{PDF EPUB} the Comics Journal Library Vol. 1 Jack Kirby by Milo George Fiction House

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

{PDF EPUB} the Comics Journal Library Vol. 1 Jack Kirby by Milo George Fiction House Read Ebook {PDF EPUB} The Comics Journal Library Vol. 1 Jack Kirby by Milo George Fiction House. Fiction House is an American publisher of pulp magazines and comic books that existed from the 1920s to the 1950s. Its comics division was best known for its pinup-style good girl art, as epitomized by the company's most popular character, Sheena, Queen of the Jungle. Contents. History. Jumbo Comics #1 (Sept 1938). Cover artist(s) unknown. Fight Stories Vol. 2, #4 (Sept 1929). Cover art by F. R. Glass. Detective Book Magazine Vol. 5, #10 (Winter 1948) Jumbo and Jack Kirby. Fiction House began in the 1920s as a pulp-magazine publisher of primarily aviation, Western and sports pulps. By the 1930s, it had expended into detective mysteries. [1] Publisher Thurman T. Scott, whose Fiction House group included the pulp-magazine imprints Glen-Kel and Real Adventures Publishing Co. , expanded into comic books in the late 1930s when that emerging medium began to seem a viable adjunct to the fading pulps. Receptive to a sales call by Eisner & Iger, one of the prominent "packagers" of that time who produced complete comic books on demand for publishers looking to enter the field, Scott released Jumbo Comics #1 (Sept. 1938). [2] Fiction House star Sheena, Queen of the Jungle appeared in that initial issue. Will Eisner and S.M. "Jerry" Iger had created the leggy, leopard- wearing jungle goddess for the British magazine Wags , [3] under the joint pseudonym "W. Morgan Thomas". [4] Fiction House's other features in that initial foray included the period adventure "Hawks of the Seas" (continuing a story from Quality Comics' Feature Funnies #12, after Eisner-Iger and Quality had had a falling out), and several now-obscure strips ("Peter Pupp"; "ZX-5 Spies in Action"; "Spencer Steel"; "Inspector Dayton"). [5] These include three by future industry legend Jack Kirby, representing his first comic-book work following his debut in Wild Boy Magazine : [6] the science fiction feature The Diary of Dr. Hayward (under the pseudonym "Curt Davis"), the modern-West crimefighter strip Wilton of the West (as "Fred Sande"), and Part One of the swashbuckling serialization of Alexandre Dumas, père's The Count of Monte Cristo (as "Jack Curtiss"), each four pages long. "The big 6 of the comics" Jumbo proved a hit, and Fiction House would go on to publish Jungle Comics ; the aviation-themed Wings Comics ; the science fiction title Planet Comics ; Rangers Comics ; and Fight Comics during the early 1940s — most of these series taking their titles and themes from the Fiction House pulps. Fiction House referred to these titles in its regular house ads as "The Big Six," but the company also published several other titles, among them the Western-themed Indians and Firehair , jungle titles Sheena, Queen of the Jungle and Wambi , and five issues of Eisner's The Spirit . [7] Quickly developing its own staff under editor Joe Cunningham followed by Jack Burden, [8] Fiction House employed either in-house or on a freelance basis such artists as Meskin, Matt Baker (the first prominent African-American artist in comics), Nick Cardy, George Evans, Bob Powell, and the British Lee Elias, as well as such rare female comics artists as Ruth Atkinson, Fran Hopper, Lily Renée, and Marcia Snyder. Feminist comics historian Trina Robbins, wrote that. most of [Fiction House's] pulp-style action stories either starred or featured strong, beautiful, competent heroines. They were war nurses, aviatrixes, girl detectives, counterspies, and animal skin-clad jungle queens, and they were in command. Guns blazing, daggers unsheathed, sword in hand, they leaped across the pages, ready to take on any villain. And they did not need rescuing. [9] Despite such pre-feminist pedigree, Fiction House found itself targeted in psychiatrist