Read Ebook {PDF EPUB} A History of Underground Comics by Mark James Estren History of Underground Comics SC (1974 Straight Arrow) 1st Edition 1-1ST GD+ 2.5. Some pages separating from spine. One page fully detached. Smoke odor. Ended May 31 8:50 PM CST Bid History 12 bids Winning Bid $32. 1st Edition - 1st printing. By Mark James Estren. Wraparound cover by Rand Holmes. A HISTORY OF UNDERGROUND COMICS is a lavishly illustrated, comprehensive and controversial account of the "comix" genre from the 1960s. Mark James Estren traces the roots of underground comics and details how the cartoons unabashedly portrayed sex, drugs, and rock 'n' roll, flouting the censors who kept conventional comics tame. This edition of the classic work incorporates historical updates, a new index and bibliography. Softcover, 8 1/2-in. x 11-in., 320 pages, B&W. Mature Readers Cover price $9.95. Grade: GD+ 2.5 explanation of grade Condition: Used (collectible) Customer Testimonials Our customers have some nice things to say about us: Customer Testimonials Mailing List Join our Mailing List for news and sales. We’ve been selling comics since 1961 (our first sale: Fantastic Four #1 at $0.25, see one of our first ads) and on the web since 1996. Copyright © 1996 - 2021 Lone Star Comics Inc. Character images copyright © their respective owners. A History of Underground Comics. In the land that time forgot, 1960s and 1970s America (Amerika to some), there once were some bold, forthright, thoroughly unashamed social commentators who said things that "couldn't be said” and showed things that "couldn't be shown.” They were outrageous — hunted, pursued, hounded, arrested, busted, and looked down on by just about everyone in the mass media who deigned to notice them at all. They were cartoonists — underground cartoonists. And they were some of the cleverest, most interesting social commentators of their time, as well as some of the very best artists, whose work has …mehr. Underground Comics. Underground Comics (or "Comix," with the X understood to signify X-rated material) include strips and books heavily dosed with obscenity, graphic sex, gory violence, glorification of drug use, and general defiance of convention and authority. All are either self-published or produced by very small companies which choose not to follow the mainstream Comics Code. Some undergrounds are political, carrying eco-awareness, anti- establishment messages, and general revolutionary overtones. Others are just meant for nasty, subversive fun. All have elements of sensation and satire. The origins of underground comics can be traced to the so-called "Tijuana Bibles" of the 1930s and 1940s: illegally produced 8-page mini- comics that depicted mainstream characters getting drunk and having sex (Popeye, Mickey Mouse, Dick Tracy, etc.). The legacy of underground comics are the Alternative and Independent of the 1980s and 1990s. Underground comics truly came into their own during the 1960s, thanks to the talents of artist/writers such as Robert ("R.") Crumb, , and S. Clay Wilson. The first underground strips appeared in underground papers such as New York's , Berkeley's Barb, the Los Angeles Free Press, and the Detroit Fifth Estate. The first recognizable underground comic book is God Nose (Snot Reel) put out by Jack ("") Jackson in 1963. Undergrounds proliferated in the mid and late 1960s, with printing and distribution by companies such as San Francisco's Rip-Off Press, Milwaukee's Kitchen Sink Enterprises (a.k.a. Krupp), and Berkeley's . These companies sold their books not through newsstands but through Head Shops. The first issues of R. Crumb's Zap (1967) were a milestone in underground comics. Zap featured the catchy Keep On Truckin' image and introduced characters such as the hedonistic guru Mr. Natural and the outwardly proud but inwardly repressed Whiteman. Crumb's intense and imaginative artwork, strange and often shocking images, unsparing satires, and unflattering self-confessions still remain perhaps the most impressive work in the history of underground comics. Crumb's very popular comics and illustrations have become widely available in compilations, anthologies, and even coffee table books. Crumb's life and work are the subject of the excellent 1995 documentary film, Crumb. Gilbert Shelton found his greatest success with his Fabulous Furry Freak Brothers comic, more than a dozen issues of which have been infrequently published since #1 in 1968. The Freaks include Phineas, Freewheelin Franklin, and Fat Freddy (the most popular of the