Mothers and Daughters (comics)

Mothers and Daughters (comics)
Mothers & Daughters
Cerebus155Cover.jpg

Cover to Cerebus #155, the fifth issue of the Mothers & Daughters storyline
Publisher Aardvark-Vanaheim
Number of issues 151 – 200
Series Cerebus
Creative team
Creator(s) Dave Sim
Gerhard
Original publication
Published in Cerebus
Issue(s) 151 – 200
Language English
ISBN
Chronology
Preceded by Melmoth
Followed by Guys

Mothers & Daughters: a novel is the sixth novel in Canadian cartoonist Dave Sim's Cerebus comic book series. Sim considers the novel to be the final portion of the main story. It collects Cerebus #151 – 200 in four volumes, the seventh through tenth volumes of the paperback "phone book" collections of the series, titled Flight, Women, Reads and Minds.

After two quiet, character-focused novels (Jaka's Story and Melmoth) in which Cerebus the character took a back-seat rôle, Cerebus springs into action and takes centre stage in the series again. The novel is filled with climactic happenings, including the revelation of the identity of Suenteus Po, a sword battle between Cirin and Cerebus, and Cerebus having a long conversation with his creator — Sim himself.

Of particular note are the text portions that made up a large part of the third book of the novel, Reads, and especially what was the last issue making up that book — issue #186, in which Sim speaks to the reader in the first person about his ideas on gender. His writing in that issue about the "Male Light" and the "Female Void" have earned Sim a reputation as a misogynist and lost him numerous readers.

Contents

Background

Cerebus, who had twice been Prime Minister of the city-state of Iest (first in High Society) and then all-powerful Pope, had fallen from grace at the end of Church & State. The fascist, matriarchal Cirinists invaded Iest, and Cerebus went into hiding, first with Jaka (the love of his life) and her husband.

After Jaka is captured by the Cirinists for illegal exotic dancing, Cerebus believes she has been put to death. He takes Jaka's doll, Missy, with him and finds a café at which to spend the rest of his life, paying for it with a rare gold coin, whose value has become superinflated as the Cirinists have collected all the gold in the city.

Cerebus comes out of the near-catatonic state in which he had spends the duration of Melmoth when he hears of Jaka's ill-treatment at the hands of the Cirinists. He becomes enraged and starts attacking Cirinists with his sword, clutching Missy to himself.

Books

Sim considers Mothers & Daughters to be one novel, but divided it into four books, as indicated in the indicia of each issue. The four books were collected into paperback "phonebook" volumes separately.

Book One: Flight

(Cerebus #151 – 162)

Cerebus's return from hiding and slaughter of Cirinsts leads to a very brief revolution. When word reaches Cirin, who is busily having books burned, she dispatches her army and has the rebellion brutally crushed, but before they can capture Cerebus, he disappears.[1]

Artemis, with Elrod as his sidekick, also stages his own impromptu revolution under his new persona "PunisherRoach", a parody of the Marvel comics character The Punisher, armed with pearl-handled semi-automatic crossbows. Punisherroach plows through the Cirinists before Elrod leads him to a brothel, where he falls for a prostitute named Blossom, which calms him down somewhat.[1]

Mrs. Thatcher and Mrs. Kopp (a parody of former Canadian Member of Parliament Sheila Copps) each try to take control of Cirinist power. Cirin works to manage her sect and arrange her own Ascension, while obsessing over Astoria and her connection with Cerebus.[1]

Cerebus ascends into the Seventh Sphere and finally up to the Eight sphere where he speaks with Suenteus Po — who, he discovers, is the mysterious third aardvark. Po warns Cerebus not believe what George (th Judge from Church & State) has told him, s he is not reliable.[1]

Book Two: Women

(Cerebus #163 – 174)

Cerebus crashes back to earth. He is assisted by a mysterious old woman who is being openly spied upon by the Cirinists; she sends him to a bar to hide. This story arc includes a parody of Neil Gaiman's Sandman in which the Roach plays "Swoon" (a parody of Dream) and Elrod plays "Snuff" (a transvestite parody of Death). Astoria and Cirin symbolically duel in a dream realm. The book includes excerpts from books written by Astoria and Cirin that describe their differing beliefs. Cerebus flies across the city to slay Astoria, but is interrupted by the arrival of Suenteus Po.