Dr. Fredric Wertham's book Seduction of the Innocent (1954), which in part blamed comic books for an increase in Juvenile delinquency. Aside from the ostensible effects of gory horror in comic books, Wertham cast blame on the sexy, pneumatic heroines of Fiction House, Fox Comics and other companies. A subsequent, wide-ranging investigation by the Senate Subcommittee on Juvenile Delinquency, coupled with outcry by parents, a downturn in comics sales, the demise of the pulps, and the rise of television and paperback novels competing for readers and leisure time, Fiction House faced an increasingly difficult business environment, and soon closed shop. Feasts For The Dogs And Birds – This Week’s Links. I’ll keep this week’s intro brief, mostly as I’m writing it while suffering under some exciting side-effects from Charles Pfizer’s COVID-19 vaccine, which, incidentally, do not in any way add positively to the experience of finally cracking into Kentaro Miura’s magnum opus, Berserk, let me tell you. That particular endeavour will have to wait, but This Week’s Links, below, cannot, and urgently request your full and immediate attention! Spying with my little eye… This week’s news. • The Daily Cartoonist report on The New York Daily News’ editorial cartoonist, Bill Bramhall, being accused of racism, following publication of a cartoon attacking New York City mayoral candidate Andrew Yang - the cartoon having been altered for print publication, following earlier complaints levelled against its online version, and the usual “where does the line get drawn, metaphorically speaking” argument got roused from hibernation for another little trot around, just as a treat. • Causing the shenanigans meter to make a high-pitched keening noise before failing entirely and issuing forth acrid black smoke, BOOM! Studios this week waded into the furore surrounding Disney’s alleged failure to pay royalties to various creators - Fleen rounds up the many ways in which this is best embodied by the Spider-Man pointing at Spider-Man meme. You know the one. • Koyama Provides announced the latest recipient of their grant program, awarding $1,000 to Noel Freibert, which “will aid in the production costs of Halloween Baptism , the comic book follow up to 2020's Halloween Confession .” • In memoriam, remembering those that the comics community lost recently, as here at TCJ Alex Grand has an obituary for writer and editor David Anthony Kraft who passed away last week, aged 68, an archive TCJ interview with whom can also be read here; Penelope Green writes for The New York Times on the life and work of Kathleen Andrews, instrumental executive at the Andrews McNeel Syndicate, who died on April 16th, aged 84; and Publisher’s Weekly shared the news that Dan Frank, editorial director at Pantheon since 1996, passed away this week, aged 67 - James Fallows has an obituary for The Atlantic . Nothing but buzzer beaters… This week’s reviews. • Matt Seneca reviews the towering darkness of Barry Windsor-Smith’s Monsters - “Despite the deep focus his artwork strives for, Windsor- Smith feels less intent on presenting the specifics of his narrative than its tone - one most often sumptuously gloomy. How Monsters hangs together as a plot, I think, is less important than the feeling passed on to its readers as they push slowly through hundreds of densely gridded, intricately drafted, balloon laden pages. I myself found it an overpowering experience of simultaneous disquiet and awe.” • Brian Nicholson reviews the dissonant juxtapositions of Leomi Sadler’s Tummy Bugs - “This collection is oriented around the cute stuff, although cute is a relative term, and here the notion seems invoked with some irony. It’s a colorful thing, but the colors clash and overwhelm one another until they cancel each other out, like candy and fruit dissolving into stomach acids. Sadler enjoys an acrid palette.” • Alex Curtis reviews the embarrassing caricatures of Rick Rememder and Bengal’s Death or Glory: Prestige Edition . • Ryan Perry reviews the refreshing