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Cyclopedia Exotica

by Aminder Dhaliwal

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935293,304 (4.15)6
"In Cyclopedia Exotica, doctor's office waiting rooms, commercials, dog parks, and dating app screenshots capture the experiences and interior lives of the cyclops community; a largely immigrant population displaying physical differences from the majority... Through this parallel universe, Dhaliwal comments on race, difference, beauty, and belonging, touching on all of these issues with her distinctive deadpan humour steeped in millennial references. Cyclopedia Exotica is a triumph of hilarious candor."--… (more)
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» See also 6 mentions

Showing 5 of 5
A beautifully drawn, wonderfully written story with a wonderful cast of characters. A very important and well-written run of stories about discrimination, subtle racism, institutionalized racism, microaggressions, and just... many different kinds of prejudice.

The part that stood out to me most was the line "about the lack of [group] representation even in [group]-driven art", particularly in recent book-banning debates. Schools are trying to ban "Maus", an incredibly phenomenal novel about the Holocaust from the perspective of Jews, and others are arguing about how stories about Jews and the Holocaust are often more readily accepted when they are written by and star Gentiles. We can't even star in films that are purportedly about us (e.g., "Woman in Gold", a story about the the Nazis stealing from Jews and using art featuring us as a status symbol; the film starred Gentiles playing Jews). So that really hit home.

I also loved the queer rep. There were some really lovely queer storylines and different relationship dynamics. And I loved all the references to mythology, even down to naming the characters.

Overall, a really lovely graphic novel. ( )
  AnonR | Aug 5, 2023 |
An amusing but thought-provoking collection of one- or two-page Instagram cartoons features an ensemble cast of one-eyed Cyclopes dealing with identity issues, relationships, microaggressions, discrimination, and bigotry in a world in which they are a minority to the two-eyed people who treated them as outright monsters for much of their shared history. There's no big plot uniting the book, but all of the characters have their own little arcs that kept me engaged.

The world-building seems incomplete even though it's just supposed to be our world but with Cyclopes. I thought it was a little odd that the Cyclopes are portrayed as multi-colored on the few color pages, but skin color seems to play no part in the prejudice against them or within their own culture. And while a few of the humans are portrayed as BIPOC, no time is spent on how they specifically relate to Cyclopes, whether they are allies in the struggle against discrimination or not. Does traditional racism not exist because of the presence of Cyclopes? What were the historical implications as to slavery, civil and world wars, and genocides? Also, a large portion of the cast are models, artists, or writers, leaving me to wonder how the blue-collar folks are getting by.

If you enjoy this, be sure to check out the author's similarly structured previous book, Woman World. ( )
1 vote villemezbrown | Apr 5, 2022 |
When I found out that the creator of Woman World (which I've recommended to almost everyone I know) had another book out I immediately ordered it without even bothering to check the synopsis. [A/N: I'm not a regular follower of her web comics on Instagram but I understand that this book is a combination of those as well as some additional pages on the same theme.]

In essence, this book is a satirical look at 'otherness' through the lens (haha the pun ain't lost on me) of several Cyclopes who are just trying to live their lives like the rest of the Two-Eyes on the planet. We follow Arj who is a super klutz, Bron who had corrective eye surgery that went badly wrong, Pol who continues to seek his 'happily ever after', and a whole host of other delightfully fleshed out characters. It has just enough humor to not make it depressing or preachy while also alighting on topics that are serious and complex such as bullying, body dysmorphia, sexual fetishization of the 'exotic', and intermarriage (just to name a few). These weighty topics are addressed beautifully by Dhaliwal. This is an author/illustrator to keep your eye(s) on because she's doing fantastic storytelling and I have a feeling she's only going to get better from here. I think you can already guess how I feel about this book but just in case you're on tenterhooks I really liked it. *mega thumbs up* ( )
  AliceaP | Aug 9, 2021 |
100% Team Aminder. ( )
  LibroLindsay | Jun 18, 2021 |
(Full disclosure: I received a free e-ARC for review through Edelweiss.)

CYCLOPEDIA EXOTICA begins as an encyclopedia entry on Cyclops: a totally real subspecies of "archaic humans" that originated in Italy and settled in western Eurasia, only to emerge from an isolated existence in caves and volcanoes ~120 years ago. Their efforts to integrate into "Two-Eyed" societies were often thwarted; Cyclopses were relegated to sheep herding, their traditional vocation, or recruited into circuses. All this changed with a nudie magazine called Playclops, which in 1978 featured a model named Etna on its cover.

At which point Etna comes to life and invites the reader to learn about Cyclops through their own stories. The comic strips in CYCLOPEDIA EXOTICA revolve around a large cast of Cyclops characters, loosely connected Six-Degrees-of-Kevin-Bacon style. There's Pari and Tim, an interspecies couple about to welcome their first child into the world; Latea, an aspiring model and actress; Pol, a romantic whose optimism is slowly but surely being drained by the dating scene; Bron, one of the first Cyclops to undergo experimental two-eye surgery, and who once again lives with one functioning eye; Arj, a vibrating ball of anxiety still haunted by his childhood bully; Grae and Jian, twin sisters in an avant garde artistic partnership; and, of course, former cover model Etna, now an activist, counterbalanced by Vy, who for a time was the face of the "lift and separator" bra, and now teaches media literacy to impressionable young Cyclopses.

https://www.flickr.com/photos/smiteme/51118082551/

https://www.flickr.com/photos/smiteme/51118082541/

The characters' life experiences and relationships with one another hint at some of the many topics Dhaliwal explores: fetishization, representation (including #ownvoices), unrealistic (and speciesist) beauty standards, police bias, hate crimes, capitalism, scientific speciesism, microaggressions, maternal mortality, etc.

Among my favorite panels are parents-to-be Pari and Tim declaring that they don't care whether their baby has one eyes or two, as long as they're healthy - and a boy (!);

https://www.flickr.com/photos/smiteme/51117995133/

https://www.flickr.com/photos/smiteme/51117517777/

and Arj, confronting his childhood bully Eric Wood.

https://www.flickr.com/photos/smiteme/51117995088/

CYCLOPEDIA EXOTICA is an insightful, entertaining read, though it gave me all kinds of mixed feelings. Dhaliwal uses a mythical creature to interrogate racism, xenophobia, and misogyny - and, while I think it mostly works, the idea itself makes me uncomfortable: what does it say about the collective we, if we're better able to relate to or sympathize with a fictional creature than, say, Black people or immigrants? I guess you could argue that fantastical setting and comedic setup might lower the audience's guard, making them more susceptible to your message. And yeah, this is probably true, to an extent. But this makes me wonder how many readers will actually connect the dots, especially as Dhaliwal tends to end each strip with a lighthearted joke rather than doubling down on her point.

Either way, I enjoyed CYCLOPEDIA EXOTICA (even more so on the second reading), and can't wait to dive into her freshman book, WOMAN WORLD. ( )
  smiteme | Apr 15, 2021 |
Showing 5 of 5
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The Cyclops is an exotic subspecies of archaic humans that settled in western Eurasia.
Wow, they have the first "Playclops" . . . This must be worth something. I mean, other than the inherent worth of Etna changing everything for us Cyclopes.
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"In Cyclopedia Exotica, doctor's office waiting rooms, commercials, dog parks, and dating app screenshots capture the experiences and interior lives of the cyclops community; a largely immigrant population displaying physical differences from the majority... Through this parallel universe, Dhaliwal comments on race, difference, beauty, and belonging, touching on all of these issues with her distinctive deadpan humour steeped in millennial references. Cyclopedia Exotica is a triumph of hilarious candor."--

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