PublicLiterature.Org | Alphabetical Index

Asterix

Asterix (originally Astérix) is the fictional hero of a series of comic books created by René Goscinny and Albert Uderzo in France. The books have been translated into many languages (including Latin and ancient Greek) and are available in most countries. It's probably the most popular French comic in the world.

One key element in the success of the series is that it contains comic elements for several publics: young children like the fist-fights and other visual gags, while adults would see allusions to classical education and contemporary figures.

Table of contents
1 Setting and characters
2 List of volumes
3 Films
4 Video Games
5 External links

Setting and characters

Asterix lives around 50 BC in a fictional village in northwest Gaul (Armorica), the only part of that country not yet conquered by Julius Caesar. The inhabitants of the village gain superhuman strength from drinking a magic potion prepared by the druid Getafix (originally Panoramix - names of all characters except "Asterix" and "Obelix" vary from one translation to another). Many books in the Asterix series have as their main plot the attempt by the Roman army of occupation to prevent the druid from making the potion, or the attempt to get some of it for their own use. Such attempts are inevitably foiled by Asterix and his friend Obelix.

The humour encountered in the Asterix comics often centres on anachronistic caricatures and tongue-in-cheek stereotypes of contemporary European nations and French regions. In Asterix and the Goths, for instance, the Goths are represented as militaristic and regimented, reminiscent of late nineteenth and early twentieth century Germans. The helmets worn by these Goths even resemble the German pickelhaube helmets worn up to World War I and one of their leaders bears an uncanny resemblance to Otto von Bismarck. The British are shown as polite, drinking warm beer or hot water (before the first tea has been brought to England by Asterix) and boiling all their food. Spain is the cheap country down south where people from the North vacation (and demand to eat the same food as they are used to at home). Some caricatures of the traits of certain French regions are also used (the people from Normandy cannot give a straight answer; the people from Marseille play boules and exaggerate matters, Corsicans are easily angered and have long-standing family feuds that they settle violently...).

In spite of this stereotyping and the streaks of French chauvinism, it has been very well received by cultures around the world -- the USA, where it never caught on, being a notable exception.

The stories also feature allusions to major artistic works (such as Pieter Bruegel's Peasant Wedding and Victor Hugo's story of the battle of Waterloo from Les Châtiments in Asterix in Belgium), historical personalities (Napoleon, Louis XIV of France), famous places (Le Moulin Rouge).... [1]

However, in many other respects the series reflects life in the 1st century BC as accurately as can be expected from the medium. For example, the multistoried apartments in Rome - the insulae - has Obelix remarking that one man's roof is another man's floor and consequently "These Romans are crazy" - his favourite line. The text makes relatively regular use of original Latin proverbs, and allusions to Julius Caesar's De Bello Gallico, a book about the conquest of Gaul, later used as an introductory text to Latin. Some jokes are made about Caesar's use of the third person to write about himself. Such allusions were likely to be well-received in the by the better-educated sections of the French and Belgian public in the 1960s, when the teaching of Latin was still widespread in highschools.

A key feature of the text of the Asterix books are the constant puns used as names of characters; The names of the two protagonists come from the French names for the asterisk and the obelisk. English language examples include the chief (Vitalstatistix), the druid (Getafix), the woeful bard of the village (Cacofonix), the fishmonger (Unhygienix), an old man (Geriatrix) with a young wife. Incidental characters often feature names like "Hiphiphurrax" and "Mykingdomforanos". This punning tradition occurs in other languages; for example, in the French original, the chief is called "Abraracourcix", derived from the phrase "à bras raccourcis" meaning 'with arms raised and ready, ready to punch'. The Egyptian in Astérix Légionnaire is named "Courdeténis" in French, "Ptenisnet" in English.