escapology of Brandon Easton, Fico Ossio, et al’s Mister Miracle: The Source of Freedom #1 . • Justin Harrison reviews the compelling eeriness of Jeremy Holt and George Schall’s Made in Korea #1 . • David Brooke reviews the thoughtful politics of Eve L. Ewing, Kim Jacinto, Simone Di Meo et al’s Champions Volume 1: Outlawed . • Avery Kaplan reviews the singular balance of Jeremy Holt and George Schall’s Made in Korea #1 . • Ricardo Serrano Denis reviews the exemplary experience of Z2 Comics' True War Stories, edited by Alex de Campi and Khai Krumbhaar. Broken Frontier. • Bruno Savill de Jong reviews the sprawling tapestry of Mannie Murphy’s I Never Promised You a Rose Garden . • Rebecca Burke reviews the unflinching detail of Didier Kassaï and Marc Ellison’s A House Without Windows . • Andy Oliver reviews the crisp scene-setting of Bethany Hall and Mia Ryder’s Brat Soup #1 . • John Trigonis reviews the confused pacing of Declan Shalvey, Rory McConville, Joe Palmer, et al’s Time Before Time #1 . • Lindsay Pereira reviews the intriguing dread of Adam Smith and Matt Fox's The Down River People. Four Color Apocalypse. Ryan C has reviews of: - The slapstick minimalism of Drew Lerman’s Schtick . - The off-kilter heart of Josh Frankel’s Grim Nutrition . - The powerful nihilism of Carlos Gonzales’ Scab County . - A pair of zines from Billy Mavreas - the inquisitive teasing of BVA and the practical rewards of drop . The Guardian. Rachel Cooke reviews the controlled emotions of Lee Lai’s Stone Fruit . The Library Journal. • Martha Cornog reviews the heartbreaking triumph of Rebecca Hall and Hugo Martínez’ Wake: The Hidden History of Women-Led Slave Revolts . • Tom Batten reviews: - The perfect pathos of Simon Hanselmann's Crisis Zone. - The careful poignancy of Guy Delisle's Factory Summers. - The brutal rawness of R. Kikuo Johnson's No One Else. - The claustrophobic excellence of Fido Nesti's adaptation of George Orwell's 1984.
Recommended publications
  • An Exploration of Comics and Architecture in Post-War Germany and the United States
    An Exploration of Comics and Architecture in Post-War Germany and the United States A DISSERTATION SUBMITTED TO THE FACULTY OF THE UNIVERSITY OF MINNESOTA BY Ryan G. O’Neill IN PARTIAL FULFILLMENT OF THE REQUIREMENTS FOR THE DEGREE OF DOCTOR OF PHILOSOPHY Dr. Rembert Hueser, Adviser October 2016 © Ryan Gene O’Neill 2016 Table of Contents List of Figures……………………………………………………………………………………...……….i Prologue……………………………………………………………………………………….....…1 Introduction………………………………………………………………………………………...8 Chapter 1: The Comic Laboratory…………………………………………………...…………………………………….31 Chapter 2: Comics and Visible Time…………………………………………………………………………...…………………..52 Chapter 3: Comic Cities and Comic Empires………………………………...……………………………...……..…………………….80 Chapter 4: In the Shadow of No Archive…………………………………………………………………………..…….…………114 Epilogue: The Painting that Ate Paris………………………………………………………………………………...…………….139 Works Cited…..……………………………………………………………………………..……152 i Figures Prologue Figure 1: Kaczynski, Tom (w)(a). “Skyway Sleepless.” Twin Cities Noir: The Expanded Edition. Ed. Julie Schaper, Steven Horwitz. New York: Akashic Books, 2013. Print. Figure 2: Kaczynski, Tom (w)(a). “Skyway Sleepless.” Twin Cities Noir: The Expanded Edition. Ed. Julie Schaper, Steven Horwitz. New York: Akashic Books, 2013. Print. Figure 3: Image of Vitra Feuerwehrhaus Uncredited. https://www.vitra.com/de-de/campus/architecture/architecture-fire-station Figure 4: Kaczynski, Tom (w)(a). “Skyway Sleepless.” Twin Cities Noir: The Expanded Edition. Ed. Julie Schaper, Steven Horwitz. New York: Akashic Books, 2013. Print. Introduction Figure 1: Goscinny, René (w), Alberto Uderzo (i). Die Trabantenstadt. trans. Gudrun Penndorf. Stuttgart: Ehapa Verlag GmbH, 1974. Pp.28-29. Print. Figure 2: Forum at Pompeii, Vitruvius Vitrubius. The Ten Books on Architecture. trans. Morris Hicky Morgan, Ph.D., LL.D. Illustrations under the direction of Herbert Langford Warren, A.M. pp. 132. Print. Figure 3: Töpffer, Rodolphe.
