Asterix and the Great Divide
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Asterix and the Great Divide is the twenty-fifth volume of the Asterix series. It was first published in 1980.
In this volume, two rival chiefs, Cleverdix and Majestix, have been elected to govern a village in Gaul. Through various incidents, a ditch has been dug through the village dividing it into the party of the left and the part of the right. However, Histrionix, the son of Cleverdix, and Melodrama, the daughter of Majestix, are in love, and decide to get help from Asterix and company to resolve the political infighting. To add a twist to the plot, Cleverdix's mind is poisoned by his evil advisor Codfix, who promises to ensure that Cleverdix becomes undisputed chief by enlisting the help of the Romans. Of course he wants to marry Melodrama in exchange for his help. Histrionix and Melodrama are obviously based on Romeo and Juliet. The ditch is an analogy of the Berlin Wall.
This was the first volume of the series that was designed and written by Albert Uderzo alone, after the death of his long-time collaborator René Goscinny, and published by his own company, "Editions Albert René". Both stylistically and story-wise it departs relatively strongly from the previous volumes; consequently, it was hailed by some who thought the series had become stale, but reviled by others who thought it was not true to the spirit of the series. The following volumes followed a more balanced line between the style of the earlier volumes and that of Asterix and the Great Divide.
Apart from common translations, the volume was also translated into Viennese dialect (by Willi Resetarits), as "Da grosse Grobn" and into the Finnish Savo dialect as "Luaksolaesten lempi".Template:Comics-stub fr:Le Grand Fossé