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![]() Click for words events NONFICTION REVIEW Drawn Eastward
Last year, English speakers were introduced to the work of Guy Delisle
through the graphic travel journal "Pyongyang," which recounted his
stay in the North Korean city by the same name. Now "Shenzhen," an
earlier work by Delisle about his experiences in China, is available in
English as well. The premises of the two texts are ostensibly the
same--both are graphic travelogues recounting Delisle's time in Asia
supervising animation for a French studio. But while the two books must
be considered together, they are actually very different, and in many
ways "Shenzhen" is the superior book. In "Pyongyang," Delisle takes
an oppressively over-politicized world and somehow manages to saturate
it with even more political content, often to the detriment of the book.
Maybe it was a consequence of the intensely politicized world of 2003,
or maybe Delisle was just trying too hard. At any rate, in "Shenzhen"
(originally published in French in 2000) his reception of Chinese
culture and politics seems less forced and more insightful. This time
around, we see the everyday makeup of Delisle's life in China--the way
that he manages his alienation and boredom by going to the gym, biking
to work, traveling, finding new restaurants, bossing around his
subordinates and trying to make friends. By concentrating more on
himself--even on the most banal moments of his life--his experience in
China begins to come into focus. Delisle is at his best when he lets his
graphical representations of spaces do the talking. In "Pyongyang," he
creates crisp, clean landscapes to convey a sense of a sterilized world.
But in "Shenzhen," Delisle configures the space quite differently.
Shenzhen is not clean and sterile and desolate like the city of
Pyongyang. Rather, it is crowded and loud and filthy. The artwork, then,
is smudged and grainy, and drawn with grease and charcoal--still, it
remains accessible, aesthetically pleasing and fun to read. Delisle also
demonstrates his sophistication and versatility as an artist by bouncing
from style to style. Style shifts can indicate flashbacks, mood swings
or even a change in Delisle's role as spectator. The result is Delisle's
funniest, most interesting and most creative work to be published in
English to date. "Shenzhen: A Travelogue from China"
By Guy Delisle
Drawn & Quarterly Books, $19.95, 148 pages
Also by Dan Bulla
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