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Bird On The Wire
an online column by Carmel Bird
No. 8
27 July 1998Previous columns
Switzerland gave us the cuckoo clock and great pharmaceutical companies; it gave us
Jung and cheese with holes and Heidi.
Johanna Spyri, a Swiss author who died in 1901,
was the creator of stories, beginning in 1879,
about a girl called Heimathlos, known in English
as Heidi. Heidi, you understand, was a character
in fiction. The stories were not biography,
they were fantasy. They have delighted readers
in many languages, and the stories have been made
into several movies. I expect there have been
musicals. Girls have been named after the little
heroine. The genre is a kind of sentimental
realism, telling of the ordinary trials and
joys in the life of an orphan child in
the Swiss Alps at the end of last century.
The Heidi of fiction and fantasy has
recently passed
into history and fact, and has been re-fashioned
as a commodity with a birthplace and
a hometown and all the trimmings of the theme
park. We are accustomed to this kind of thing;
we need places to take the children for their
entertainment. That two different villages are
claiming Heidi (not Johanna Spyri, but Heidi) does
not strike me as unusual or problematic. Grotesque,
perhaps, but normal.
I imagine no child will care that there
are two places; human beings are accustomed
to there being multiple birthplaces and
stamping grounds for popular figures
of both history
and fiction -- think of King Arthur or
Jesus. Maybe the competition between
Sarganserland and Maienfeld
will keep both towns on their toes.
Like many another character from the
fiction of the distant past, Heidi is off and
running with a life of her own. The hell with
the book and the author. Perhaps this is OK. It's
a nice thought that the creation is more powerful
and flexible than the creator, that fiction
is (well, I suppose it always has been really)
more vigorous fun than fact. Like toys in
the middle of the night, characters in fiction
leap from the pages of their books and off they go.
In Maienfeld you can send emails from Heidi's House.
Sarganserland will sell you a Heidi compact disc.
There will be Heidi wines and coins and museums,
naturally. You might wonder what took them so
long. Check Heidiland Packages on the Net. Mind
you, whereas Sarganserland doesn't get a run
in the books, the first paragraph of my translation
of Heidi goes:
'From the old and pleasantly situated
village of Maienfeld, a footpath
winds through green and shady meadows
to the foot of the mountains, which
on this side look down from their
stern and lofty heights upon the
valley below.'
Sounds like fantasy to me, but there, smack
in the first line is the name of the
village of Maienfeld. But this does not
seem to trouble the business men of
Sarganserland. Actually I think the paragraph
has a faint echo of Alice's rabbit hole, the
removal of the characters from real life
into the world of dreams. So maybe the mention
of Maienfeld is by the by.
It's kind of interesting that nobody can
lay claim to the real Wonderland, even the real
rabbit hole. Because Carroll himself is so
endlessly fascinating and documented, and because
the girl for whom he wrote the story was
real and documented, there can be no argument
about which places on earth have
the right to make money out of
Alice. And poor Alice has long since been
done over by Disney so that there is a
distinct split between the popular image of
Alice and the vast academic study of Alice.
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It is true that I have not visited the
Heidi shrines, and maybe, just maybe, they are
inoffensive enough. However, I have seen plenty of
theme parks and I don't hold out much hope. Once
you turn a character from fiction or from
history into the central motif of a money-making
theme park the character is pretty well
doomed. By letting them loose you shut them down.
The best place for a fictional character is
in a book. But books are not safe any
more. The characters become the brands that will
put Swiss villages on the map. (My
old Michelin Guide to Switzerland,
3rd Edition, does not list Sarganserland or Maienfeld.)
I suppose it's lucky Heidi stopped
being known as Heimathlos, the meaning of which is 'homeless'.
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HOMECopyright © Carmel Bird 1998. All rights reserved.