Comic Strip of the Day

CSotD: Where bliss abides

Cragn120827

For any strips with families, and certainly for any that feature kids in starring roles, back-to-school cartoons are one of those tiresome annual required arcs, most of which can be safely ignored, except that then you'd miss a headspinner like today's Agnes.

Much of what makes this work is that it uses the concept of back-to-school without getting tangled up in the mandatory gags. There's a huge difference between acknowledging that kids are going back to school and getting into stereotype-lockstep with those insulting Staples commercials (which I haven't seen in a while, thank goodness) in which children are depressed over the prospect of returning to the classroom while parents celebrating getting rid of the brats.

I won't pretend this is a "poll," but we asked the kids who visit a web site I work with how they felt about back to school. Ten percent chose "My life is over" and another 27 percent picked "Living for the Weekend," but the rest were split between "Summer can be kind of boring" and "There's homework but I'll have plenty of free time." And that seems about right to me.

For my part, I didn't like class all that much as a kid, but I liked being back at school where my friends were, while, when I became a parent, I missed having the kids around after they went back to school. The cliches didn't hold at either end.

But none of this pontificating and projecting has much bearing on Agnes, whose existence is so surreal as to start off the chart and go in random directions from there.

PlumtreesI think I feel about Agnes the way other people feel about "Zippy the Pinhead" or "Hark! A Vagrant!" neither of which I quite get. That is, I understand what they're saying, I catch the references, but it doesn't resonate for me, and they are all strips where, if it doesn't resonate, it ain't happenin', but, if it does, it's as blissful as an abode with Plumtree's Potted Meat.

What the three strips have in common is that they feature references that, much of the time, are amusing enough to be pleasurable but then, more often than chance would dictate, offer up a nugget that is fabulous.

I suspect, however, that it is a rare person who finds equal fabulosity in the gems of each of those three strips. Not a value judgment, simply an observation.

In this case, the gem is the "well, of course" epiphany that these little girls, insightful as they are in their own universe, are utterly indifferent to the pop culture references of another generation, even one that has barely reached maturity itself.

Not "hostile" to them, and not even engaged enough to be "puzzled" by them, but, rather, completely untouched and indifferent to them. 

Trout is only mildly curious about sorting out which of the loveable mop-tops was Bailey. It does not matter to her in the least, except maybe as a sort of $100-level Jeopardy question. I give Agnes credit for even knowing who the "Power Rangers" were, except that it's likely that the lunchbox — excuse me, the "lunch loader" — has the words "Power Rangers" written on it.

And I have always adored the way Agnes and Trout accept the economic limits of their world. It reminds me of a story my grandfather told of being a young fellow not much older than these two, and lying on his back in the yard of friend in turn-of-the-century Ironwood, Michigan, a not-so-fashionable mining town on the Upper Peninsula, looking up at the sky and talking about the future.

He said something about growing up and leaving, and his friend asked, in some astonishment, "You'd leave this?"

My grandfather said he raised his head and looked around at the nearly grass-less red iron dirt of the yard, and back at the house, paint-free from the constant scouring of wind-swept sand, and said, "Yes."

Similarly, Agnes plans to get out one day, but Trout is more not so much "resigned to her fate" as simply comfortable with what she's been given, and, if she's more practical than Agnes, she's also less ambitious, the difference between "more practical" and "less ambitious" being, in the majority of cases, a distinction without a difference.

And yet, for all her impatience with the limitations of her reality, Agnes loves her grandmother and accepts that yard sale items are part of life, and that your grandmother isn't expected to quite get what it is you know and care about.

So anyway.

So, anyway, while there are some cartoonists who would probably do better crafting comics for Agnes's grandmother than they would writing them for her or for Trout, there are also those who aren't aiming for either demographic, and that's fine, too.

I doubt, for instance, that Agnes, Trout or Grandma would have a clue about today's "That Is Priceless," but it made me giggle.

Tip120827

 

 

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Comments 5

  1. Zippy the Pinhead frightened me when I was younger. And like you, it was not that the strips contents were over my head, but Zippy was one of a handful of strips that still challenged me as a reader and young adult still learning what life is. It made me think, it opened new doors of insight not on it’s own accord though. But rather the unique perspectives it offered on a daily basis opened up the freedom to question life further, in directions I may have never had the insight, audacity or openess to otherwise delve into. But it was that same ‘call to the wild’ that frightened me. Sometimes I was not willing to go where the strip beckoned me to. Partly because it was absurdity that drove Zippys mantra quips and partly because the vast majority of my school friends already thought I was weird with a capitol W, I didn’t need Zippys influence to capotilize the rest of the word on me while I wasn’t looking or worse yet add an O. WEIRDO. In the end the strip did teach me how to glean from the fringe while leaving the weird in it’s place.

  2. I discovered that Power Rangers is still running recently. The lunch loader probably doesn’t have the current characters on it, but they are still taking Japanese entai shows and converting them.

  3. I seem to have dropped an S. That should be Sentai shows.

  4. I absolutely despised school. Never mind that I was relatively successful in school and made it through college with a degree (and post college with a certificate).
    I will forever consciously and unconsciously link fall with going back to school and by absolutely despising school, I also absolutely despise fall (and winter, but that’s because snow sucks).
    Does any of this really matter? No, but it’s pretty obvious which camp I fall into.

  5. Love for, and understanding of her grandmother seems to trump, for Agnes, any sense that she sees herself as the center of the universe, entitled to exactly what she wants, the way she wants it. This is who her grandmother is – and rather than signalling the end of the world, it’s accepted as inextricably part of it. Gives this grandmother reassurance as she does her best to connect with her grandchildren.

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