The Idea (wordless novel)  

From The Art and Popular Culture Encyclopedia

Jump to: navigation, search

Related e

Wikipedia
Wiktionary
Shop


Featured:

The Idea (Idée, sa naissance, sa vie, sa mort, "Idea, her birth, her life, her death") is a 1920 wordless novel by Flemish artist Frans Masereel (1889–1972). In eighty-three woodcut prints, the book tells an allegory of a man's idea, which takes the form of a naked woman who goes out into the world; the authorities try to suppress her nakedness, and execute a man who stands up for her. Her image is spread through the mass media, inciting a disruption of the social order. Filmmaker Berthold Bartosch made an animated adaptation in 1932.

Overview

An artist is struck with an idea, which manifests itself as a naked woman with long, black hair. He displays her to the public, but the authorities, offended by her nudity, chase her around the city in order to cover up her body. A man who is not offended by her nudity takes to the woman's side, and the two fight injustice together; the man is caught and executed. The authorities destroy all books published with the woman's image, but she finds new outlets in the mass media, and succeeds in disrupting the social order. The woman returns to the artist, who has a new idea—a white-haired woman. He frames and hangs the black-haired woman on the wall, and releases the white-haired woman to the public.Template:Sfn

The allegorical book is open to interpretation. It can be seen as representing new ideas, and how they disrupt and are resisted by tradition. From the perspective of the woman, it can be seen as how the image of women is manipulated by society and the media, or how society is threatened by women who express themselves freely.Template:Sfn

Publication history

The book first appeared as in 1920 from French publisher Template:Illm under the title Idée, sa naissance, sa vie, sa mort: 83 images, dessinées et gravées sur bois ("Idea, her birth, her life, her death: 83 pictures, drawn and engraved on wood").Template:Sfnm It was printed from 83 woodcutsTemplate:Sfn of Template:Convert each.Template:Sfn Of the 878 copies made, the first 28 were signed and hand-numbered and printed on Japon imperial paper, one in a serious number 1–25 and another A–C. A further 50 printed on Hollande van Gelder paper were unsigned but hand-number in Roman numerals from I to L. The unsigned rest of the run was on volumineux anglais paper.Template:Sfn

German publisher Kurt Wolff released a popular edition in 1924 under the German title Die Idee: 83 Holzschitte.Template:Sfn An introduction by writer Hermann Hesse prefaced the second edition in 1927.Template:Sfn An English edition didn't appear until London publisher Redstone Press released it in 1986 in a paired edition with Story Without Words (1920), entitled The Idea and Story Without Words: Two Novels Told in Woodcuts.Template:Sfn

Legacy

American artist Lynd Ward used the concept of an idea surviving oppression in his wordless novel Madman's Drum (1930).Template:Sfn Austro-Hungarian filmmaker Berthold Bartosch spent two yearsTemplate:Sfn on an animated film adaptation of The Idea in 1932; initially Masereel agreed to a collaboration in 1930, but backed out of the production. Bartosch's version has the idea defeated in the end. He tries to create a three-dimensional feeling through the use of multiple levels of animation cels.Template:Sfn Film historian William Moritz called it "the first animated film created as an artwork with serious, even tragic, social and philosophical themes".Template:Sfn Historian Perry Willett wrote that the film is at times unclear, and was "something of a disappointment".Template:Sfn





Unless indicated otherwise, the text in this article is either based on Wikipedia article "The Idea (wordless novel)" or another language Wikipedia page thereof used under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License; or on research by Jahsonic and friends. See Art and Popular Culture's copyright notice.

Personal tools