Editorial
2008; Berghahn Books; Volume: 1; Issue: 2 Linguagem: Inglês
10.3828/eca.1.2.1
ISSN1754-3797
AutoresLaurence Grove, Mark McKinney, Ann Neville Miller, Hugo Frey,
Tópico(s)Comics and Graphic Narratives
ResumoAmong the many new books on comic strips published in the past year one of the most provocative has been Nicolas Rouvière’s Astérix ou la parodie des identités [‘Asterix or the Parody of Identities’].1 Rouvière provides a fascinating analysis of questions of national identity in René Goscinny and Albert Uderzo’s famous series of albums. Grosso modo, he suggests that the strips undermine hard nationalist prejudices, to create universal understanding between peoples. Rouvière contends that the Astérix series encourages the French to question the myths of their own national identity, and satirises their stereotyping of their neighbours (the French image of the British, the Belgians, the Swiss, etc.). He concludes that Astérix runs counter to a world based on the ‘clash of civilisations’ model famously employed by Samuel Huntington.
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