    [Show full text]
  • The Metacomics of Alan Moore, Neil Gaiman, and Warren Ellis
    University of Alberta Telling Stories About Storytelling: The Metacomics of Alan Moore, Neil Gaiman, and Warren Ellis by Orion Ussner Kidder A thesis submitted to the Faculty of Graduate Studies and Research in partial fulfilment of the requirements for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy in English Department of English and Film Studies ©Orion Ussner Kidder Spring 2010 Edmonton, Alberta Permission is hereby granted to the University of Alberta Libraries to reproduce single copies of this thesis and to lend or sell such copies for private, scholarly or scientific research purposes only. Where the thesis is converted to, or otherwise made available in digital form, the University of Alberta will advise potential users of the thesis of these terms. The author reserves all other publication and other rights in association with the copyright in the thesis and, except as herein before provided, neither the thesis nor any substantial portion thereof may be printed or otherwise reproduced in any material form whatsoever without the author's prior written permission. Library and Archives Bibliothèque et Canada Archives Canada Published Heritage Direction du Branch Patrimoine de l’édition 395 Wellington Street 395, rue Wellington Ottawa ON K1A 0N4 Ottawa ON K1A 0N4 Canada Canada Your file Votre référence ISBN: 978-0-494-60022-1 Our file Notre référence ISBN: 978-0-494-60022-1 NOTICE: AVIS: The author has granted a non- L’auteur a accordé une licence non exclusive exclusive license allowing Library and permettant à la Bibliothèque et Archives Archives Canada to reproduce, Canada de reproduire, publier, archiver, publish, archive, preserve, conserve, sauvegarder, conserver, transmettre au public communicate to the public by par télécommunication ou par l’Internet, prêter, telecommunication or on the Internet, distribuer et vendre des thèses partout dans le loan, distribute and sell theses monde, à des fins commerciales ou autres, sur worldwide, for commercial or non- support microforme, papier, électronique et/ou commercial purposes, in microform, autres formats.
    [Show full text]
  • The Weird History of Usamerican Fascism: a Guide (1979-2019) Phd in Critical and Cultural Theory 2019 M.C
    The Weird History of USAmerican Fascism: A Guide (1979-2019) PhD in Critical and Cultural Theory 2019 M.C. McGrady Summary The future, as ever, can be read in comic books. Foretold by the Dark Age of Comics, the doom that now comes to Earth arrives in the form of self-realizing eschatologies, horrors born out of the rutting between unfettered capitalism and its favorite child, technological hubris. When the Big Two comic book publishers began hiring British and Irish authors en masse over the course of the 1980s, these writers brought with them a critical eye sharpened by the political and economic cruelty of the decade. The victims of the Iron Lady came to the New World and set their sights on the empire of the Teflon President, using superhero stories to explore the ideological weapons deployed in the service of global capitalism. The Weird History of USAmerican Fascism tracks the interrelated networks of popular culture and fascism in the United States to demonstrate the degree to which contemporary USAmerican politics embodies the future that the fictional dystopias of the past warned us about. Although the trans-Atlantic political developments of 2016 and their aftermath have sparked a widespread interest in a resurgent Anglophone fascism and its street-level movements – seen most obviously in the loose collection of white supremacists known as the ‘alt- right’ – this interest has been hamstrung by the historical aversion to a serious study of popular and ‘nerd’ culture during the twentieth century. By paying attention to the conceptual and interpersonal networks that emerged from the comic books and videogames of the 1980s, The Weird History of USAmerican Fascism fills a critical lacuna in cultural theory while correcting recent oversights in the academic analysis of contemporary fascism, providing an essential guide to the past, present, and future of the bizarre world of USAmerican politics.
