Bezimena, by Nina Bunjevac
2019
Last month, I read Bujevac's Fatherland, and it was very good, if a heavy read. And that's okay. The world of comics needs heavy reads. Bezimena? Heavier!
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This cover will either draw people in or push them away. It obviously "sexy", but not a very sexy kind of sexy |
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There is a layer of myth over the book |
The main story I understood just fine: Benny, an upper middle class boy in the 1930's or so, has sexual issues. As a boy, he can't stop touching himself, and as a man, he is barely employed because he's not okay.
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From an early age, Benny can't keep his hands off of himself, regardless of the consequences |
This is the story of a sexual predator, told from the point of view of the predator, and a somewhat sympathetic one. Bunjevac is in no way approving of the behavior, but portrays Benny as someone not in control of their faculties. He's not malicious in his behavior.
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This is what Benny sees |
Most of the book is this, Benny's story. It's explicit and uncomfortable, and much of it I can't post pictures of without making this blog more adult than I would like it to be. But this is a book that goes to places most comics cannot. Sometimes the sexual images are beautiful: Benny is compelled by lust, and obviously on some level he is tempted by beauty and pleasure. But the images are also grotesque and cruel. Benny is hurting women.
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The ugly is rendered equal to the beautiful |
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A typical two page spread |
The book is almost entirely built on a single rhythm, a black left side page with a text balloon or two, and a full page image on the right side.
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A close up of that last page. An unbelievable amount of time has been spent on each page |
The book uses framing of am ancient priestess showing a woman Benny's life, and in the story Benny has dreams of himself as a stag, and these parts I couldn't quite wrap my head around. The book cover describes allusions to the myth of Artemis, and I'll trust it. I read it once, and I think this is a book to read twice or more to get its full meaning. It's a large book, but at one image per two page spread, it's a fairly brisk read. Only the distressing content keeps me from going back to it soon.
A hauntingly beautiful image |
Bunjevac writes an afterword piece about a near-rape experience she had as a teen which informed the book. That was an experience which altered the way she saw the world. She's not using rape as a plot device or source of pain as has been seen in comics, she's grappling with how men who don't want to think of themselves as bad could still do such a horrible thing. It's a hard idea to confront.
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