Book Three: Reads

(Cerebus #175 – 186)

This book primarily consists of two long text pieces. These two stories are accompanied by a long discussion between Cirin, Astoria, Cerebus, and Suenteus Po. Po gives information about aardvarks, including that all aardvarks have Cerebus' "magnifier" quality, and attempts to convince each of the others to abandon their pursuits of power and return to what they enjoy doing most, then leaves them to their fates. Astoria is convinced and also leaves, but not before giving Cerebus information about her history with Cirin and also informing him of his hermaphrodite nature. Cerebus and Cirin then engage in a long and brutal swordfight, which leads to the beginning of another Ascension.

The first revolves around an author of Reads, which are heavily illustrated books that are popular in Cerebus' world. In this story, there is a strong thread about the dangers of commercial success and "selling out". The series moves from this storyline to a long essay attributed to Viktor Davis, a fictional Reads author. This essay puts forth a theory on the nature of the genders, describing the "Female Void" focused on feeling, and the "Male Light" focused on reason. It is in the conclusion to this book that Sim produced issue #186, which earned him the reputation of being a misogynist.

Book Four: Minds

(Cerebus #187 – 200)

Cerebus and Cirin ascend, then are separated by a mysterious force. As Cerebus flies through the solar system, he is shown images from his past and is forced to reconsider his actions and his faith. He then encounters a disembodied voice calling itself "Dave" that acknowledges itself as Cerebus's creator. "Dave" shows Cerebus the history of the Cirinist movement, revealing that Cirin is actually named Serna and was the best friend of the real Cirin (the old woman Cerebus encountered in Women), but usurped Cirin's leadership and effectively exchanged identities with her. "Dave" then gives Cerebus information about his past, showing that Cerebus unwittingly ruined his original destiny, causing chaotic repercussions which have influenced most of his adventures. Cerebus demands that "Dave" make Jaka love him; in response, "Dave" shows Cerebus visions of possible futures between himself and Jaka, all of which are disastrously flawed for both of them due to Cerebus' nature. After a period of penance and self-reflection on Pluto, Cerebus asks "Dave" to place him in a bar he remembers from his mercenary days.

Issue 186

Sim had long been critical of modern feminism, but Cerebus issue #186 brought him claims of being a misogynist. In the text piece that appeared in this issue, Sim (through the thinly-veiled guise of Viktor Davis) speaks in the first person about issues of gender and male-female relationships, in which he claims the "Female Void devours the Male Light."[2]

The issue was one part of the Reads portion of Mothers & Daughters and appears in the Reads collection.

Characters

Cerebus
After spending two novels in a secondary rôle, and spending an entire novel in a near-catatonic state, Cerebus leaps into action and takes centre stage once again. He finally meets the mysterious third aardvark, who turns out to be Suentius Po. It is also revealed that Cerebus is a hermaphrodite.
Cirin
Leader of the matriarchal Cirinists who have conquered the city of Iest — also, along with Cerebus, one of only three aardvarks known to exist in Estarcion. She is working to bring about another Ascension, and having a giant gold sphere made in preparation. Cerebus and Cirin have a dramatic swordfight during the course of Reads. It is later revealed that she is not the real Cirin however — her real name is Serna, and she has usurped power from the real Cirin, who is now an old, human woman.
Suenteus Po
After appearing only as a voice in Cerebus' head for most of the series, it is finally revealed that he is the third Aardvark.
Astoria
Cirin's greatest matriarchal rival
The Roach
Once again taking on parodic rôles, first as the "Punisheroach" (after the Marvel character, The Punisher), and then as "Swoon" (after Neil Gaiman's take on the Vertigo character, Dream, from The Sandman).
Elrod
The Roach's sidekick again, Elrod takes on the persona of "Snuff" (a transvestite parody of the Sandman character, Death).