    [Show full text]
  • 2News Summer 05 Catalog
    COMICS’ BRONZE AGE AND BEYOND! February 2015 No.78$8.95 ISSUE! 0 1 1 82658 27762 8 Batman’s Weirdest Team-Ups • Orlando’s Weird Adventure Comics • Weird War Tales • Weird Mystery Tales Ditko’s Shade the Changing Man & Stalker • Chaykin’s Iron Wolf • Crumb’s Weirdo • Starlin & Wrightson’s The Weird Volume 1, Number 78 February 2015 Celebrating the Best Comics of the '70s, '80s, Comics’ Bronze Age and Beyond! '90s, and Beyond! EDITOR-IN-CHIEF Michael Eury PUBLISHER John Morrow DESIGNER Rich Fowlks COVER ARTIST Alan Craddock COVER DESIGNER WEIRD logo TM & © DC Comics. Michael Kronenberg PROOFREADER Rob Smentek SPECIAL THANKS Mark Arnold Carol Lay Terry Austin Paul Levitz Peter Bagge Andy Mangels Dewey Cassell Scott Nickel Howard Chaykin Luigi Novi Shaun Clancy Dennis O’Neil Jon B. Cooke Gary Panter Robert Crumb Martin Pasko FLASHBACK: Weird Batman Team-Ups . .2 DC Comics Tom Powers The Caped Crusader’s out-of-the-ordinary co-stars J. M DeMatteis Sasa Rakezic Mark Evanier Bob Rozakis FLASHBACK: Orlando’s Weird Adventures . .10 Mary Fleener Rac Shade The comic-book smorgasbord that was Joe Orlando’s Adventure Comics Drew Friedman Steve Skeates Carl Gafford Jim Starlin BEYOND CAPES: Those Were Weird Times: Weird Mystery Tales . .23 Macedonio Garcia Bryan D. Stroud From Kirby to Destiny to Eve, you never knew who or what you’d find in this DC title Mike Gold Pvt. “Lucky” Taylor Grand Comics Steven Thompson BEYOND CAPES: The Horrors of Combat: Weird War Tales . .31 Database Carol Tyler This bizarre battle book proved that war really was hell Robert Greenberger Jim Vadeboncoeur Bill Griffith Don Vaughan BEYOND CAPES: IronWolf .
    [Show full text]
  • GRANT MORRISON Great Comics Artists Series M
    GRANT MORRISON Great Comics Artists Series M. Thomas Inge, General Editor Marc Singer GRANT MORRISON Combining the Worlds of Contemporary Comics University Press of Mississippi / Jackson www.upress.state.ms.us The University Press of Mississippi is a member of the Association of American University Presses. Copyright © 2012 by University Press of Mississippi All rights reserved Manufactured in the United States of America First printing 2012 ∞ Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data Singer, Marc. Grant Morrison : combining the worlds of contemporary comics / Marc Singer. p. cm. — (Great comics artists series) Includes bibliographical references and index. ISBN 978-1-61703-135-9 (cloth : alk. paper) — ISBN 978- 1-61703-136-6 (pbk. : alk. paper) — ISBN 978-1-61703-137-3 (ebook) 1. Morrison, Grant—Criticism and interpretation. 2. Comic books, strips, etc.—United States—History and criticism. I. Title. PN6727.M677Z86 2012 741.5’973—dc22 2011013483 British Library Cataloging-in-Publication Data available Contents vii Acknowledgments 3 Introduction: A Union of Opposites 24 CHAPTER ONE Ground Level 52 CHAPTER TWO The World’s Strangest Heroes 92 CHAPTER THREE The Invisible Kingdom 136 CHAPTER FOUR Widescreen 181 CHAPTER FIVE Free Agents 221 CHAPTER SIX A Time of Harvest 251 CHAPTER SEVEN Work for Hire 285 Afterword: Morrison, Incorporated 293 Notes 305 Bibliography 317 Index This page intentionally left blank Acknowledgments This book would not have been possible without the advice and support of my friends and colleagues. Craig Fischer, Roger Sabin, Will Brooker, and Gene Kannenberg Jr. generously gave their time to read the manuscript and offer feedback. Joseph Witek, Jason Tondro, Steve Holland, Randy Scott, the Michigan State University Library Special Collections, and the George Washington University Gelman Library provided me with sources and images.
