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{{US culture}}
{{US culture}}


An '''American comic book''' is a thin [[periodical]] containing primarily [[comics]] content.
An '''American comic book''' is a small [[magazine]] originating in the [[United States]] and containing a [[narrative]] in the form of [[comics]]. Since 1975 the dimensions have standardized at 6 5/8" x 10 ¼" (17 x 26&nbsp;cm), down from 6 ¾" x 10 ¼" in the Silver Age, although larger formats appeared in the past. This varied based on publisher and wartime supplies, but could be as large as 7 1/2" x by 10 1/4" such as ''[[National Comics (series)|National Comics]]'' published by [[Quality Comics]].


While the form originated in 1933, American comic books first gained popularity after the 1938 publication of ''[[Action Comics]]'', which included the debut of the [[superhero]] [[Superman]]. This was followed by a superhero boom that lasted until the end of [[World War II]]. After the war, while superheroes were marginalized, the comic book industry rapidly expanded, and genres such as [[funny animal]]s, westerns, romance and humor became popular. The 1950s saw a gradual decline, due especially to new censorship laws and the spread of television. The 1960s saw a superhero revival, and superheroes continue to be the dominant genre today, although other genres have continued to find audiences.
Since the introduction of the modern [[comic book]] format in 1933,<ref name=coville /> the United States has produced the most examples, with only the [[British comics|British comic books]] (during the inter-war period and up until the 1970s), the Italian ''[[fumetti]]'' and the Japanese ''[[manga]]'' as close competitors in terms of quantity.{{Citation needed|date=May 2008}}


Since the later 20th century, comic books have gained note as collectable items. [[Comic shop]]s cater to fans, and particularly valuable issues have fetched in excess of a million dollars. Systems of grading comic books have emerged, and plastic bags and backing boards are available to maintain the comic books' condition.
Sales of comic books began to decline after [[World War II]], when the medium had to face competition with the spread of television and [[mass market paperback|mass-market paperback]] books. Confirming the trend, mass-media researchers in the period found comic-book reading among the public with television sets in homes "drastically reduced".<ref>Himmelweit, Hilde et al. ''Television and the Child'' ([[Oxford University Press]], London, 1958) p.36</ref> The 1960s saw a second wave of superhero popularity that became known as the Silver Age and also saw the advent of the [[underground comix|underground comics]]. Later, the recognition of the comics medium among academics, [[literary critic]]s and [[art museum]]s helped solidify comics as a serious artform with established traditions, stylistic [[Convention (norm)|conventions]], and artistic evolution.


==History==
==History==
===Proto-comic books and the Platinum Age===
===Proto-comic books and the Platinum Age===
The development of the modern American comic book happened in stages. Publishers had collected [[comic strip]]s in [[hardcover book]] form as early as 1833, with ''[[Histoire de M. Vieux Bois|The Adventures of Obadiah Oldbuck]]'', which appeared in New York in 1842, as the first example published in English.<ref name=coville />
The development of the modern American comic book happened in stages. Publishers had collected [[comic strip]]s in [[hardcover book]] form as early as 1833, with ''[[Histoire de M. Vieux Bois|The Adventures of Obadiah Oldbuck]]'', which appeared in New York in 1842, as the first example published in English.<ref name="HoCB-Platinum" />


[[Image:YellowKidMcFadden.jpg|thumb|left|''The Yellow Kid in McFadden's Flats'' (1897). The Yellow Kid did not speak; messages in a [[pidgin]] vernacular appeared on his nightshirt. This message reads: "Dis book is de story of me sweet young life".]]
[[Image:YellowKidMcFadden.jpg|thumb|left|''The Yellow Kid in McFadden's Flats'' (1897). The Yellow Kid did not speak; messages in a [[pidgin]] vernacular appeared on his nightshirt. This message reads: "Dis book is de story of me sweet young life".]]


