Pedigree Girls
by Sherwin Tjia
Insomniac Press, 2001
Reviewed by Nathan Whitlock
But for a couple of minor exceptions, the only thing
that changes in the 300-odd comic strips that make up Toronto poet,
painter, and journalist Sherwin Tjia’s Pedigree Girls is the
dialogue. Each strip’s three panels are identical: shoulder-up drawings
of two blandly pretty girls, one a blonde, the other a brunette, both
smiling out at the reader, both wearing private school uniforms. Though
some of the references are to Toronto’s elite schools, the strips
attempt a parody of the culture of entitlement and nastiness that grows
like mould in any expensive private school.
To further emphasize the point
that Tjia’s girls are part of homogenous elite, their names shift from
Kelly, to Julia, to Alexa, to Tori, to Sandra, to Gina, and beyond. To
each other and to others they are vicious, insulting, and cruel –
gleefully so. They revel in the cynicism that supports their own elite
standing. These are the pampered daughters of the brokers, lawyers,
corporate execs, and politicians that currently control just about
everything. They are of the group and generation that will soon rule us
and our kids.
So it is all the more important to attack them while
they’re still young. Unfortunately, Tjia’s strips veer off too often
from attack into sniggering celebration. Visually, the monotony of those
teenage smiles is hilarious and effective. It’s in the dialogue that
Tjia throw into the strips (and many of them do seem thrown together) that
Pedigree Girls runs aground.
Using the voice of venality against itself is a tricky
business. Tjia does manage to capture the tone of thoughtless, pampered
teen-speak,
"You’re leaving?"
"Yeah."
"Well, don’t room with Audrey. She’s got no
taste. And Brenda’s only here on scholarship. Kayla gets her clothes off
the rack and Sheila is just a whiner."
"Actually, I’m moving home."
"Oh, that’s good. You never know what kind of a
snotty bitch could be your next roomie."
"So, are you going to stay with that haircut or
what?
"I don’t know. I keep changing my mind."
"You should come with me and Mich. We’ll
introduce you to Matt. He’ll take care of you. He’s giving us all,
like, a hip ‘fuck you’ sort of cut."
"I’m sooo jealous. You guys are, like, moving in
a direction with your hair."
Mostly though, Tjia squanders this parodic authority by
simply going too far – not into outrageousness, but into banal
stupidity. Rather, stoopidity. Good, meaningful satire forces the
reader into a position of culpability. For Pedigree Girls to work,
the reader should be tempted to admire the girls’ nasty charisma. There
should be the delayed shock of realizing the pedigree culture is not
marginal, but mainstream. The strips keep threatening to do just this, but
keeps slipping into excess. Making them caricatures keeps them at arm’s
length. We need not recognize any of their nastiness in ourselves,
because, unless you are an immature turd, it’s not. At least not in the
obvious way that Tjia puts forth.
"God. I’m happy."
"You look it. What’s up?"
"Ben licked me for hours last night."
"That’s great. Did you have sex?"
"Have you lost your mind? Have sex with my dog?"
"Oh, sorry."
Or, how about,
"The other day I laughed so hard I almost sneezed
my tampon out."
"Does that happen a lot?"
"If I’m lucky."
Yeah. Haw, haw. Tampon. Priceless. Pass it on.
Tjia occasionally leaves the middle panel devoid of
dialogue, as if he couldn’t quite stretch his vision over three,
"C’mon, it’ll be fun."
"…"
"Wipe your own bum."
These silences do work in a few of the strips, the girls’
smiles becoming ever more sinister by being rendered mute,
"Hey, Kelly, do you have any friends that aren’t
white?"
"Lemme see…"
"…"
"…"
Press releases are rarely the best source for truth
about anything, but the one for Pedigree Girls – however
intentionally - gets it just about right: "Tjia’s comic strip
heroines are vicious, ruthlessly superficial parodies of the typically
private-school princess…." Tjia’s parodies really are as
"ruthlessly superficial" as their targets. And, while I can’t
say the book gave me "hours of amusement," I can certainly
attest to the "distinct sense of futility."
Confronting ugly beauty with beautiful ugliness is at
the core of the punk ethic, and there are few better target for vicious
satire than pedigree girls (and boys). Some might say that Tjia’s whole
project is a puerile waste of time, but I think it is what Doonesbury
creator G.B. Trudeau dubbed Saturday Night Live: "a wasted
opportunity." Instead of attacking the wealth-fed cynicism of his
girls, Pedigree Girls ends up embodying it. He makes the satirist’s
greatest error by giving his targets the last laugh. Tjia’s strips
should be a big hit in our nation’s most exclusive dorms.
Nathan
Whitlock selected and edited the fiction for TDR's January 2002
issue. |