European Graphic Novels+
“BD” refers to Franco-Belgian comics, but let's open things up to include ALL Euro comics and GN's. Euro-style work from around the world is also welcome!
* BD = "Bandes dessinées"
* BDT = Bedetheque
* GN = graphic novel
* LBK = Lambiek
* LC = "Ligne claire"
Please DO: 1) follow good 'netiquette' and 2) the four simple rules of lemm.ee (this instance) when posting and commenting. As for extracts, they're fine, but don't link to pirated downloads.
The designated language here is English, with a traditional bias towards French. When posting foreign-language content, please DO include helpful context for English-speakers.
---> Here's the community F.A.Q, and our resource page <---
RELATED COMMUNITIES:
- #bandes dessinées
- r/bandedessinee
- BritComics@feddit.uk
- Comics on Lemmy
- GN's on Lemmy
- Heathcliff (w/o HC)
- r/noDCnoMarvel
- Moebius_Art
- Moomin Valley
SEARCHES:
# #Tintin #Asterix #LuckyLuke #Spirou #Gaston #CortoMaltese #Thorgal #Sillage(Wake) #Smurfs #Trondheim #Moebius #Jodorowsky
view the rest of the comments
For sure. I feel lile that about drawing. It's another skill I'd love to aquire, but the level of detail that is desirous to obtain is daunting. Sometimes I yearn for a return to a child's simplicity of being able to make something without getting hung up on it looking "good". I feel that way about most things, writing, learning about new things, etc. It's what I aspire to attain most, the act of doing something irregardless of the percieved level of competence.
Ah yes, that's exactly something I chased for years, particularly in the arts. Trying to always retain the child's sense of wonder, and so forth.
Definitely. My motto these days is "the perfect is the enemy of the good". Although I don't always adhere to it completely. The past few months my writing has fallen off since I fell into the "it wont be good enough" mindset. I'm trying to shake myself out of it, but it's a difficult habit to break.
In Japan, I understand there to be a saying "wabi-sabi" that in some interpretations means something like "nothing is finished, nothing is perfect, and nothing lasts."
Since their national perfectionism can get out of hand at times (my interpretation), I think one can see how useful such a balancing phrase can be.
Definitely. I try to remember that. I just get stuck in my head the ideal of what I want, and if that ideal doesn't match what I think I am able to accomplish I just don't try in the first place. It's a terrible habit I need to break, especially if I'm going to ever get any decent amount of writing done :|
I think their perfectionism is pretty well known, or at least their intense work ethic. I was just watching something recently (can't remember, a docu I believe) that had a segment on Japanese work culture and how the Japanese government had to even force workers to take a vacation because it was eating into their economic activity. The Japanese were working so much that they weren't spending enough to stimulate their economy creating a downturn. One employer locked the doors and shut the power off at the office, and the workers broke into their own office building and did their work by flashlight and their own wifi hotspots. Crazy.
Wow, I hadn't heard about that before, but somehow it fits.
Unfortunately, along with their 'high work ethic,' I understand Japanese corporations and office workers have some traditions going on that are in turn killing the economy, and even the quality of their own lives. A big one of course is the idea that it's the height of gauche to leave work before your superior does, leading the average salaryman to stay at the office many more hours than he needs to, spending much of that time shuffling papers, napping, and mainly just wasting their time in order to save face. This leads to the person in question being able to spend much less time with their family. That's just a classic, super-well known problem, tho. The difficulties run much deeper, I'm afraid, part of why I'm somewhat morbidly curious reading r/japan and r/japanlife on the regular.
Yeah, the work culture in Japan is pretty crazy. Although, same could be said about US work culture in a lot of ways. Working three or more jobs. Crazy hours with little or no overtime in some places etc.
Another sad consequence of their brutal work culture, is the fact that suicide resulting from overwork is so prevalent that they actually have a specific term for it over there. I can't remember what it is called, but it's a big enough issue that it has it's own term and social consciousness.