Che Guevara: The Poster Boy of Revisionist History

He’s not just that guy on the T-shirt

Paul Combs

--

Ernesto “Che” Guevara (Image: Wikimedia Commons)

Revisionist history is something we grapple with every day, and in the past few years it’s something we’ve witnessed in real-time. There is, however, one man who is the literal poster boy of this revisionist phenomenon, and I say literal because if you are of a certain age, it’s likely you had a poster of him on your wall in college. Even today, you may have a T-shirt with his picture on it regardless of your age, he is that ubiquitous. I’m talking about Ernesto Guevara de la Serna, known to the world simply as “Che.”

Che Guevara was an Argentine-born Marxist revolutionary, physician, author, political theorist, and diplomat. Along with Fidel and Raul Castro, he was a key figure in the Cuban Revolution of the late 1950s. Because of an iconic photograph by Alberto Korda (above) he’s best known in the West today “as that guy on the T-shirt.” At various times I have heard people, especially younger people, identify him as Benicio Del Toro, Jesus, and the third baseman for the St. Louis Cardinals. He was obviously none of those, but before getting into why he is the poster boy for revisionist history, here are a few facts about his life that everyone agrees on.

Ernesto Guevara was born in Rosario, Argentina, on June 14, 1928. His parents came from…

--

--

Paul Combs

Writer, bookseller, would-be roadie for the E Street Band. My ultimate goal is to make books as popular in Texas as high school football...it may take a while.