This morning
Le Devoir has turned over the
entire paper to cartoonists.
The occasion is the opening of a new show of graphic illustration at
the Musée des Beaux arts de Montréal, but it also is a sly way of
commenting on the recent municipal election.
Instead of the usual photos accompanying news stories, the newspaper has asked the cream of Quebec's
bédéistes (from
bandes dessinées, the French term for cartoonists) to illustrate the news. Some of them are right on, indeed. And some of them are suitably
méchant like
the one above which shows mayor-elect Denis Coderre as the somewhat
buffonish Asterix from the famous series of "comic books."
In
the French-speaking world, illustrated books have long been considered
seriously. I remember being aghast when an artist friend suggested a
book group I belong to read BDs for one of our monthly meetings. But
she presented a number of beautifully drawn and produced books with
story lines no more silly than many literary novels, and explained how
the art work was of very high quality.
Since then I've
taken "graphic novels," as they're called in the English-speaking world,
far more seriously. It's clear that the books frequently treat themes
of substance, and are far from being the refuge of the semi-literate.
(Drawn and Quarterly, in whose bookstore I'll have my
book launch Wednesday night,
is a very successuly publisher of this kind of book.) But the genre
also always for much very interesting comment on the state of the
world.
Among the ones I'd recommend are
Guy Delisle's series on far away places, particularly his
Jerusalem Chronicles: Tales from the Holy City, which is rooted in a year he and his family spent in Jerusalem while his wife worked for Doctors without Borders. A view you won't find anywhere else!