Rated
May 25
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1 review
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arts, books
• graphicwitness.org

The Idea [Die Idee], first published 1920, has been republished by The Redstone Press, 1986 and reprinted 1991. The small, 1991 boxed edition contains two (out of a total of eight) original novels by Masereel, all of them "told in woodcuts." These two are titled The Idea and Story Without Words. The cover of the box cites Thomas Mann's response to them "'...so compelling, so deeply felt, so rich in ideas that one never tires of looking at them.'"
"An Idea springs from the mind of the Thinker and goes out into the world. She is naked, female, radiant, a pocket Venus embodying all ideals, and she finds herself in the mean streets of a twentieth century city -- among politicians and fat cats, torturers and striptease audiences, who take the Idea and use it for their own ends, or reject and try to destroy it..." [from a review in The Independent]
The first image in the book: the "Thinker" is blocked, as though his thoughts were caught in a web.

In the second image, the Idea strikes, with the force of lightning. [Next] we first meet the Idea as she springs from his now web-cleared brain.



The Thinker demonstrates his love for the Idea, and sad to let her go, sends her out into the world (in an envelope). But this beautiful Idea is not well received. People try to change the Idea, (rather than let the Idea change them); they attempt to clothe her, to tone down her alluring charms. Inspired by the Idea, one person is arrested and ultimately shot by a firing squad, but of course the Idea cannot die so easily.


After unsuccessfully offering herself to people in the countryside, the small town and the big city, the Idea attracts the attention of a scientist, who tries to confine her -- however, Ideas must be free. She flees and finds refuge at a book publisher. The books and materials that contain the Idea are burned, but as ever, the Idea is not destroyed.
{ftp sent to me by the clever and generous filippi. Unless we are caught in the University system, we are arguably no longer faced with these difficulties that beset the Idea in Die Idee. That is, unless one wants to freshen up the story and think of the internet as a place that catches your ideas in the web. But puns are a bad Idea!}