SkutIsMyCoPilot Member
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#5 · Posted: 8 Mar 2026 01:49
An interesting observation!
Certainly, we see Tintin engaging more and more with moral themes, symbolism, allegory, and the complexity of our world, in the later adventures.
Jean-Marie Apostolidès, in her fascinating novel "The Metamorphoses of Tintin", breaks she breaks the albums into three main phases (p. 191 in my copy).
The primary adventures are simpler like children's books. They do nothing but reflect the geographical position of the stories: Soviet Union, Congo, America, Black Gold etc...
The second series of adventures "work out a balance between transcendent and worldly values" and "highlight the mystical dimension of the world that can be revealed only in esoteric knowledge acquired through an initiation process involving a journey to outer space or to a distant, sacred past." In this context, it could well be argued that thought bubbles become more of a necessity in these later adventures.
However, Apostolidès suggests that 'The Calculus Affair' marks the third phase of these albums that "bring us back to earth, but to a world that Hergé henceforth presents as run by the logic of 'wheeling and dealing'..."
Trafficking, violence, revolution and even the hostility of the natural world impose dictate the mystery of the narratives by imposing their own laws upon our favourite heroes. The characters in these last adventures are never in control of their own narrative, which is perhaps why they may be seen as having become so personal to Hergé despite his efforts to ease himself away from the stresses of the Studios.
Although I would add here that 'The Blue Lotus' also reflects features of Apostolidès' third point, and that 'Tintin in Tibet' sees Tintin confront certain myths apparent in earlier volumes, thereby bridging the gap between all three phases of the adventures, as it were.
In any case, taken in three parts, you might suggest that many of the later adventures become increasingly existential and rely heavily on the characters' internal thoughts and concerns as their minds are made alive.
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