The G. W. Dillingham Company published the first known proto-comic-book magazine in the U.S., ''The Yellow Kid in McFadden's Flats'', in 1897. It reprinted material &ndash; primarily the October 18, 1896 to January 10, 1897 sequence titled "McFadden's Row of Flats" &ndash; from [[cartoonist]] [[Richard F. Outcault]]'s [[newspaper]] [[comic strip]] ''[[Hogan's Alley (comic strip)|Hogan's Alley]]'', starring a character called the [[Yellow Kid]]. The 196-page, square-bound, black-and-white publication, which also includes introductory text by [[E. W. Townsend]], measured 5x7 inches and sold for 50 cents. The neologism "comic book" appears on the back cover.<ref name=coville>Coville, Jamie. [http://www.thecomicbooks.com/old/Platinum.html The History of Comic Books: Introduction and "The Platinum Age 1897 - 1938]", TheComicBooks.com, n.d. [http://web.archive.org/web/20030415153354/www.collectortimes.com/~comichistory/Platinum.html Archive of original page] published at defunct site [http://www.collectortimes.com CollectorTimes.com]</ref> Despite the publication of a series of related Hearst comics soon afterward (including the first known full-color comic, ''The Blackberries'', in 1901) the first monthly comic book, ''Comics Monthly'', did not appear until 1922 and only lasted a year. Produced in an 8½-by-9-inch format, it reprinted newspaper comic strips.<ref name=coville />
The G. W. Dillingham Company published the first known proto-comic-book magazine in the U.S., ''The Yellow Kid in McFadden's Flats'', in 1897. It reprinted material &ndash; primarily the October 18, 1896 to January 10, 1897 sequence titled "McFadden's Row of Flats" &ndash; from [[cartoonist]] [[Richard F. Outcault]]'s [[newspaper]] [[comic strip]] ''[[Hogan's Alley (comic strip)|Hogan's Alley]]'', starring the [[Yellow Kid]], the lead character. The 196-page, square-bound, black-and-white publication, which also includes introductory text by [[E. W. Townsend]], measured 5x7 inches and sold for 50 cents. The neologism "comic book" appears on the back cover. Despite the publication of a series of related Hearst comics soon afterward (including the first known full-color comic, ''The Blackberries'', in 1901) the first monthly comic book, ''Comics Monthly'', did not appear until 1922 and only lasted a year. Produced in an 8½-by-9-inch format, it reprinted newspaper comic strips.<ref name="HoCB-Platinum" />


===''The Funnies'' and ''Funnies on Parade''===
===''The Funnies'' and ''Funnies on Parade''===
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[[Image:FamousFunnies1933.jpg|thumb|left|Eastern Color Press' ''[[Famous Funnies]]: A Carnival of Comics'' (Eastern Color Printing, 1933)]]
[[Image:FamousFunnies1933.jpg|thumb|left|Eastern Color Press' ''[[Famous Funnies]]: A Carnival of Comics'' (Eastern Color Printing, 1933)]]


Also in 1933 Gaines and Wildenberg collaborated with Dell to publish the 36-page ''Famous Funnies: A Carnival of Comics'',<ref>{{Cite web| url=http://www.comics.org/details.lasso?id=75 | title=Famous Funnies- Carnival of Comics | work=The Grand Comics Database | accessdate=2010-09-12}}</ref> which historians consider the first true American comic book; Goulart, for example, calls it "the cornerstone for one of the most lucrative branches of magazine publishing".<ref name="ron" /> Distribution took place through the [[F. W. Woolworth Company|Woolworth's]] [[department store|department-store]] chain, though it remains unclear whether it was sold or given away; the cover displays no price, but Goulart refers, either metaphorically or literally, to "sticking a ten-cent pricetag <nowiki>[</nowiki>[[sic]]<nowiki>]</nowiki> on the comic books".<ref name="ron" />
Also in 1933 Gaines and Wildenberg collaborated with Dell to publish the 36-page ''Famous Funnies: A Carnival of Comics'', which historians consider the first true American comic book; Goulart, for example, calls it "the cornerstone for one of the most lucrative branches of magazine publishing".<ref name="ron" /> Distribution took place through the [[F. W. Woolworth Company|Woolworth's]] [[department store|department-store]] chain, though it remains unclear whether it was sold or given away; the cover displays no price, but Goulart refers, either metaphorically or literally, to "sticking a ten-cent pricetag {{sic}} on the comic books".<ref name="ron" />


