Claire Bretécher (1940–2020)
Author of Les Frustrés 1
About the Author
Series
Works by Claire Bretécher
Salades de saison (Collection Dargaud 16/22 [i.e. seize/vingt-deux]) (French Edition) (1979) 4 copies
Claire Bretécher 2 copies
décollage délicat 2 copies
Frustrati 1 & 2 1 copy
Les Angoisses de Cellulite 1 copy
Les Frustrés - intégrale - Volume 1 - Selected Pages from Claire Bretécher's groundbreaking work (2017) 1 copy
L’Écho des Savanes 1 copy
Turha joukko 2 1 copy
Salades de saison 2e partie 1 copy
Les frustrés 1 copy
Associated Works
Tagged
Common Knowledge
- Canonical name
- Bretécher, Claire
- Birthdate
- 1940-04-17
- Date of death
- 2020-02-11
- Gender
- female
- Occupations
- cartoonist
- Nationality
- France
- Birthplace
- Nantes, Loire-Atlantique, Pays de la Loire, France
- Place of death
- 10e arrondissement, Paris, Île-de-France, France
- Burial location
- Cimetière de Montmartre, Paris, France
- Map Location
- France
- Associated Place (for map)
- France
Members
Reviews
It may not make sense for me to say how great this is, considering that I only understood maybe 50% of it: not only do I not speak French fluently, but as part of her attempt to make the teenage dialogue in Agrippine equally confusing for all ages, Bretécher made up a whole lot of slang no French person ever used before. But that's part of the fun, because it's not just arbitrary jargon but puns on terms that are already puns on or backwards versions of something else, so once you do figure show more it out it's both logical and ridiculous in the same way that natural language is—plus, her dialogue is fun even if you have no idea what they're saying, because Bretécher has such a perfect ear for tone and rhythm and she directs her "actors" so well. I don't know if she and Jules Feiffer influenced each other, or just developed similar writing and drawing styles independently, but they're brilliant in a lot of the same ways (although for a North American reader, Agrippine also weirdly recalls For Better or for Worse—Lynn Johnston is less rude and more naturalistic, and allows her people to grow up, but I think there's a similar feeling for character and detail).
Anyway, this is a bunch of one-page strips about a teenager in 1988 who's relatable yet unbearable. She's 14 or 15 and she looks just as awkward as people are afraid they look at that age, kind of like Beavis and Butt-Head with better drawings, but she acts insanely confident about everything. Her life is full of drama even though she never really does anything. She has an on-and-off boyfriend, Modern (none of the kids have regular names, they're all English words or weird historical references), who's a pretentious ass, but kind of lovable for his dorky desperation. One very simple story I like a lot is just Modern lecturing her endlessly about his philosophy, while he inches closer into her personal space and she just stares at him with the smallest possible increase in tension, until he's about to try to kiss her and she suddenly says "You're a genius but I'm not interested in you physically" (which, we know from other episodes, she totally is). He brushes it off and says he's not interested either because she's not smart enough. She takes offense to that—so he challenges her to summarize all the bullshit he just said. That's about as adult as the situations get; other times we see how much of a little kid Agrippine still is, with a kid's idea of how to negotiate with the world (she talks her way into a babysitting job at a luxurious home she wants to hang out at, but backs out when she realizes it'll actually involve babysitting).
I guess I'll have to read this in English some time, but I won't get my hopes up: I think even the world's greatest translator might not be able to make the jokes make sense and make the writing work so well with the drawing. In conclusion, Claire Bretécher rules. show less
Anyway, this is a bunch of one-page strips about a teenager in 1988 who's relatable yet unbearable. She's 14 or 15 and she looks just as awkward as people are afraid they look at that age, kind of like Beavis and Butt-Head with better drawings, but she acts insanely confident about everything. Her life is full of drama even though she never really does anything. She has an on-and-off boyfriend, Modern (none of the kids have regular names, they're all English words or weird historical references), who's a pretentious ass, but kind of lovable for his dorky desperation. One very simple story I like a lot is just Modern lecturing her endlessly about his philosophy, while he inches closer into her personal space and she just stares at him with the smallest possible increase in tension, until he's about to try to kiss her and she suddenly says "You're a genius but I'm not interested in you physically" (which, we know from other episodes, she totally is). He brushes it off and says he's not interested either because she's not smart enough. She takes offense to that—so he challenges her to summarize all the bullshit he just said. That's about as adult as the situations get; other times we see how much of a little kid Agrippine still is, with a kid's idea of how to negotiate with the world (she talks her way into a babysitting job at a luxurious home she wants to hang out at, but backs out when she realizes it'll actually involve babysitting).
I guess I'll have to read this in English some time, but I won't get my hopes up: I think even the world's greatest translator might not be able to make the jokes make sense and make the writing work so well with the drawing. In conclusion, Claire Bretécher rules. show less
De 1973 à 1980, dans les pages du Nouvel Obs, Claire Bretécher signe chaque semaine le portrait des Frustrés qui lui vaut d'être qualifiée de « meilleure sociologue de l'année » en 76 par Roland Barthes. Elle croque, certes avec tendresse, mais surtout avec une lucidité impitoyable ces Français snobs, intellos, gauchisants et surtout totalement largués.
Prés de 30 ans plus tard, ces pages hilarantes sont un témoignage jubilatoire de tous nos travers et le meilleur moyen de se show more rendre compte que rien n'a changé, de Frustrés nous sommes juste devenus des bobos, mais les symptômes sont les mêmes. show less
Prés de 30 ans plus tard, ces pages hilarantes sont un témoignage jubilatoire de tous nos travers et le meilleur moyen de se show more rendre compte que rien n'a changé, de Frustrés nous sommes juste devenus des bobos, mais les symptômes sont les mêmes. show less
Agrippine est une adolescente des années 1990. Cynique, teigneuse, cossarde, désabusée, peste, mais touchante à force de se chercher – en vain – une identité. Elle traîne son mal de vivre avec ses copines de classe, houspille son petit frère et drague au coup par coup des garçons qui ont du mal à la suivre. Agrippine use allègrement d'un langage aussi mystérieux qu'hilarant : "pourquoi les gnolguis xéroxent tout leur comporte sur des gourous baveux, ça persécute à force", show more susurre-t-elle à sa meilleure amie, plongée dans un abîme de perplexité. Pleine d'humour et de tendresse cachée, Agrippine tend un miroir gentiment déformant aux adolescentes et aux adolescents de sa génération. Claire Bretécher a créé le personnage d'Agrippine dans les colonnes du Nouvel Observateur, à la fin des années 1980. L'intégrale comporte cinq albums, parus entre 1988 et 1998 : Agrippine, Agrippine prend vapeur, Les Combats d'Agrippine, et Agrippine et les Inclus , Agrippine et l'Ancêtre. Bretécher retrouve la verve et la vivacité qu'elle exprimait dans sa série Les Frustrés, pour décrire les états d'âme d'une jeune femme représentative de son temps. L'humour acidulé et caustique présent tout au long de l'intégrale Agrippine aidera le lecteur à passer un bon moment, en réfléchissant aux travers de notre époque. --Jean-François Courtille show less
The longhand writing makes the comic hard to read, but if you're willing to make the effort it's hilarious.
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Statistics
- Works
- 74
- Also by
- 2
- Members
- 1,069
- Popularity
- #24,075
- Rating
- 3.7
- Reviews
- 15
- ISBNs
- 213
- Languages
- 8
- Favorited
- 3

















