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Xã Xệ and Lý Toét

Xã Xệ and Lý Toét are a satirical duo which became popular fiction characters in sketches published as caricatures through the columns of the modernist Vietnamese newspapers in Tonkin from the 1930s to the 1940s.[1] Their influence went beyond the simple cartoon as they became archetypes of the transformations that Vietnam was going through, so much so that Lý Toét could be considered an "important figure in the urban world of 1930s Vietnam."[2]

Xã Xệ and Lý Toét
Group publication information
PublisherTự Lực Văn Đoàn (Self-Reliant Literary Group)
First appearance1932
Created by
Xã Xệ and Lý Toét
Creative team
Artist(s)Nguyễn Tường Tam (Đông Sơn)

Lê Minh Đức (Bút Sơn)
Tô Ngọc Vân (Tô Tử, Ái Mĩ)
Nguyễn Thứ Lễ (Lê Ta)

Nguyễn Tường Long (Tứ Ly)
Creator(s)

History edit

A cultural hybrid: from Vietnamese satire to Western cartoons of the 1920s edit

Xã Xệ and Lý Toét may have been inspired from Vietnamese tradition through the figures of Trạng Quỳnh (Master Quynh), the archetype of the shrewd lower-level literatus, and Trạng Lợn (Master Pig) who represented the court official as a fool. Represented often in Vietnamese folk theatre, these two traditional figures may have served as a background for these two characters.[3]

Foreign influences may have influenced the caricatures as well. Their publisher, Nhất Linh, has spent time studying in France in the late 1920s and early 1930s. The sketching style of Xã Xệ and Lý Toét echoes the drawing style of Le Canard Enchainé, a French satirical journal launched in 1915.[4] The archetype comic duo of a fat and a thin character is also reminiscent of the most famous comic duo of all, Laurel and Hardy, started in 1927, and it was known in Vietnam as "Mập – Ốm" (The Fat and the Skinny).

A Vietnamese printing success from South to North edit

The first satirical cartoon including the figure of Lý Toét was first published by Nhất Linh in his newspaper Phong Hóa ("Customs", or "Mores") after he took over the Hanoi weekly in 1932.[5] It was the first satirical journal in Indochina.[6] In 1936, a new paper called Ngày Nay ("These Days") was created to integrate this humour in a more serious and social-focused publication.[7] Because of their catchy humor, Lý Toét also allowed Phong Hoa to be "the first northern [Vietnam] journal to attract the attention of readers in the south [Vietnam]".[8] After the victory of the Popular Front in France, freedom of the press also allowed for a more direct political engagement even in cartoons.

Spreading humor across French Indochina edit

The duo was featured in more than 180 cartoons between 1934 and 1940.[9]

The journal's humoristic tone was a counterpoint to the serious and almost dramatic tone adopted by other Vietnamese intellectuals and chroncists such as Phạm Quỳnh. The characters also indulged in insiders' jokes, as when they indirectly compared Khái Hưng's weekly column in their own newspaper to "a rash caused by undercooked beans".[10]

The archetypal characters were so popular so copycat characters were created in competing newspapers such as the Central and Northern News (Trung Bắc Tân Văn) or Youth (Thanh Niên). Others found them downgrading for the Vietnamese peasantry.

In the decades after, the duo of Xa Xe and Ly Toet was copied in other newspapers as in the national high school newspaper Học sinh where Ly Toet was imitated in 1939.[11] There characters also lived on in various theatrical forms such as Chèo, Tuồng, Cai luong, dialogue, and even poetry.

In the former French Protectorate of Cambodia, Neay Koy and Neay Krom is a comic duo which is a Khmer equivalent. "Neay" refers to a small village chief and the Koy and Krem similarly refers to their clumsiness. There comic relationship which originated in Lakhon Bassac has become a popular television show.[12]

Characters edit

Although many of the drawings came from various contributors, the characters were always depicted with distinguishing features which to be depicted in similar and readily recognizable forms.

While the main protagonists where the duo of Xã Xệ and Lý Toét, others secondary characters also appeared such as Bang Bạnh.