three): fun- loving hippy buddies out looking for sex, drugs, and rock n' roll—especially drugs. The comic also features the adventures of Fat Freddy's cat, who must sometimes fight off suicidal cockroaches in Freddy's apartment. Shelton also writes and draws the superhero parody strip "Wonder Wart-Hog." S. Clay Wilson holds the distinction of being the most perverse and most disgusting of any underground comic artist. His work is filled with orgies and brawls, molestations and mutilations. His characters are usually pirates, lesbians, motorcycle gangs, or horned demonic monsters. All his characters are drawn in anatomically correct detail, complete with warts, nosehair, sweat, saliva, and wet rubbery genitalia. Comics featuring his work include Zap and . Other important and popular underground artist/writers include: whose playful and humorous work appeared (among elsewhere) in the East Village Other and ; whose frightening bony faces and horror stories appeared in Skull ; whose psychedelic-organic art appeared in Zap, countless posters, and some of the more famous Grateful Dead album covers; whose space/time distortions show the influence of M.C. Escher; who was the most important sci-fi/fantasy underground artist with his dreamy Moondog book; and Richard Corben (later famous for the Den series in Heavy Metal ), whose fleshy, muscular, scantily-clad men and women appeared under the pseudonym "Gore" in and Death Rattle. Mainstream artists who got their start with early undergrounds include ( Zippy ) and ( Maus, covers for The New Yorker ). There have been few women in underground comics, but notable exceptions include and , both of whom worked as artists, writers, and editors. Robbins edited It Ain't Me Babe Comix —the first all-women comic—in the early 1970s. In the 1960s and 1970s, the most popular underground sex comics included Snatch Comics, Jiz Comics, Big Ass Comics, Gay Comics, Young Lust, and Bizarre Sex. Popular pro-drug comics included Freak Brothers, Dope Comix, and Uneeda Comix. Popular political compilations included the anti-pollution Slow Death and the anti-government Anarchy Comics. Small print-runs and low distributions kept most of these comics away from the eyes of civil and political authorities. But there were some notable legal battles, the biggest of which erupted in 1969 over Zap Comics #4, which featured Crumb's infamous "Joe Blow" story about an incestuous S&M family orgy. A New York State judge ruled the comic obscene and therefore illegal, holding publisher Print Mint liable for fines. When Head Shops died out in the early 1970s, many underground comics vanished entirely, the survivors becoming available only through mail order. But with the dawn of comic speciality shops in the early 1980s, undergrounds once again had a place on the shelves. In the 1990s, reprints and compilations of early undergrounds are found alongside conventional mainstream books. The influence of underground comic books and the openness of comic specialty shops helped make possible the so-called Alternative or Independent comics that flourished in the 1980s and continue to reach wide audiences through the late 1990s. Some of the most popular Alternatives are the Hernandez brothers' Love and Rockets, 's Yummy Fur, 's Bitchy Bitch, 's Hate, 's Cerebus, Dan Clowes's Eightball, Charles Burns' Black Hole, and compilations Weirdo, Raw, and Drawn & Quarterly. Like the early undergrounds, these new books are uncompromising in their treatment of sex and violence, and often hold skeptical and subversive undertones. Most Alternatives avoid the extremism of their 1960s and 1970s predecessors, but without these earlier books, the widely-read and widely- praised Alternative books would not have been possible. Further Reading: Adelman, Bob, editor. Tijuana Bibles: Art and Wit in America's Forbidden Funnies. New York, Simon & Schuster, 1997. Estren, Mark James. A History of Underground Comics. Berkeley, Ronin, 1993 (1974). Griffith, Bill, editor. Zap to Zippy: The Impact of . San Francisco, Cartoon Art Museum, 1990. Juno, Andrea, editor. Dangerous Drawings: Interviews with Comix and Graphix Artists. New York, Juno, 1997. Sabin, Roger. Comics, Comix, and Graphic Novels. London, Phaidon, 1996. BUY THIS BOOK. "Both a landmark study in its field and a book which is just plain fun to read." - TV News/Greenwich Village "In the highly politicized atmosphere of the mid '60s, these new comics were a much needed, usually humorous counterpoint to the dead seriousness of the in which many of them first