The LGBT war on whimsy: now Tintin is gay?
Tintin (character) (Photo credit: Wikipedia) |
One of the most tiresome things about the
rainbow revolutionaries is their incessant war on whimsy.
It is not enough that revisionist hack
historians are transposing today’s hypersexualized climate onto male friendships
of the past, insisting that Abraham Lincoln must have been gay or “bi-sexual”
or that Jonathan and David must have been lovers. Following in their footsteps,
the post-modernists in the field of literature have decided that the fictional
characters of the literary canon are also in need of a rewrite. Characters
created in the Judeo-Christian context are now being recast to create heroes
for the soulless Sexual Revolution. Anne of Green Gables and her “bosom friend”
Diana, they insist, must have been lesbian lovers—and to boot, orphan Anne
would have been an abortion activist had she been alive! (My wife’s brilliant
response to
that particular proposal was quoted in the National Post.) Shakespeare is also
full of homoeroticism, apparently—especially if you are the type of academic
who has never relinquished the adolescent ability to see everything as sexual.
Anne of Green Gables
wasn’t a lesbian. Tintin wasn’t gay. And pre-schoolers don’t need to be
introduced to homosexual puppets. These activists need to leave sex out of
childhood, and stop trying to force their lifestyles into the whimsy and
innocence of children’s stories.
And now, I’ve discovered, it’s been “revealed”
that the beloved European adventurer Tintin is gay, as well. Tintin, the
international crime-fighter who travels the globe with his trusty dog Snowy and
a colorful cast of characters including old sea dog Captain Haddock and the
absent-minded Professor Cuthbert Calculus, was created by Hergé, the penname
used by Belgian artist Georges Remi. No fictional character, it seems, is safe
from the sexual iconoclasm and literary vandalism of those who wish to project
their sexual motivations on everything and everyone.
Like many children of a European background, I
grew up voraciously reading the Tintin albums. I was thus interested when I saw
that one of my favorite blogs, The
Imaginative Conservative, had
posted an essay referring
to Tintin as “The True European.” From there, I ended up reading Catholic
journalist Denis Tillinac’s analysis of Tintin, who notes: “He’s a solitary
adventurer. The heroes of the Left—say Guevara—are heroes subject to a
revolutionary project, hooked on a doctrine and responding to the necessities
of strategy. Tintin is a solitary adventurer animated by the evangelical
message: the widow and the orphan; by the values of chivalry. He acts as a
knight of modern times by knowing—another theme of the Right—that man is not
good and never will be.”
Like all durable fictional characters who
succeed in capturing the imagination of millions, the Tintin stories are loved
because they show the never-ending battle between good and evil, and good
nearly always wins.
But then, unfortunately, I clicked on the Business
Insider column
that explained - “revealed,” per the headline - that Tintin was gay. Now, I
realize that there is a whiff of the absurd about all of this. Tintin is a
fictional character who was created in the imagination of Georges Remi. The
idea that a fictional character has any life at all outside of the pages of the
work of their creator is the stuff of childhood imagination. But perhaps
because the sexualisation of everything is
beginning to become so tiresome, let me take a few moments to explain why this
literary “theory” is as stupid as it is absurd.
The “theory” was put forward by British gay
rights activist Matthew Parris, and is broken down by Business
Insider thusly:
Background and origins: A total mystery.
Tintin never talks about his parents or family, as though trying to block out
the very existence of a father or mother. As psychologists will confirm, this
is common among young gay men, some of whom find it hard to believe that they
really are their parents' child. The “changeling” syndrome is a well-known gay
fantasy...
It is not, however, a “mystery” that Tintin’s
family is not mentioned to anyone who is familiar with the background of his
creator. As Georges Remi’s biographers will tell you, there is much autobiographical
content within his work, as there is with any author’s work. (Tom McCarthy’s Tintin
and the Secret of Literature is
probably the best such biography.) Here, in fact, are the
simple autobiographical details that
explain the absences Parris uses to project his proclivities:
Georges Rémi's background and upbringing had
not always been happy. His grandmother had given birth to twins (no, not called
Thomson and Thompson), but she never really knew their father. She later
married Philippe Rémi, a neighbour, who became a "pseudo-father" to
the twins until she died in 1901, six years before Georges was born. Philippe,
his "pseudo-grandfather", survived her until 1941 and yet Hergé never
met him.
Growing up, he was not close to his younger
brother Paul either, and tortured private letters and certain family sources
allege that he may have been abused by his uncle, Charles Arthur, 10 years his
senior. He once wrote, "Not everyone is lucky enough to be born an
orphan." Later, he was unable to have children, as he had been made
sterile accidentally during treatment for boils. It's no accident that Tintin
and the other main characters have no parents, partners, children or close
family relationships. Even the Thom(p)sons are not twin brothers; after all,
their surnames are different.
Right. So that takes care of that.
Next, Parris claims that Tintin’s close
friendship with Captain Haddock must be of a homosexual nature, because (as I’ve
written before), true friendship seems to be
something inconceivable to some gay activists. The truth, as Remi told an interviewer,
was that “women have nothing to do with a world like Tintin’s, which is a world
of male friendship.” Parris points with great fanfare to the lack of female
characters in the Tintin adventures, as if this is somehow hugely significant.
As far as that goes, Georges Remi was raised Catholic and felt enormously
guilty for several affairs he pursued over the years, one of which culminated
in Remi leaving his first wife for Fanny Rodwell, a fellow artist. He never
managed to calm his conscience over this. The influence of his religious
upbringing was far too strong. One writer explains
it this way:
Any hints of sexuality are largely absent too
from the Tintin books, apart from the unwanted attention Bianca Castafiore
gives whisky-loving sea-dog Captain Haddock. As for Hergé, he privately
grappled with sexual guilt for years. He admitted that he had quit his first
troop of "boy scouts without God" out of disgust at the brawling and
group masturbation into which older boys lured their juniors. What would
Baden-Powell have said?
It takes the very briefest of glances at life
and work of Georges Remi to answer the innuendo-laden questions that Parris
presents as irrefutable proof that Tintin, a fictional character, was gay. Each
of his so-called evidences have very simple explanations, explanations readily
available to anyone interested in the story-teller behind the stories, which
Parris obviously is not. Like the rest of the sexual revolutionaries, he is
trying to hijack beloved characters from children’s literature to further his
sexual agenda.
The only reason I’ve bothered to write a
response to such a nonsensical issue is because the constant attempts to
retroactively sexualize literature - especially children’s literature
- is becoming wearisome. This is an attempt by the sexual revolutionaries to
colonize childhood. That is why the LGBTQ lobby has been pushing Disney for so
long to portray a gay character in one of their children’s films. That is why
activists launched a petition begging the children’s show Sesame
Street to
announce that Ernie and Bert were gay, eliciting a rather frosty response in
which the creators reminded the activists that the characters were
puppets, “created to teach preschoolers that people can be good
friends,” and furthermore, that puppets do not exist below the waist.
Anne of Green Gables wasn’t a lesbian, as L.M.
Montgomery would readily tell you. Tintin wasn’t gay, as Georges Remi would
assure you. Pre-schoolers don’t need to be introduced to homosexual puppets.
These activists need to leave sex out of childhood, and stop trying to force
their lifestyles into the whimsy and innocence of children’s stories.