Lý Toét was created by Nhất Linh, but Xã Xệ and Bang Bạnh were created by painter Nguyễn Gia Trí under the pseudonym Rigt. Other famous illustrators of that period contributed to the sketches such as:

  • Nguyễn Tường Tam (Đông Sơn)
  • Lê Minh Đức (Bút Sơn)
  • Tô Ngọc Vân (Tô Tử, Ái Mĩ)
  • Nguyễn Thứ Lễ (Lê Ta)
  • Nguyễn Tường Long (Tứ Ly...)

Lý Toét edit

 
Lý Toét in front the judge: injustice is a frequent theme in this classic Vietnamese cartoon.

Ly Toet was "the first sustained fictitious character in any Vietnamese newspaper". His omnipresent character can be described as a "country bumpkin". "" refers to lý trưởng which means a village mayor while "toét" generally has a negative connotation. He is an elderly, skinny, poorly dressed, ugly character. His traditional topknot Vietnamese, his moustache, his unshaved whiskers identify him as well as his umbrella. He has a daughter, Cô Ba Vành (Miss Three Rings), and a son named Toe who are both minor characters. While he likes to curse at "Western man" and his "Western habits", he often makes a fool of himself by his own ignorance and superstition.The character was inspired from seen by Nhất Linh in a cartoon published in a June 1931 issue of Women's Chronicle (Phụ nữ thời đàm). He first appeared in Phong Hóa on May 26, 1933.[13]

Xã Xệ edit

Xã Xệ or Bác Xã is the "rotund sidekick" of Lý Toét. His alliterative moniker means "the Saggy commune Chief." He also wears a traditional Áo ngũ thân flowing tunic distinctive of Vietnamese literati of the time without the turban however. His single hair sticks out from the back of his bald head in a way reminiscent of the pig's tail. He first appeared in a cartoon submitted by one of the paper's reader on March 16, 1934.[9]

Bang Bạnh edit

Bang Bạnh is one of the secondary characters who serves as a middle player between Xã Xệ and Lý Toét. His appearances are far less recurrent than the two others.

Themes: from social satire to political awareness edit

The main theme of the Xã Xệ and Lý Toét cartoons is the conflict between tradition and modernity especially because of the "disparity between traditional Sino-Vietnamese superstitions and modern science".[14]

As dissatisfaction grew among the Indochinese populations against the French colonization, these characters were "a useful mouthpiece for Vietnamese to voice criticism of France and its imperial project".[15] The cartoon was meant to criticize colonialism and social inequalities in a way that broke away with the communist rhetoric.[16]

While the humor is often at the expense of the elder generation, it is also a warning against the dangers of modernity and an expression of the fear and insecurity of certain Vietnamese in face of a changing future, as could also be seen from the Dumb Luck of Vũ Trọng Phụng.[17]