appeared." -- Buffalo (New York) Reporter. "Seems to me you've displayed plenty of affectionate respect for even the lowliest just or being part of a movement, but kept a clear eye on their actual achievements, and organized the whole with clarity and style. How's that for a rave?" -- Bill Pearson, " " "It's a great book. There is nothing like it anywhere." -- The Fifth Estate. "A massive job and a highly successful one." -- The Buyers' Guide. "Estren's book is one of the best studies of comic art in print." -- Seattle Times. "A long, loving, yet still perceptive look at the artwork, the philosophies and the satire." -- Santa Barbara News-Press. "Lavishly illustrated, with ample examples of not only underground artists but several who set many of the trends and styles in earlier days." -- San Francisco Sunday Examiner & Chronicle ------ince the genre first emerged in the late 1960s, underground comics (or "comix") have delighted and outraged millions of people. The exploits of such characters as Mr. Natural and The Fabulous Furry Freak Brothers embodied the psychedelic era and continue to attract loyal readership today. The first and most comprehensive look at the underground cartoonists and their work -- lavishly illustrated, including comments and drawings by the cartoonists themselves and by members of the earlier generation that most influenced them. Includes the full story of the notorious obscenity trial of Zap #4 including the panels. A History of Underground Comics offers the most lavish collection of comix art ever to appear in one book, with more than 1,000 drawings by the likes of R. Crumb, Gilbert Shelton, S. Clay Wilson, Richard Corben, , , Justin Green, Dave Sheridan, Jaxon, , Victor Moscoso, Kim Deitch, Rick Griffin, Foolbert Sturgeon and many others. A History of Underground Comics , Mark Estren traces the roots of underground comics in such legendary comic demigods as Krazy Kat and Little Nemo, and details how comics unabashedly portrayed sex, drugs, and rock n' roll, flouting the conventions of censors who had kept above- ground comics tame. This fourth edition provides 32 pages of new material, including a new index and a new bibliography. Social satire in the underground comics usually takes the form of humorous (sometimes bitter) exaggerations of various aspects of American society, from money hunger to art and music. At times, the satire is found mostly in the words. The stories in this book reduce all of society to absurdity by simple vocabularies and a childlike approach to the material. In his "social realism" strips, R. Crumb does not mock American society; rather, he presents it for what it is and trusts the reader eventually to realize that the strips are funny because the society is absurd. Crumb has not been the only underground cartoonist to attempt this special brand of social realism. On occasion, J. Kinney has also worked in this manner. Kinney describes his approach as follows: "I try to put down on paper relatively true visions of middle-class life as I see it. . . . Hopefully by capturing all this on paper, I can help people to see themselve s more objectively and insightfully. Heheheheheh." "This history will be a revelation to many comix fans." -- Atlanta Journal. "Lively and provocative." -- Richmond Times-Dispatch. "I thought it was great and an important contribution to the comics library shelf." -- Will Eisner (in personal letter!!) "I am in your fan club." -- Fred W. Friendly (Edward R. Murrow's CBS News producer) "It's beautiful!" -- William M. Gaines ("Mad" publisher; another hand-written letter) "A far-reaching sampler full of exuberance and irreverent fun." -- San Francisco Examiner. "You've got a winner! Really a fine book." -- Harvey Kurtzman. "A loving monograph, a paean to the men and women who kept the counter-culture's sense of humor alive during one of the most humorless times in this nation's history." -- Chicago Sun-Times. "A long, strange -- and generously illustrated -- trip." -- Radio & Records. "A generous genealogy of this warped genre." -- Swank. A History of Underground Comics by Mark James Estren ISBN 13: 9780914171119. Try adding this search to your want list. Millions of books are added to our site everyday and when we find one that matches your search, we'll send you an e-mail. Best of all, it's free. Are you a frequent reader or book collector? Join the Bibliophile's Club and save 10% on every purchase, every day — up to $25 savings per order! Social Responsibility. 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