    [Show full text]
  • Wonder Woman Unbound
    COMICS/LITERARY CRITICISM/POPULAR CULTURE WONDER WOMAN UNBOUND “I’ve never seen more information about Wonder Woman than in Wonder Woman Unbound. Tim Hanley tells us everything we’ve never asked about Wonder Woman because it simply never occurred to us: from her mythic Golden Age origins through her dismal Silver Age years as a lovesick romance comic character, and worse yet, when she lost her costume and powers in the late 1960s. Our favorite Amazon’s saga be- comes upbeat again with the 1970s advent of Gloria Steinem and Ms. magazine, and Lynda Carter’s unforgettable portrayal of her on television. And it’s all told with a dollop of humor!” —Trina Robbins, author of Pretty in Ink: North American Women Cartoonists, 1896–2013 ith her golden lasso and her bullet-deflecting bracelets, WWonder Woman is a beloved icon of female strength in a world of male superheroes. But this close look at her history por- trays a complicated heroine who is more than just a female Super- man. When they debuted in the 1940s, Wonder Woman comics advocated female superiority and the benefits of matriarchy; her adventures were also colored by bondage imagery and hidden les- bian leanings. In the decades that followed, Wonder Woman fell backward as American women began to step forward. Ultimate- ly, Wonder Woman became a feminist symbol in the 1970s, and the curious details of her past were quickly forgotten. Exploring this lost history adds new dimensions to the world’s most beloved female character, and Wonder Woman Unbound delves into her comic book and its spin-offs as well as the motivations of her cre- ators to showcase the peculiar journey of a twentieth-century icon.
    [Show full text]
  • Nowhere Fan 5
    Nowhere Fan 5 Going Nowhere Nowhere Fan 5 is the much-delayed follow-up to Nowhere Fan 4 and is like all social contacts these days electronic only. This fanzine will be following government guidelines on social distancing but needs frequent exercise and will be happy to stand in the queue for shopping. Please rinse in hot soapy water before reading. It is available as a PDF from [email protected] or online from efanzines.com. All content is written by Christina Lake, apart from Bayou Rhythms, which is by Doug Bell. The cartoon p.27 is by the illustrious Brad Foster. All Swamp Thing artwork is © DC Comics. (April 2020) ___________________________________________________________________________ Lockdown Lemonade As a fanzine that owes its inspiration to utopias and dystopias, it feels like I should be running features on pandemic reading and commenting on the swiftness with which we have moved from a civil liberties society to one where the government can dictate how often we’re meant to leave our homes. But with a whole new generation discovering Defoe’s Journal of the Plague Years and post-apocalyptic punditry popping up in every newspaper and website, maybe this isn’t really the time. Doug has even postponed writing the article he promised me on demographic changes in Carrie Vaughn’s post-apocalyptic Bannerless series as it just seemed, well, too close to home in this time of disease tracking and infection maps. But I do find it intriguing to ponder this throwback moment which reminds us why we used to think it was important to have a welfare state and to act for the good of society as a whole rather than the gain of the individual.
