Kampung Boy
A main theme of Kampung
Boy is the contrast between the traditional rural way of life and the
modern urban lifestyle. The series promotes the village lifestyle as an
environment that is fun and conducive to the development of a healthy and intelligent
child. It raises the issue of modernization, proposing that new values and
technologies should be carefully examined by a society before being accepted.
Lat's animation has won
praises for its technical work and refreshing content, although questions have
been raised by Southeast Asian audiences over its similarities
with Western animation and its deviations from the local style of spoken
English. Malaysian animation critics held up Kampung Boy as
the standard to which their country's animators should aspire, and academics in
cultural studies regarded the series as a method of using modern technologies
and cultural practices to preserve Malaysian history.
Kampung
Boy is a favorite of millions of readers in Southeast Asia .
With masterful economy worthy of Charles Schultz, Lat recounts the life of Mat,
a Muslim boy growing up in rural Malaysia in the 1950s: his
adventures and mischief-making, fishing trips, religious study, and work on his
family's rubber plantation. Meanwhile , the traditional way of life in his
village (or kampung ) is steadily disappearing, with tin mines and factory jobs
gradually replacing family farms and rubber small-holders. When Mat himself leaves
for boarding school, he can only hope that his familiar kampung will still be
there when he returns. Kampung Boy is hilarious and affectionate, with
brilliant, super-expressive artwork that opens a window into a world that has
now nearly vanished.
Malaysian
cartoonist Lat uses the graphic novel format to share the story of his
childhood in a small village, or kampung0 . From his birth and adventures as a
toddler to the enlargement of his world as he attends classes in the village,
makes friends, and, finally, departs for a prestigious city boarding school,
this autobiography is warm, authentic, and wholly engaging. Lat depicts small
children\emdash including himself\emdash as mostly mop-topped, toothy,
bare-bottomed or sarong-draped\emdash while the important adults in his life
often appear in billowing trousers or dramatic spectacles. Everything is
wonderfully detailed in his scribbly black-and-white sketches; each page is
crammed with heavily inked action scenes, which are explained in simple but
eloquent prose. Some passages recall past behavior; others focus on cultural
events and surroundings\emdash a wedding, a rubber plantation, Lat's
circumcision (It took place on a banana trunk. In two minutes it was over! . .
. just like an ant bite! ). Filled with humor and affection, the book is a
delight; readers will enjoy it not only as an introduction to a well-known
Southeast Asian artist but also as a story of boyhood that encompasses both
universals and the specifics of a time and place.
Malaysian
comics creator Lat makes his American debut with this down-to-earth account of
childhood in a Southeast Asian kampung, or village. His black-and-white text
resembles a chronological sketchbook, with stilt-houses and jungle plants inked
on each page, and handwritten text explaining events and customs. Impatient
readers might wish for a glossary or map: "I was born in a kampung in the
heart of the world's largest tin-mining district-the Kinta Valley
in Perak," says the narrator, and leaves it at that. But most will enjoy
the protagonist's casual chronicle of rites of passage such as a hair-shaving
ceremony ("adat cukur kepala"), lessons in the Koran at age six, the
Bersunat (circumcision) ceremony at age 10, and a trip to the movies circa
1960. From the window of his house, he sees a rubber plantation and hears the
"distant roaring sound... of a tin dredge." Later, Constable Mat
Saman, a Barney Fife-like zealot toting an automatic rifle, chases villagers
who pan the river for saleable tin scraps. Lat's adults have narrow chests and
slouch pelvis-first, while mischievous children canoe, dive and fish in the
river. This first in a projected series ends on a to-be-continued note, with
the narrator leaving for boarding school and already homesick for the kampung.
Lat's loose, laid-back stories of Muslim family life and school should appeal
to Marjane Satrapi fans; with humor and affection, Lat makes the exotic kampung
feel familiar. All ages.