References edit

  1. ^ Herbelin, Caroline (2013). "Changements et opportunités dans l'architecture en Indochine pendant la période de Vichy". French Colonial History. 14: 103. doi:10.14321/frencolohist.14.2013.0089. ISSN 1539-3402. JSTOR 10.14321/frencolohist.14.2013.0089.
  2. ^ Dutton, George (2007). "Lý Toét in the City: Coming to Terms with the Modern in 1930s Vietnam". Journal of Vietnamese Studies. 2 (1): 102. doi:10.1525/vs.2007.2.1.80. ISSN 1559-372X. JSTOR 10.1525/vs.2007.2.1.80.
  3. ^ Dutton, George (2007). "Lý Toét in the City: Coming to Terms with the Modern in 1930s Vietnam". Journal of Vietnamese Studies. 2 (1): 86. doi:10.1525/vs.2007.2.1.80. ISSN 1559-372X. JSTOR 10.1525/vs.2007.2.1.80.
  4. ^ Dutton, George (2007). "Lý Toét in the City: Coming to Terms with the Modern in 1930s Vietnam". Journal of Vietnamese Studies. 2 (1): 85. doi:10.1525/vs.2007.2.1.80. ISSN 1559-372X. JSTOR 10.1525/vs.2007.2.1.80.
  5. ^ Luong, Hy V. (2003). Postwar Vietnam: Dynamics of a Transforming Society. Rowman & Littlefield. p. 263. ISBN 978-0-8476-9865-3.
  6. ^ Nguyen, Martina Thucnhi (2020-12-31). On Our Own Strength: The Self-Reliant Literary Group and Cosmopolitan Nationalism in Late Colonial Vietnam. University of Hawaii Press. p. 49. ISBN 978-0-8248-8673-8.
  7. ^ Dutton, George (2007-02-01). "Lýý Toéét in the City: Coming to Terms with the Modern in 1930s Vietnam". Journal of Vietnamese Studies. 2 (1): 81. doi:10.1525/vs.2007.2.1.80. ISSN 1559-372X.
  8. ^ Cherry, Haydon (2019-05-28). Down and Out in Saigon: Stories of the Poor in a Colonial City. Yale University Press. p. 184. ISBN 978-0-300-24493-9.
  9. ^ a b Nguyen, Martina Thucnhi (2020-12-31). On Our Own Strength: The Self-Reliant Literary Group and Cosmopolitan Nationalism in Late Colonial Vietnam. University of Hawaii Press. p. 61. ISBN 978-0-8248-8673-8.
  10. ^ Nguyen, Martina Thucnhi (2020-12-31). On Our Own Strength: The Self-Reliant Literary Group and Cosmopolitan Nationalism in Late Colonial Vietnam. University of Hawaii Press. p. 63. ISBN 978-0-8248-8673-8.
  11. ^ Robson, Kathryn; Yee, Jennifer (2005-04-28). France and Indochina: Cultural Representations. Lexington Books. p. 76. ISBN 978-0-7391-5517-2.
  12. ^ Peang, Koung (1994). The Giant Never Wins: Lakhon Bassac (Cambodian Folk Opera) in Philadelphia. Philadelphia Folklore Project. p. 64. ISBN 978-0-9644937-1-1.
  13. ^ Nguyen, Martina Thucnhi (2020-12-31). On Our Own Strength: The Self-Reliant Literary Group and Cosmopolitan Nationalism in Late Colonial Vietnam. University of Hawaii Press. pp. 58 sq. ISBN 978-0-8248-8673-8.
  14. ^ Nguyen, Martina Thucnhi (2020-12-31). On Our Own Strength: The Self-Reliant Literary Group and Cosmopolitan Nationalism in Late Colonial Vietnam. University of Hawaii Press. p. 65. ISBN 978-0-8248-8673-8.
  15. ^ Nguyen, Martina Thucnhi (2020-12-31). On Our Own Strength: The Self-Reliant Literary Group and Cosmopolitan Nationalism in Late Colonial Vietnam. University of Hawaii Press. p. 73. ISBN 978-0-8248-8673-8.
  16. ^ Ngoc, Phan (1998). "À la rencontre de deux cultures : l'influence de la littérature française au Viêt-nam". Aséanie, Sciences humaines en Asie du Sud-Est (in French). 1 (1): 140. doi:10.3406/asean.1998.1573.
  17. ^ Dutton, George (2007). "Lý Toét in the City: Coming to Terms with the Modern in 1930s Vietnam". Journal of Vietnamese Studies. 2 (1): 104. doi:10.1525/vs.2007.2.1.80. ISSN 1559-372X. JSTOR 10.1525/vs.2007.2.1.80.

Bibliography edit

  • Dutton, George (2007-02-01). "Lýý Toéét in the City: Coming to Terms with the Modern in 1930s Vietnam". Journal of Vietnamese Studies. 2 (1): 80–108. doi:10.1525/vs.2007.2.1.80. ISSN 1559-372X.
  • Dương, Đoàn Ánh; Kiên, Phùng; Tiến, Nguyễn Mạnh; Tuấn, Mai Anh; Nguyễn, Martina Thucnhi (2020-07-04). Phong Hóa thời hiện đại: Tự Lực văn đoàn trong tình thế thuộc địa ở Việt Nam đầu thế kỷ 20 (in Vietnamese). Sách Tao Đàn. ISBN 978-604-3-06142-0.
  • Nguyen, Martina Thucnhi (2021). On Our Own Strength: The Self-Reliant Literary Group and Cosmopolitan Nationalism in Late Colonial Vietnam. University of Hawai'i Press. doi:10.2307/j.ctv105b9bn.7. ISBN 978-0-8248-8333-1. JSTOR j.ctv105b9bn. S2CID 243064874.