    [Show full text]
  • Amerikansuomalaisia Sarjakuvataiteilijoita
    Amerikansuomalaisia sarjakuvataiteilijoita ILPO LAGERSTEDT Amerikansuomalaisia sarjakuvataiteilijoita Copyright ©2008 Tampere University Press ja tekijä We believe the comics published more than 75 years ago and those once copyrighted by Chicago Sun Syndicate, Chicago Daily News Syndicate, Jones Syndicate, Ace Publishing, Centaur Comics and Quality Comics, which no more exist, are now public domain. All comics are reprinted here only for historical and informative purposes and according to fair use doctrine, not to violate anyone´s copyright, trademark, or other intellectual property rights. See http://www.finlex.fi/fi/laki/ajantasa/1961/19610404 http://www.copyright.gov/fls/fl102.html http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/ Wikipedia:WikiProject_Comics/copyright Myynti Tiedekirjakauppa TAJU Kalevantie 5 PL 617 33014 Tampereen yliopisto puhelin (03) 3551 6055 fax (03) 3551 7685 taju@uta.fi www.uta.fi/taju http://granum.uta.fi Kansi Ensio Aalto Taitto Maaret Kihlakaski ISBN 978-951-44-7230-5 ISBN 978-951-44-7335-7 (pdf) Tampereen Yliopistopaino Oy – Juvenes Print Tampere 2008 Dedicated to Jean Bails Comics at this time is becoming widely accepted and recognized by our cultural and academic community. It is important, in my opinion, that underlying cultures which contributed to Ameri- can humor and social imagery be recognized. Will Eisner Sisällys Esipuhe ................................................................9 Muuttuneen maailman jäljillä ............................12 Tutkimuksen alku ..............................................12 Tutkimusaineistosta
    [Show full text]
  • 1 Bealer Preliminary Pages PQ
    GRAPHIC ENVIRONMENTS: PERFORMING ECOCRITICISM AT THE CONFLUENCE OF IMAGE AND TEXT by Adele Haverty Bealer A dissertation submitted to the faculty of The University of Utah in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy Department of English The University of Utah May 2014 Copyright © Adele Haverty Bealer 2014 All Rights Reserved The University of Utah Graduate School STATEMENT OF DISSERTATION APPROVAL The following faculty members served as the supervisory committee chair and members for the dissertation of Adele Haverty Bealer . Dates at right indicate the members’ approval of the dissertation. Robert S. Tatum , Chair March 7, 2014 Date Approved Howard Horwitz , Member March 7, 2014 Date Approved Stuart K. Culver , Member March 7, 2014 Date Approved Mary S. Strine , Member March 7, 2014 Date Approved Leonard C. Hawes , Member March 7, 2014 Date Approved The dissertation has also been approved by Barry Weller , Chair of the Department/School/College of English and by David B. Kieda, Dean of The Graduate School. ABSTRACT My dissertation focuses on an ecocritical evaluation of environmental representation in contemporary comics and graphic novels. Ecocriticism and the graphic narrative share disciplinary similarities; both are hybrid forms that commingle seemingly incommensurable components (literature and the land, text and image), and both continue to evolve in complex and exciting ways. Using the familiar rubric of animal, vegetable, and mineral, my dissertation explores the theoretical underpinnings of ecocriticism’s contemporary moment as it is illustrated in the graphic environment. Ecocriticism today is marked by an increased interest in postcolonial theory and by a posthumanist turn that has culminated in various species of speculative realism and new materialist theory.
    [Show full text]
  • The Frustrated Ecological Possibilities in Alan Moore's Swamp Thing By
    Green Smile, Interrupted: The Frustrated Ecological Possibilities in Alan Moore’s Swamp Thing by Alec Whitford B.A. Hons., The University of British Columbia, 2010 A THESIS SUBMITTED IN PARTIAL FULFILLMENT OF THE REQUIREMENTS FOR THE DEGREE OF MASTER OF ARTS in THE FACULTY OF GRADUATE AND POSTDOCTORAL STUDIES (English) THE UNIVERSITY OF BRITISH COLUMBIA (Vancouver) October 2013 © Alec Whitford, 2013 Abstract In this thesis, I conduct an ecocritical reading of Alan Moore’s tenure as writer on DC Comics’ monthly superhero comic Swamp Thing, which spanned from Volume 2 Issue 20 (January 1984) to Volume 2 Issue 64 (September 1987). I explore the ways in which Swamp Thing’s efforts to understand “the green”—a metaphysical network that connects all plant life in the universe— both challenge and reinforce the classical, Western division between Culture and Nature. Richard Harrison claims that the tenure of each creative team on a superhero comic establishes that tenure as a novel built around a “‘core cluster’ of first principles that define the hero in time and place and set his or her story in motion” (26). Whereas the core cluster of first principles for Wein and Wrightson’s run on Swamp Thing establishes non-human Nature as a physically violent force that unites with violent Culture to produce the monstrous body of Swamp Thing, Moore’s run establishes a core cluster of second principles that posit a more peaceful Nature that is continuously in conflict with the violence of Culture. The primary image of Wein’s first principles is Swamp Thing’s face frozen in an expression of horror and agony, while Moore’s second principles rely on a peaceful, smiling expression on Swamp Thing’s face, which suggests that Swamp Thing’s face is the face of ecology and an icon for the point at which humans can speak to the environment.
