AnaMarie Mehmel
Professor Benander
World Literature II
14 February 2011
Reading Zorro was an interesting experience. It took probably an hour or so to read, which is pretty good. Zorro was not what I expected. I had never read a graphic novel before, preferring to read regular novels. It surprised me because it gave a whole different perspective to the story of Zorro than I would have gotten reading the traditional novel. The graphics done by Francavilla are so potent. It’s a story with in a story, and it grabs at a person. Reading the words on the page gives one reality that is so vivid; and tells the story of Diego de la Vega. He fight for justice against oppression and his need to be able to protect his family from harm show that there are people out there willing to stand up for those who cannot do so for themselves. Diego has to become El Zorro and become someone other than himself to do that. I think that was foreshadowed by his mother. His mother was a warrior woman from the Tongva tribe who became an upstanding Spanish lady named Regina. She had to hide her true self. She was a warrior, and she died as one. Francavilla shows the two sides of Regina wonderfully in the images of the attack of the pirates. S
he is dressed as a Spanish lady, but she fights as the warrior she is. Francavilla’s graphics of her fighting are always big and centered on her fight. She is so important to the development of El Zorro. Diego follows in her footsteps. He is a dandy by day and El Zorro by night. This is actually something people do all the time, probably without even realizing it. I know that until the idea of having two identities came up in Zorro I had never thought of how that happens in my own life. In school people see a carefree, happy, “cute” me. I’m fun and make people laugh, but at home it’s a little different. It is not all fun and games. At home I am with people who really know me and with whom I am not afraid to show my true emotions. I can be angry or sad or just plain crazy with my family. Showing that side of me to strangers is not acceptable. Diego does that by being a dandy than being Zorro. I have realized as I have gotten older that books really can describe a person’s life, even if it is fiction.
I agree that one of the significant plot additions of Allende is providing this strong mother figure. Now that you are reading Like Water for Chocolate, you see how important La Madre is in these cases. Allende brings back La Madre in her true archetypal form, and for many readers, this is very satisfying. I really like your last point about how fiction can come very close to truth. That's exactly why we like it so much.
ReplyDelete