Links edit

  • Một góc văn chương bị bỏ quên
  • Bang Bạnh - Xã Xệ - Lý Toét: Những "siêu sao" biếm họa Việt Nam

xệ, toét, satirical, which, became, popular, fiction, characters, sketches, published, caricatures, through, columns, modernist, vietnamese, newspapers, tonkin, from, 1930s, 1940s, their, influence, went, beyond, simple, cartoon, they, became, archetypes, tran. Xa Xệ and Ly Toet are a satirical duo which became popular fiction characters in sketches published as caricatures through the columns of the modernist Vietnamese newspapers in Tonkin from the 1930s to the 1940s 1 Their influence went beyond the simple cartoon as they became archetypes of the transformations that Vietnam was going through so much so that Ly Toet could be considered an important figure in the urban world of 1930s Vietnam 2 Xa Xệ and Ly ToetGroup publication informationPublisherTự Lực Văn Đoan Self Reliant Literary Group First appearance1932Created byNhất Linh Nguyễn Gia TriXa Xệ and Ly ToetCreative teamArtist s Nguyễn Tường Tam Đong Sơn Le Minh Đức But Sơn To Ngọc Van To Tử Ai Mĩ Nguyễn Thứ Lễ Le Ta Nguyễn Tường Long Tứ Ly Creator s Nhất Linh Nguyễn Gia Tri Contents 1 History 1 1 A cultural hybrid from Vietnamese satire to Western cartoons of the 1920s 1 2 A Vietnamese printing success from South to North 1 3 Spreading humor across French Indochina 2 Characters 2 1 Ly Toet 2 2 Xa Xệ 2 3 Bang Bạnh 3 Themes from social satire to political awareness 4 References 5 Bibliography 6 LinksHistory editA cultural hybrid from Vietnamese satire to Western cartoons of the 1920s edit Xa Xệ and Ly Toet may have been inspired from Vietnamese tradition through the figures of Trạng Quỳnh Master Quynh the archetype of the shrewd lower level literatus and Trạng Lợn Master Pig who represented the court official as a fool Represented often in Vietnamese folk theatre these two traditional figures may have served as a background for these two characters 3 Foreign influences may have influenced the caricatures as well Their publisher Nhất Linh has spent time studying in France in the late 1920s and early 1930s The sketching style of Xa Xệ and Ly Toet echoes the drawing style of Le Canard Enchaine a French satirical journal launched in 1915 4 The archetype comic duo of a fat and a thin character is also reminiscent of the most famous comic duo of all Laurel and Hardy started in 1927 and it was known in Vietnam as Mập Ốm The Fat and the Skinny A Vietnamese printing success from South to North edit The first satirical cartoon including the figure of Ly Toet was first published by Nhất Linh in his newspaper Phong Hoa Customs or Mores after he took over the Hanoi weekly in 1932 5 It was the first satirical journal in Indochina 6 In 1936 a new paper called Ngay Nay These Days was created to integrate this humour in a more serious and social focused publication 7 Because of their catchy humor Ly Toet also allowed Phong Hoa to be the first northern Vietnam journal to attract the attention of readers in the south Vietnam 8 After the victory of the Popular Front in France freedom of the press also allowed for a more direct political engagement even in cartoons Spreading humor across French Indochina edit The duo was featured in more than 180 cartoons between 1934 and 1940 9 The journal s humoristic tone was a counterpoint to the serious and almost dramatic tone adopted by other Vietnamese intellectuals and chroncists such as Phạm Quỳnh The characters also indulged in insiders jokes as when they indirectly compared Khai Hưng s weekly column in their own newspaper to a rash caused by undercooked beans 10 The archetypal characters were so popular so copycat characters were created in competing newspapers such as the Central and Northern News Trung Bắc Tan Văn or Youth Thanh Nien Others found them downgrading for the Vietnamese peasantry