    [Show full text]
  • Fantagraphics-F17.Pdf
    NORTON 2017 Fall-COVERs.indd 2-3 2/6/17 4:06 PM FALL 2017 FALL 2017 7563 lake city way ne • seattle, wa 98115 • usa the World’sG reatest telephone: 206-524-1967 • fax: 206-524-2104 er of Cart customer service: 800-657-1100 blish oon [email protected] • www.fantagraphics.com Pu ists Since 1976 Distributed to the book trade in the In Japan: In Singapore, Malaysia: Distributed to the comic book specialty United States by: market by Diamond Comics Distribu- Rockbook – Gilles Fauveau Pansing Distribution Pte Ltd tors (www.diamondcomics.com). W.W. NORTON AND COMPANY, INC. Expirime 5F 10-10 Ichibancho 1 New Industrial Road 500 Fifth Avenue Chiyoda-ku Times Centre Also available via Last Gasp Books New York, NY 10110 102-0082 Tokyo Singapore 536196 (www.lastgasp.com). Tel.: 212-354-5500 Japan Tel (65) 6319 9939 Fax: 212-869-0856 Tel: (81) 90 9700 2481 Fax (65) 6459 4930 For information on distribution Tel: (81) 90 3962 4650 Order Dept. Tel.: 800-233-4830 email: [email protected] elsewhere, please contact Martin Bland. email: [email protected] Order Dept. Fax: 800-458-6515 “Fantagraphics… has published and championed many of the finest “Fantagraphics publishes the best comics in the world.” —Wired email: [email protected] Customer Service Dept.: 800-233-4830 In Thailand, Cambodia, Laos, Vietnam, cartoonists working today.”—John Hodgman, The New York Times Special Sales Dept.: Myanmar: General Inquiries “Fantagraphics [is] raising bars and smashing boundaries with every 800-286-4044 In Taiwan and Korea: [email protected] “One of the foremost publishers of comics, graphic novels and related mammoth step they take.
    [Show full text]
  • The Metacomics of Alan Moore, Neil Gaiman, and Warren Ellis
    University of Alberta Telling Stories About Storytelling: The Metacomics of Alan Moore, Neil Gaiman, and Warren Ellis by Orion Ussner Kidder A thesis submitted to the Faculty of Graduate Studies and Research in partial fulfilment of the requirements for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy in English Department of English and Film Studies ©Orion Ussner Kidder Spring 2010 Edmonton, Alberta Permission is hereby granted to the University of Alberta Libraries to reproduce single copies of this thesis and to lend or sell such copies for private, scholarly or scientific research purposes only. Where the thesis is converted to, or otherwise made available in digital form, the University of Alberta will advise potential users of the thesis of these terms. The author reserves all other publication and other rights in association with the copyright in the thesis and, except as herein before provided, neither the thesis nor any substantial portion thereof may be printed or otherwise reproduced in any material form whatsoever without the author's prior written permission. Examining Committee Douglas Barbour, English and Film Studies Brad Bucknell, English and Film Studies William Beard, English and Film Studies Steven Harris, Art and Design Bart Beaty, Communications and Culture, University of Calgary This document is the product of work, support, and love from many people, and so there is no one person I could possibly dedicate it to. I would like to thank my parents, Michael Kidder and Joanna Ussner, for giving me both a love of fantasy and the ability to critique it; Dr. Kirsten Uszkalo for suggesting, years ago, that I do a dissertation on comic books at all; Dr.
    [Show full text]