Week 1: The Arrival by Shaun Tan
Shaun Tan's The
Arrival shows
us, without words, our reality of immigration through a fictional world. The graphic novel tells the story of a magical but
dangerous world and a man’s journey to an unknown land in order to seek a
better life for him and his family. The protagonist finds himself in a
mysterious new world of foreign customs, peculiar animals and indecipherable
languages where he must push through any social, lingual or cultural barriers
to forge a new life for him and his family. Through the power of only using
pictures it easily conveys the amount of passing time across, as well as conversations
between characters and even flashbacks and memories from other characters in
the story. The art is monochrome; so, it has also removed the medium of color
to in any way help get the story across. Through tones of golds, browns, and
blacks, Tan portrays this magical world, the emotion, and the progression
through soft shading and beautiful imagery. The underlying themes of belonging,
acceptance and personal identity are brilliantly illustrated throughout the
book, the textless sepia images often giving away much more than words ever
could. This also allows the reader greater freedom of imagination to interpret
the images, the absence of words creating a more conceptual approach to the originally
shown story.
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