In the decades after the duo of Xa Xe and Ly Toet was copied in other newspapers as in the national high school newspaper Học sinh where Ly Toet was imitated in 1939 11 There characters also lived on in various theatrical forms such as Cheo Tuồng Cai luong dialogue and even poetry In the former French Protectorate of Cambodia Neay Koy and Neay Krom is a comic duo which is a Khmer equivalent Neay refers to a small village chief and the Koy and Krem similarly refers to their clumsiness There comic relationship which originated in Lakhon Bassac has become a popular television show 12 Characters editAlthough many of the drawings came from various contributors the characters were always depicted with distinguishing features which to be depicted in similar and readily recognizable forms While the main protagonists where the duo of Xa Xệ and Ly Toet others secondary characters also appeared such as Bang Bạnh Ly Toet was created by Nhất Linh but Xa Xệ and Bang Bạnh were created by painter Nguyễn Gia Tri under the pseudonym Rigt Other famous illustrators of that period contributed to the sketches such as Nguyễn Tường Tam Đong Sơn Le Minh Đức But Sơn To Ngọc Van To Tử Ai Mĩ Nguyễn Thứ Lễ Le Ta Nguyễn Tường Long Tứ Ly Ly Toet edit nbsp Ly Toet in front the judge injustice is a frequent theme in this classic Vietnamese cartoon Ly Toet was the first sustained fictitious character in any Vietnamese newspaper His omnipresent character can be described as a country bumpkin Ly refers to ly trưởng which means a village mayor while toet generally has a negative connotation He is an elderly skinny poorly dressed ugly character His traditional topknot Vietnamese his moustache his unshaved whiskers identify him as well as his umbrella He has a daughter Co Ba Vanh Miss Three Rings and a son named Toe who are both minor characters While he likes to curse at Western man and his Western habits he often makes a fool of himself by his own ignorance and superstition The character was inspired from seen by Nhất Linh in a cartoon published in a June 1931 issue of Women s Chronicle Phụ nữ thời đam He first appeared in Phong Hoa on May 26 1933 13 Xa Xệ edit Xa Xệ or Bac Xa is the rotund sidekick of Ly Toet His alliterative moniker means the Saggy commune Chief He also wears a traditional Ao ngũ than flowing tunic distinctive of Vietnamese literati of the time without the turban however His single hair sticks out from the back of his bald head in a way reminiscent of the pig s tail He first appeared in a cartoon submitted by one of the paper s reader on March 16 1934 9 Bang Bạnh edit Bang Bạnh is one of the secondary characters who serves as a middle player between Xa Xệ and Ly Toet His appearances are far less recurrent than the two others Themes from social satire to political awareness editThe main theme of the Xa Xệ and Ly Toet cartoons is the conflict between tradition and modernity especially because of the disparity between traditional Sino Vietnamese superstitions and modern science 14 As dissatisfaction grew among the Indochinese populations against the French colonization these characters were a useful mouthpiece for Vietnamese to voice criticism of France and its imperial project 15 The cartoon was meant to criticize colonialism and social inequalities in a way that broke away with the communist rhetoric 16 While the humor is often at the expense of the elder generation it is also a warning against the dangers of modernity and an expression of the fear and insecurity of certain Vietnamese in face of a changing future as could also be seen from the Dumb Luck of Vũ Trọng Phụng 17 References edit Herbelin Caroline 2013 Changements et opportunites dans l architecture en Indochine pendant la periode de Vichy French Colonial History 14 103 doi 10 14321 frencolohist 14 2013 0089 ISSN 1539 3402 JSTOR 10 14321 