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Thursday, November 18, 2010

Better than the Song by Zack Attack

Today we celebrate the 25th anniversary of crucial Sunday comic Calvin and Hobbes. At this point, Calvin and Hobbes has been gone longer than it was with us as an active strip, but it remains unparalleled in its juxtaposition of juvenile humor with legitimate social criticism. But most of all, it was a bridge that joined parents and children and help them understand one another just a little bit better. We were all reminded of the infinite possibilities that Calvin represented, those dreams that we stretched to attain, and the forces that would bring us back down to reality.

Who in 1985 could have guessed that the exploits of a boy and his stuffed tiger could speak so clearly to so many people; that thousands upon thousands of readers would be united in finding little bits and pieces of their lives mirrored in those three little boxes in the funny pages. We each have our own Hobbes--the full time foil (but part time snake charmer) for Calvin's antics; the straight man to ground us when our minds run a little too wild, and egg us on when we need to learn a lesson for our own good. Calvin and Hobbes, as characters, had a relationship with qualities from both brotherhood and friendship. Together, they involved themselves in any number of imaginative projects: parenthood approval polls, avant-garde snow sculptures, harrowing toboggan/Radio Flyer rides down hills and off cliffs, the exaggerated adventures of Spaceman Spiff/Tracer Bullet/Stupendous Man, epic battles of Calvinball, run ins with Rosalyn the baby sitter, or simply contemplating the complex world of grown ups. These are all things that we grapple with growing up, in one manner or another. Everyone has their version of Saturday mornings, jacked up on Chocolate Frosted Sugar Bombs, reading Hamster Huey and the Gooey Kablooie. And who didn't join at least one version of G.R.O.S.S. in middle school, to ensure that the object of our affection thought that their mere presence would induce vomiting.

For his part, writer/illustrator Bill Watterson always made a big deal about protecting his creation from being tainted. He refused to sign autographs, or even really do interviews, claiming that both would trivialize what he (and many others) saw as precious. None of the copious amounts of Calvin merchandise is authorized by Watterson. That includes those frat boy tee shirts with the eponymous characters dancing in shades and PJs, and the hick stickers of Calvin pissing on the Chevy logo (or Ford, depending on your particular automotive leanings). In fact, the only official Calvin and Hobbes products, besides the books, are two monthly calenders (1989 & 1990), one tee shirt created in a run of one for the MOMA, and an educational book, Teaching with Calvin and Hobbes, which is long out of print and sells for several hundred dollars if you are lucky enough to find one for sale.

Calvin and Hobbes is unique in that, in its ten years of existence, it was always consistently funny, touching, whimsical, philosophical and endearing. It never dipped in quality. You can read and re-read the collections and they are still just as humorous and relevant as ever. We can still learn just as much from those familiar panels, see our own lives reflected back at us and find comfort in that. And even through there will probably never be new Calvin and Hobbes comic, we can just remember what we once had and how good it was. That doesn't make it mean any less. True friends are hard to come by.

2 comments:

navagat prakash said...

hey mikey!
this is one of the best calvin hobbes critiques (you'll wince at your write-up being called a critique, i kn) i've read . u are correct. it does juxtapose juvenile humour with serious social criticisms.

i too have given it a bit of a thought. you see, C n H is about a single child who doesnt like school or sports.. and as calvin says in one of the strips. " he'd rather just run around.(than play organised sports)" he doesn even have any friends (unless you count susie derkins). he's just too haapy in his own world!

even though all this is really fascinating, psychological studies have shown that such kids have trouble adjusting with the world once they grown up.
i think a social problem that watterson addresses is of nuclear families: where people dun continue to live with their parents or siblings once they grow up..and with usually both parents working, the care, love and affection that a child needs while growing up remains incomplete. kids get affected a lot. i dun think u'll deny the importance of the care and love that elders (like grandparents) can provide. i live in india. i do not know much about american society. but i think grandparents and siblings are a very important part of growing up. and as calvin's dad would put it, 'it helps build character' :) . it actually does. and i mean it most meaningful way.

navagat prakash
new delhi
india

mikey squeamish said...

hello there, navagat.

i can see some of your points. calvin is, in the best way possible, totally disconnected from the "real world." the elaborate fantasies he concocts allow him to brush off responsibility and deal with outside influences in a way with which he is comfortable. in many ways, it shows just how trivial some grownup problems are--calvin is often able to reduce them to nothing more than plots of bad sci-fi.

i think that most studies would show that kids who grow up with their extended family (in addition to their nuclear family) probably do have healthier (and possibly more rewarding) experiences outside the home. kids like that simply have a more structured support system, more positive reinforcement. however, i'm not so sure i see any evidence of that in c n' h. maybe you could post a link to a comic that demonstrates this? personally, i grew up in a household that included granny squeamish, and i consider myself lucky to have done so and treasure my relationship with my grandmother.

thanks for sending us some mail all the way from new delhi! it is great to get some perspective as many points of view as possible. thanks for reading and taking the time to respond!