March 2016 49
Christianity, you were seen as a traitor. h e
more I read, the more I felt the Rebellion
embodied a tension between East and West
that I’ve felt in my own life.”
Actually, graphic novels have almost
become an ideal platform to express cultural
dif erences, expressed in words and images,
both. Modern classics like Persepolis, Marjane
Satrapi’s graphic novel exploring the Islamic
revolution of 1979 through the author’s eyes
as an Iranian youth, break down barriers of
expectation and stereotype through their
own portrayal. Young Islamic girls chant for
freedom, hold rock albums and sit with their
parents at the dinner table.
Clark Kent’s Many Faces
Dif erence is so often what’s chosen as the
ultimate protagonist because it’s something
we all feel. Perhaps the most iconic
American visual descriptor of this universal
dif erence has been cradled in our country’s
Sydney Padua
created an
animation of the
actual analytic
machine featured
in Lovelace and
Babbage—the
one called the fi rst
computer. “It’s an
incredibly complex
machine,” says
Padua. “Until you
understand the
purpose of all
the bits and how
they interact, it’s
just a mass of
metal—similar to
how it’s diffi cult
to do life drawing
without under-
standing anatomy.”
She fi rst scanned
Babbage’s plans
into a program
called Autodesk
Maya—software
used for fi lm
effects—before
building off the
plans to “puzzle
out a three-dimen-
sional model.” It
took her many
months to build
the version she
has now. “I hope
to eventually build
the whole thing,”
she says, “virtually,
that is!”
©Pantheon Books