【Request Movies】
Updike: Portrait of the Artist as a Young Fan
Best of 2015
We’re away until January 4, but we’re re-posting some of our favorite pieces from 2015. Please enjoy, and have a happy New Year!
“I can’t remember the moment when I fell in love with cartoons, I was so young,” John Updike once recalled in Hogan’s Alley magazine. “I still have a Donald Duck book, on oilclothy paper in big-print format, and remember a smaller, cardboard-covered book based on the animated cartoon Three Little Pigs. It was the intense stylization of those images, with their finely brushed outlines and their rounded and buttony furniture and their faces so curiously amalgamated of human and animal elements, that drew me in, into a world where I, child though I was, loomed as a king, and where my parents and other grownups were strangers.”
This is one of many passages where Updike talks about his childhood love of comics, a theme that recurs not just in essays but also in poems and short stories. What deserves attention in this passage is not only what Updike is saying but the textured and sensual language he’s using when he recalls the “oilclothy paper” and the “buttony furniture.” His tingling prose, where every idea and emotion is rooted in sensory experience, owes much to such modern masters as Joyce, Proust, and Nabokov, but it was also sparked by the cartoon images he saw in childhood, which trained his eyes to see visual forms as aesthetically pleasing. Indeed, the comparison with Nabokov is instructive since the Russian-born author of Lolitawas also a cartoon fan. The critic Clarence Brown has coined the term bedesque(roughly translated as “comic strip-influenced”) to describe the cartoony quality of Nabokov’s fiction, including its antic loopiness, its quicksilver movement from scene to scene, and its visual intensity. I think one reason Updike felt an affinity for Nabokov is because they both wrote bedesque prose. Read More >>
Search
Categories
Latest Posts
Inhumanitarians
2025-06-27 07:18The Dunce Party
2025-06-27 06:37Our Man in Hollywood
2025-06-27 06:013 tips for creating viral content from the creators who get it done
2025-06-27 05:53Popular Posts
A NASA rover just conquered a treacherous climb on Mars
2025-06-27 07:48Sexual Rights, Sexual Wrongs
2025-06-27 07:03Inhumanitarians
2025-06-27 07:00Last Man Standing
2025-06-27 06:27Best Amazon deal: The DJI Power 1000 is just $549
2025-06-27 06:23Featured Posts
Meta Quest 3S (256GB) deal: Score a free $30 Best Buy gift card
2025-06-27 08:03Pressure and Escape
2025-06-27 07:15The Gospel of Organizing
2025-06-27 07:02The Almighty Gun
2025-06-27 06:17Hands on with Lenovo's 'rollable' display laptop at CES 2025
2025-06-27 05:39Popular Articles
SpaceX will try to achieve 2 impressive feats on Monday
2025-06-27 07:52The Other American Frontier
2025-06-27 07:10Let Us Prey
2025-06-27 07:05Beautiful Lies
2025-06-27 06:48Today's Hurdle hints and answers for December 18
2025-06-27 06:10Newsletter
Subscribe to our newsletter for the latest updates.
Comments (3564)
Prosperous Times Information Network
OpenAI's Sora review: Marques Brownlee breaks down the AI video model
2025-06-27 08:17Wisdom Information Network
The View from Warsaw
2025-06-27 08:13Transmission Information Network
Speaking of Memory
2025-06-27 07:36City Information Network
Suffer the Little Children
2025-06-27 07:06Wisdom Information Network
The Onion has been denied bid to buy Alex Jones' InfoWars
2025-06-27 06:52