Publication

Mothers & Daughters "phonebook" collections
Volume Title Published Issues Dates ISBN
Flight March 1993 151–162 1991–1992 0-919359-13-2
Women April 1994 163–174 1992–1993 0-919359-14-0
Reads April 1995 175–186 1993–1994 0-919359-15-9
Minds June 1996 187–200 1994–1995 0-919359-16-7

Originally serialized in Cerebus #151-200, Mothers & Daughters was conceived as one novel, but was collected into four paperback "phonebook" volumes. As in Jaka's Story and Melmoth previously, and as in all the Cerebus stories to follow, the issues displayed the current issue number of the Cerebus comic, as well as the current number of the Mothers & Daughters storyline, so that issue #155 of Cerebus was also indicated to be installment #5 of Mothers & Daughters. The four books of Mothers & Daughters, however, were not indicated by name or installment number on the cover.

The Cerebus "phonebook" volumes had text-free spines until the publication of Flight. Afterwards, all volumes (and reprintings of the earlier volumes) had text on their spines, including the title and volume number.[3]

Reception

While many fans were initially glad that Cerebus had finally moved away from the slow pacing of Jaka's Story and Melmoth, which had driven many readers away, the storyline drew considerable fire for what was perceived as the misogyny of the contents of issue #186, with The Comics Journal running a mock Nuremberg-style trial of Sim.[citation needed]

See also


References

Notes

  1. ^ a b c d "Flight". Travels Through Iest. 2011-01-16. http://travelsthroughiest.blogspot.com/2011/01/flight.html. Retrieved 2011-06-15. 
  2. ^ "The Dave Sim Misogyny Page". Misogyny Unlimited - Misogyny on the Internet -. http://www.theabsolute.net/misogyny/sim.html. Retrieved 2011-06-13. 
  3. ^ Liss, Margaret (2008-07-06). "Cerebus Phonebooks". CerebusFanGirl. http://cerebusfangirl.com/blog/?p=310. Retrieved 2011-05-30. 

Sources

Further reading


Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.

Игры ⚽ Поможем сделать НИР

Look at other dictionaries:

  • Church and State (comics) — Church State Cover to the first volume of Church State (Aardvark Vanaheim, 1987) Publisher Aardvar …   Wikipedia

  • Mothers & Daughters — may refer to: Mothers and Daughters (book), a book by Prof. Mildred Blaxter and Elizabeth Patterson Mothers and Daughters (comics), a four volume graphic novel by Dave Sim featuring Cerebus the Aardvark Mothers Daughters (film), a 2004… …   Wikipedia

  • Melmoth (comics) — Melmoth Cover to the Melmoth collection (Aardvark Vanaheim, 1991) Publisher Aardvark Vanaheim …   Wikipedia

  • Cerebus (comics) — Cerebus If this infobox is not supposed to have an image, please add |noimage=yes . Publisher Aardvark Vanaheim Date …   Wikipedia

  • Cobweb (comics) — This article is about the comic. For other uses, see Cobweb. Cobweb Publication information Publisher America s Best Comics …   Wikipedia

  • Mandy (comics) — First issue of Mandy, 21 January 1967 Mandy was a British comic for girls, published weekly by D. C. Thomson Co. from 21 January 1967 (#1) to 11 May 1991 (#1,269),[1] with annuals appearing from 1972 …   Wikipedia

  • Media and Publishing — ▪ 2007 Introduction The Frankfurt Book Fair enjoyed a record number of exhibitors, and the distribution of free newspapers surged. TV broadcasters experimented with ways of engaging their audience via the Internet; mobile TV grew; magazine… …   Universalium

  • Cerebus the Aardvark — Cerebus redirects here. You may be looking for Cerberus. Cerebus the Aardvark Cover to Cerebus issues 112 and 113, from 1988. Art by Dave Sim and Gerhard Publication information …   Wikipedia

  • Dave Sim — Saltar a navegación, búsqueda Dave Sim Dave Sim en la Small Press and Alternative Comics Expos de Columbus, Ohio de 2007. Fotografiado por Margaret Liss. Nombre Dave Sim …   Wikipedia Español

  • Cerebus phonebook — Cerebus novels Phonebooks · Characters Cerebus …   Wikipedia

Share the article and excerpts

Direct link
Do a right-click on the link above
and select “Copy Link”