frencolohist 14 2013 0089 Dutton George 2007 Ly Toet in the City Coming to Terms with the Modern in 1930s Vietnam Journal of Vietnamese Studies 2 1 102 doi 10 1525 vs 2007 2 1 80 ISSN 1559 372X JSTOR 10 1525 vs 2007 2 1 80 Dutton George 2007 Ly Toet in the City Coming to Terms with the Modern in 1930s Vietnam Journal of Vietnamese Studies 2 1 86 doi 10 1525 vs 2007 2 1 80 ISSN 1559 372X JSTOR 10 1525 vs 2007 2 1 80 Dutton George 2007 Ly Toet in the City Coming to Terms with the Modern in 1930s Vietnam Journal of Vietnamese Studies 2 1 85 doi 10 1525 vs 2007 2 1 80 ISSN 1559 372X JSTOR 10 1525 vs 2007 2 1 80 Luong Hy V 2003 Postwar Vietnam Dynamics of a Transforming Society Rowman amp Littlefield p 263 ISBN 978 0 8476 9865 3 Nguyen Martina Thucnhi 2020 12 31 On Our Own Strength The Self Reliant Literary Group and Cosmopolitan Nationalism in Late Colonial Vietnam University of Hawaii Press p 49 ISBN 978 0 8248 8673 8 Dutton George 2007 02 01 Lyy Toeet in the City Coming to Terms with the Modern in 1930s Vietnam Journal of Vietnamese Studies 2 1 81 doi 10 1525 vs 2007 2 1 80 ISSN 1559 372X Cherry Haydon 2019 05 28 Down and Out in Saigon Stories of the Poor in a Colonial City Yale University Press p 184 ISBN 978 0 300 24493 9 a b Nguyen Martina Thucnhi 2020 12 31 On Our Own Strength The Self Reliant Literary Group and Cosmopolitan Nationalism in Late Colonial Vietnam University of Hawaii Press p 61 ISBN 978 0 8248 8673 8 Nguyen Martina Thucnhi 2020 12 31 On Our Own Strength The Self Reliant Literary Group and Cosmopolitan Nationalism in Late Colonial Vietnam University of Hawaii Press p 63 ISBN 978 0 8248 8673 8 Robson Kathryn Yee Jennifer 2005 04 28 France and Indochina Cultural Representations Lexington Books p 76 ISBN 978 0 7391 5517 2 Peang Koung 1994 The Giant Never Wins Lakhon Bassac Cambodian Folk Opera in Philadelphia Philadelphia Folklore Project p 64 ISBN 978 0 9644937 1 1 Nguyen Martina Thucnhi 2020 12 31 On Our Own Strength The Self Reliant Literary Group and Cosmopolitan Nationalism in Late Colonial Vietnam University of Hawaii Press pp 58 sq ISBN 978 0 8248 8673 8 Nguyen Martina Thucnhi 2020 12 31 On Our Own Strength The Self Reliant Literary Group and Cosmopolitan Nationalism in Late Colonial Vietnam University of Hawaii Press p 65 ISBN 978 0 8248 8673 8 Nguyen Martina Thucnhi 2020 12 31 On Our Own Strength The Self Reliant Literary Group and Cosmopolitan Nationalism in Late Colonial Vietnam University of Hawaii Press p 73 ISBN 978 0 8248 8673 8 Ngoc Phan 1998 A la rencontre de deux cultures l influence de la litterature francaise au Viet nam Aseanie Sciences humaines en Asie du Sud Est in French 1 1 140 doi 10 3406 asean 1998 1573 Dutton George 2007 Ly Toet in the City Coming to Terms with the Modern in 1930s Vietnam Journal of Vietnamese Studies 2 1 104 doi 10 1525 vs 2007 2 1 80 ISSN 1559 372X JSTOR 10 1525 vs 2007 2 1 80 Bibliography editDutton George 2007 02 01 Lyy Toeet in the City Coming to Terms with the Modern in 1930s Vietnam Journal of Vietnamese Studies 2 1 80 108 doi 10 1525 vs 2007 2 1 80 ISSN 1559 372X Dương Đoan Anh Kien Phung Tiến Nguyễn Mạnh Tuấn Mai Anh Nguyễn Martina Thucnhi 2020 07 04 Phong Hoa thời hiện đại Tự Lực văn đoan trong tinh thế thuộc địa ở Việt Nam đầu thế kỷ 20 in Vietnamese Sach Tao Đan ISBN 978 604 3 06142 0 Nguyen Martina Thucnhi 2021 On Our Own Strength The Self Reliant Literary Group and Cosmopolitan Nationalism in Late Colonial Vietnam University of Hawai i Press doi 10 2307 j ctv105b9bn 7 ISBN 978 0 8248 8333 1 JSTOR j ctv105b9bn S2CID 243064874 Links editMột goc văn chương bị bỏ quen Bang Bạnh Xa Xệ Ly Toet Những sieu sao biếm họa Việt Nam Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Xa Xệ and Ly Toet amp oldid 1175794815, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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