Robert Crumb's Genesis (via Ben Witherington's blog):
And now for something completely different. The Bible as graphic
novel, or at least graphic comic book. Robert Crumb is well known to
underground comic book aficionados. To the rest of the reading
public-- not so much. Robert Crumb was born in Philly and began his
drawing career coming up with playful and witty greeting cards. He
became a sort of cult figure in the 60s for creating characters like
Fritz the Cat and there was even a documentary about him in 1994, but
FYI, his comics were too R or even X rated in some cases for most. For
the last eighteen or so years of his life he has lived in France (and
laments he still hasn't mastered the language) with his fellow
cartoonist wife Aline Kominsky.
Now however this super-lapsed
Catholic has decided to depict scenes from all 50 chapters of Genesis,
with the emphasis on verbatim. Those of us who knew a bit about his
snarky past were holding our collective breath, but Rabbi Simcha
Weinstein, author of the well-titled book Up,Up, and Oi Vey
(the history of how Jews had influence on the creation of fictional
super-heroes) reassures us that Crumb has not given us a crumby
treatment of Genesis. Of course the literal depiction of murder,
incest, rape, and a host of the other things that go on in Genesis
itself is enough to curdle one's milk and curl one's hair. Hide the
babies and pack up the old ladies. But then alas, the Bible is hardly
a G or PG book--- it tells it like it is, even when it comes to all
our human falleness. It is thus not a surprise that in the 224 pages
of this book (out today and published by W.W. Norton) some of these pen
and ink drawings reflect the sensual and violent character of some of
these stories. This is a comic book my Mom would not have let me read
in the 9th grade! Indeed she would have said 'Exodus with this
Genesis'. [more . . .]
The kudos for this book are also coming in
from other quarters--- Rev. James Martin, a Jesuit priest and
chronicler of pop culture thinks Crumb is successfully translating the
Bible into a new medium. And even Robert Alter (with or without his
ego) well known for his rendering of The Five Books of Moses endorses
the project. Crumb actually based what he did in part on the
translations of Alter. For example Jacob's ladder becomes Jacob's ramp
in Alter's translation, and Crumb follows the latter, rather than the
former, in his drawing.
In the end Crumb after long debating how to depict God (as a bright light???) fell back on the old stand by--- God as the old white guy with the long white beard. I wonder what the Mormons would say about this Genesis.,
What I think is that in an age of visual learners, some of this material in Crumb's book is user friendly for church and synagogue folk, though one has to pick and choose and be discerning. Lord knows our Sunday school and Bible study literature could use some updating of its images. One grows weary of the Rococo Jesus, and Rubenesque cherubs.
Robert Crumb has drawn his own conclusions about Genesis-- quite literally. I'll let you draw yours about his.