Archive for May, 2008

Persepolis

May 5, 2008

If there’s a new media or genre or means of expression to be celebrated out there, I’m always late to the party. (I figure I should have created this blog at least four years ago.) So it’s not surprising that I haven’t had much exposure to the emergence of the graphic novel, sort of an extended comic book for grown-ups. I somehow associated it with Japanese anime and other media that haven’t appealed to me and that don’t seem to have the legitimacy of traditional media.

Wrong again. The filmed version of Persepolis really changed my mind. Marjane ‘Marji’ Statrapi’s coming-of-age story set against the fall of the Shah and the rise of the Islamic Revolution in Tehran is beautiful and simple and funny and utterly terrifying. I had the same reaction to it that I’ve had to well-executed puppet theatre or other representational theatre — the non-realistic portrayal somehow makes the themes and issues much clearer and more poignant. “Life couldn’t possibly be worse than it was under the Shah,” the characters believe, and then the mullahs move in and the war with Iraq begins. Even when her parents send her away to escape the horrors of the regime, Marji is still defined by Iran, by what her family has suffered and lost.

She’s a few years older than my oldest son, and while he was spending his childhood and adolescence looking for the next ballgame-party-adventure with his friends, she spent most of hers afraid, for herself and for everyone she loved, several of whom were executed by the various regimes. Sent to Vienna by her frightened parents, she falls in with a bored, alienated crowd of Holden Caulfieldesque students, and eventually lashes out at them for their indifference to what was happening in the world.

I wonder if any generation in the West is ever really aware of what is going on around them? I remember being absolutely astonished by Apocalypse Now, with its violent, nihilistic portrait of Viet Nam. “Was that really what was going on?” I wondered. And I read a book a few years ago called Hungry Ghosts that argued that, while my friends and I were playing hopscotch and discovering boys and going to our first junior high school dances, tens of millions of Chinese peasants were starving to death trying to fulfill Mao’s public relations stunt of exporting grain to other “poorer” nations. (A hungry ghost is the bottom rung of hell in Chinese mythology, doomed to wander, starving, through eternity.) As many as 50 million or more Chinese people may have died, which I suppose could put Stalin and Hitler in second and third place as the 20th century’s bloodiest regimes.

Missing Madeleine

May 2, 2008

Saturday is the one-year anniversary of the disappearance of Madeleine McCann, the little British girl abducted from a Portuguese hotel room while her parents ate dinner just a few steps away. While I expect many Americans are aware of the tragedy, the British are absolutely transfixed by it, and they have been utterly savaging the couple, particularly the mother, Kate. “What mother leaves her child alone in a hotel room?” they demand. I watched the McCanns on the BBC this morning, patiently enduring the same abrupt questions and stinging criticisms they have been subjected to from the beginning, trying to keep the story — and the search — alive.

Um, excuse me, but would all you parents out there who have done something INCREDIBLY STUPID whilst rearing your offspring, please raise your hand? (Oh, COME ON! It’s not only ME!) Just leaving my younger son in the care of his older brother, I discovered, put both of them at risk. (I’ve come home and wiped up blood off the floor, trust me.) I’m just fortunate that my stupidity didn’t result in anything tragic. When I look at the McCanns, I immediately think how easily it could have been me or any number of my friends and relatives. You only have to let your guard down or be distracted for just a moment..

To mark the anniversary, the McCanns have launched a new campaign to try to find Madeleine and other missing children. I was surprised to find that the British do not have an equivalent of an Amber Alert, which has so far helped save some 400 missing American children and is apparently fairly low-cost and low-maintenance.

I’m for giving the McCanns a break and putting all that negative energy into finding out what happened to their little girl. Oh, I know a lot of people, including the Portuguese police, think the McCanns are somehow responsible for her disappearance. But there’s scant proof of that, and it doesn’t help get anyone closer to finding any answers. Or Madeleine.

Update. Be careful what you write about your parenting skills.

May Day Carol

May 1, 2008

We don’t make much of the first of May in America, probably because it was a pagan holiday and the Puritans couldn’t endure it. (Killjoys.) It’s celebrated, or at least remembered, in Europe and the British Isles, mostly as a political holiday. But it has a romantic past:

On the first day of May [in England] young men and women would to rise a little before midnight and walk to some neighbouring wood, making music with horns and other instruments. There they would break boughs of hawthorn and other trees, weave garlands, and wander till sunrise, washing their faces in the May dew so magical in its properties. The boughs were then planted before the house-doors, and nosegays left at the thresholds; carols being sung, and gifts asked for in song. (Via.)

I remember a particularly lovely song I sang in choir about May Day:

The moon shines bright, the stars give a light
A little before tis day
Our Heavenly Father, he called to us
And bid us awake and pray.

Awake, awake, oh pretty, pretty maid
Out of your drowsy dream
And step into your dairy below
And fetch me a bowl of cream.

If not a bowl of thy sweet cream
A cup to bring me cheer
For the Lord knows when we shall meet again
To go Maying another year.

I have been wandering all this night
And some time of this day
And now returning home again
I’ve brought you a branch of May.

A branch of May I’ve brought you here
And at your door I stand
‘Tis nothing but a sprout, but it’s well budded out
By the work of our Lord’s hand.

My song is done and I must be gone
No longer can I stay
So it’s God bless you all, both great and small
And send you a joyful May.