) / int_e11e88b6
type
Thousand-Yard Stare
 Willie and Joe (Comic Strip) / int_e11e88b6
comment
Thousand-Yard Stare: Underplayed, but it's there. A key comic is one where a captain drops by Willie and Joe's foxhole and tells them, effectively, "I'm counting on you hardened men to teach these new recruits we've got coming in." Joe is displaying a textbook Thousand-Yard Stare and is possibly drunk; Willie has just used his bayonet to cut out a row of paper dolls. The obvious conclusion is that Willie and Joe are far too traumatized to mentor younger soldiers.
 Willie and Joe (Comic Strip) / int_e11e88b6
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Willie and Joe (Comic Strip) / int_e11e88b6
 Willie and Joe (Comic Strip) / int_e7c671f3
type
Mildly Military
 Willie and Joe (Comic Strip) / int_e7c671f3
comment
A semi-aversion comes from an anecdote Mauldin relays in Up Front. He had published a typical comic on Mildly Military themes, one where Willie and Joe were confronted by a by-the-books officer and the former said "He's right, Joe, when we ain't fightin', we oughta act like soldiers." Mauldin was tracked down by a similarly-earnest officer who completely missed the irony of the cartoon and wanted to turn it into a motivational poster. Mauldin let him have the original art, not daring to explain the realities of the work.
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Willie and Joe (Comic Strip) / int_e7c671f3
 Willie and Joe (Comic Strip) / int_ea5c413d
type
Biting-the-Hand Humor
 Willie and Joe (Comic Strip) / int_ea5c413d
comment
Biting-the-Hand Humor: Military regulations were often parodied, particularly the insistence on spit-shine uniform cleanliness for front-line soldiers living in muddy foxholes. Mauldin was called on the carpet by General Patton because soldiers were imitating his characters' undisciplined appearance—or more accurately, the appearance of the characters was a realistic depiction of what men living in muddy foxholes in a war zone were going to look like. This was right after a strip that openly mocked Patton's strict dress codenote  The eponymous GIs, dirty and disheveled as ever and driving a jeep held together with duct tape, drive up to a road sign saying they are entering Third Army's area of operations. On the same post is another sign listing that dress code and promising fines for each specific violation. Willie tells Joe to "Radio the Old Man an' let him know we're gonna be late on account of a thousand-mile detour.". He was rescued by Dwight D. Eisenhower, who felt that the comics' effect on morale – that it gave the troops a means to vent – was more important. Besides, Ike thought it was Actually Pretty Funny!
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Willie and Joe (Comic Strip) / int_ea5c413d
 Willie and Joe (Comic Strip) / int_eb7c34cf
type
Crossover
 Willie and Joe (Comic Strip) / int_eb7c34cf
comment
Crossover: In 1998, Willie and Joe showed up one final time in a Peanuts Veterans' Day strip commenting on how short Snoopy (in his guise as a World War I soldier) was.
 Willie and Joe (Comic Strip) / int_eb7c34cf
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Willie and Joe (Comic Strip) / int_eb7c34cf
 Willie and Joe (Comic Strip) / int_f1d6144a
type
War Is Hell
 Willie and Joe (Comic Strip) / int_f1d6144a
comment
War Is Hell: It's also drudgery, mud, foraging for food... and booze... and smokes, mud, surviving an artillery barrage from time to time, and mud.
 Willie and Joe (Comic Strip) / int_f1d6144a
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Willie and Joe (Comic Strip) / int_f1d6144a
 Willie and Joe (Comic Strip) / int_f3626b09
type
Mercy Kill
 Willie and Joe (Comic Strip) / int_f3626b09
comment
Mercy Kill: A cavalry sergeant shoots a Jeep with a broken axle while turning away and covering his eyes, much the way he might've treated a horse with a broken leg. Bill Mauldin had said this was his favorite cartoon and to his dejection, he never saw much agreement with that. (Though the comic did make it on the front cover of one edition of the collection Bill Maudlin's Army.) It was also recreated by Col. Potter in an episode of M*A*S*H where his jeep was run over by a tank.
 Willie and Joe (Comic Strip) / int_f3626b09
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Willie and Joe (Comic Strip) / int_f3626b09
 Willie and Joe (Comic Strip) / int_f6c1a6d1
type
Religious Russian Roulette
 Willie and Joe (Comic Strip) / int_f6c1a6d1
comment
Religious Russian Roulette: Downplayed example here◊, with Joe asking a fellow soldier (A Moroccan goumier in Free French service, by the looks of things) if he knows any good Muslim prayers, ostensibly just in case.
 Willie and Joe (Comic Strip) / int_f6c1a6d1
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Willie and Joe (Comic Strip) / int_f6c1a6d1
 Willie and Joe (Comic Strip) / int_fbd285b7
type
Comically Missing the Point
 Willie and Joe (Comic Strip) / int_fbd285b7
comment
Comically Missing the Point: "Nonsense, HQ reported that machine gun silenced hours ago. Stop wiggling your fingers at me!" An annoyed Willie is wiggling his fingers at the officer through holes in his helmet. "I hate to run on a flat. Tears th' hell outta th' tires." The flat has been caused by incoming fire and the driver is remarking morosely to Willie and Joe, who are actively shooting back at the offending Germans as they all attempt to flee in the Jeep.
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 Willie and Joe (Comic Strip) / int_ffad4e9f
type
Shown Their Work
 Willie and Joe (Comic Strip) / int_ffad4e9f
comment
Shown His Work: Mauldin was right there with the troops that he was depicting, and was meticulous in his attempts to get details right.
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Willie and Joe (Comic Strip)

The following is a list of statements referring to the current page from other pages.

 Willie and Joe (Comic Strip)
hasFeature
Armed Farces / int_88603e58
 Willie and Joe (Comic Strip)
hasFeature
Boot Camp Episode / int_88603e58
 Willie and Joe (Comic Strip)
hasFeature
Chest of Medals / int_88603e58
 Willie and Joe (Comic Strip)
hasFeature
Emergency Multifaith Prayer / int_88603e58
 Willie and Joe (Comic Strip)
hasFeature
Mercy Kill / int_88603e58
 Willie and Joe (Comic Strip)
hasFeature
Mourning an Object / int_88603e58
 Willie and Joe (Comic Strip)
hasFeature
Pocket Protector / int_88603e58
 Willie and Joe (Comic Strip)
hasFeature
Post-Injury Desk Job / int_88603e58
 Willie and Joe (Comic Strip)
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Soldiers at the Rear / int_88603e58
 Willie and Joe (Comic Strip)
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The '40s / int_88603e58
 Willie and Joe (Comic Strip)
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The Neidermeyer / int_88603e58
 Willie and Joe (Comic Strip)
hasFeature
War Is Hell / int_88603e58