As a kind of visual pun, minor characters often resemble famous people or fictional characters. Notable examples include Britain's most famous bards, in Asterix in Britain, who are four in number and look like the Beatles; and a pair of Belgian warriors in Asterix in Belgium who resemble Thomson and Thompson of the Belgian Tintin comic book. Some of the side characters are caricatures of existing French people of the same era, particularly from television and the spectacles; in Obelix and Co., the young Roman bureaucrat is a caricature of young Jacques Chirac. More recently, this has occasionally extended to major characters: in Asterix and the Black Gold, a Roman spy is Sean Connery as James Bond, and in Asterix and Obelix All at Sea, the leader of the escaped slaves is Kirk Douglas as Spartacus.

List of volumes

Goscinny and Uderzo

  1. 1961 - Asterix the Gaul (Astérix le Gaulois)
  2. 1962 - Asterix and the Golden Sickle (La serpe d'or)
  3. 1963 - Asterix and the Goths (Astérix et les Goths)
  4. 1964 - Asterix the Gladiator (Astérix gladiateur)
  5. 1965 - Asterix and the Banquet (Le tour de Gaule d'Astérix)
  6. 1965 - Asterix and Cleopatra (Astérix et Cléopâtre)
  7. 1966 - Asterix and the Big Fight (Le combat des chefs)
  8. 1966 - Asterix in Britain (Astérix chez les Bretons)
  9. 1967 - Asterix and the Normans (Astérix et les Normands)
  10. 1967 - Asterix the Legionary (Astérix légionnaire)
  11. 1968 - Asterix and the Chieftain's Shield (Le bouclier Arverne)
  12. 1968 - Asterix at the Olympic Games (Astérix aux jeux olympiques)
  13. 1969 - Asterix and the Cauldron (Astérix et le chaudron)
  14. 1969 - Asterix in Spain (Astérix en Hispanie)
  15. 1970 - Asterix and the Roman Agent (La zizanie)
  16. 1970 - Asterix in Switzerland (Astérix chez les Helvêtes)
  17. 1971 - The Mansions of the Gods (Le domaine des Dieux)
  18. 1972 - Asterix and the Laurel Wreath (Les lauriers de César)
  19. 1972 - Asterix and the Soothsayer (Le devin)
  20. 1973 - Asterix in Corsica (Astérix en Corse)
  21. 1974 - Asterix and Caesar's Gift (Le cadeau de César)
  22. 1975 - Asterix and the Great Crossing (La grande traversée)
  23. 1976 - Obelix and Co. (Obélix et compagnie)
  24. 1979 - Asterix in Belgium (Astérix chez les Belges)
  25. 1980 - Asterix and the Great Divide (Le grand fossé)
  26. 1981 - Asterix and the Black Gold (L'Odyssée d'Astérix)
  27. 1983 - Asterix and Son (Le fils d'Astérix)
  28. 1987 - Asterix and the Magic Carpet (Astérix chez Rahazade)
  29. 1991 - Asterix and the Secret Weapon (La rose et le glaive)
  30. 1996 - Asterix and Obelix All at Sea (La galère d'Obélix)
  31. 2001 - Asterix and the Actress (Astérix et Latraviata)
  32. 2004 - Asterix and the Class Act (Astérix et la rentrée gauloise)

Films

Many of Asterix's adventures have also been made into films:

  1. 1967 - Asterix the Gaul (Astérix le Gaulois) (animation)
  2. 1968 - Asterix and Cleopatra (Astérix et Cléopâtre) (animation)
  3. 1976 - The Twelve Tasks of Asterix (Les douze travaux d'Astérix) (animation)
  4. 1985 - Asterix Versus Caesar (Astérix et la surprise de César) (animation)
  5. 1986 - Asterix in Britain (Astérix chez les Bretons) (animation)
  6. 1989 - Asterix and the Big Fight (Astérix et le coup du menhir\) (animation)
  7. 1994 - Asterix Conquers America (Asterix in Amerika) (animation; filmed in Germany for a change)
  8. 1999 - Asterix and Obelix Take On Caesar (Astérix et Obélix contre César) (live action film)
  9. 2002 - Asterix & Obelix: Mission Cleopatra (Astérix & Obélix: Mission Cléopâtre) (live action film)
  10. 2006 - Asterix and the Vikings (Astérix et les Vikings)(animation) (?)

Video Games

External links