When Delacorte declined to continue with ''Famous Funnies: A Carnival of Comics'', Eastern Color on its own published ''[[Famous Funnies]]'' #1 (cover-dated July 1934), a 68-page giant selling for 10¢. Distributed to newsstands by the mammoth [[American News Company]], it proved a hit with readers during the cash-strapped [[Great Depression]], selling 90 percent of its 200,000 print — though putting Eastern Color more than $4,000 in the red.<ref name="ron" /> That quickly changed, with the book turning a $30,000 profit each issue starting with #12.<ref name="ron" /> ''Famous Funnies'' would eventually run 218 issues, inspire imitators, and largely launch a new [[mass medium]].
When Delacorte declined to continue with ''Famous Funnies: A Carnival of Comics'', Eastern Color on its own published ''[[Famous Funnies]]'' #1 (cover-dated July 1934), a 68-page giant selling for 10¢. Distributed to newsstands by the mammoth [[American News Company]], it proved a hit with readers during the cash-strapped [[Great Depression]], selling 90 percent of its 200,000 print — though putting Eastern Color more than $4,000 in the red.<ref name="ron" /> That quickly changed, with the book turning a $30,000 profit each issue starting with #12.<ref name="ron" /> ''Famous Funnies'' would eventually run 218 issues, inspire imitators, and largely launch a new [[mass medium]].
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[[Image:FamousFunnies n1(1934).jpg|thumb|''Famous Funnies'' #1 (July 1934). Cover art by [[Jon Mayes]]<!--signed-->.]]
[[Image:FamousFunnies n1(1934).jpg|thumb|''Famous Funnies'' #1 (July 1934). Cover art by [[Jon Mayes]]<!--signed-->.]]


When the supply of available existing comic strips began to dwindle, early comic books began to include a small amount of new, original material in comic-strip format. Inevitably, a comic book of all-original material, with no comic-strip reprints, debuted. Fledgling publisher [[Malcolm Wheeler-Nicholson]] founded National Allied Publications &ndash; which would evolve into [[DC Comics]] &ndash; to release [[More Fun Comics|''New Fun'']] #1 (Feb. 1935). This came out as a [[Tabloid (paper size)|tabloid]]-sized, 10-inch by 15-inch, 36-page magazine with a card-stock, non-glossy cover. An [[anthology]], it mixed [[humor]] features such as the [[funny animal]] comic "Pelion and Ossa" and the college-set "Jigger and Ginger" with such dramatic fare as the [[Western fiction|Western]] strip "Jack Woods" and the "[[yellow peril|yellow-peril]]" adventure "Barry O'Neill", featuring a [[Fu Manchu]]-styled villain, Fang Gow. Issue #6 (Oct. 1935) brought the comic-book debut of [[Jerry Siegel]] and [[Joe Shuster]], the future creators of [[Superman]], who began their careers with the musketeer swashbuckler "Henri Duval" (doing the first two installments before turning it over to others) and, under the [[pseudonym]]s "Leger and Reuths", the [[supernatural]]-crimefighter adventure [[Doctor Occult]].
When the supply of available existing comic strips began to dwindle, early comic books began to include a small amount of new, original material in comic-strip format. Inevitably, a comic book of all-original material, with no comic-strip reprints, debuted. Fledgling publisher [[Malcolm Wheeler-Nicholson]] founded National Allied Publications &ndash; which would evolve into [[DC Comics]] &ndash; to release [[More Fun Comics|''New Fun'']] #1 (Feb. 1935). This came out as a [[Tabloid (paper size)|tabloid]]-sized, 10-inch by 15-inch, 36-page magazine with a card-stock, non-glossy cover. An [[anthology]], it mixed [[humor]] features such as the [[funny animal]] comic "Pelion and Ossa" and the college-set "Jigger and Ginger" with such dramatic fare as the [[Western fiction|Western]] strip "Jack Woods" and the "[[yellow peril|yellow-peril]]" adventure "Barry O'Neill", featuring a [[Fu Manchu]]-styled villain, Fang Gow. Issue #6 (Oct. 1935) brought the comic-book debut of [[Jerry Siegel]] and [[Joe Shuster]], the future creators of [[Superman]], who began their careers with the musketeer swashbuckler "Henri Duval" (doing the first two installments before turning it over to others) and, under the [[pseudonym]]s "Leger and Reuths", the [[supernatural]]-crimefighter adventure [[Doctor Occult]].{{cn|date=April 2012}}


===Superheroes and the Golden Age===
===Superheroes and the Golden Age===
{{Main|Golden Age of Comic Books}}
{{Main|Golden Age of Comic Books}}
In 1938, after Wheeler-Nicholson's partner [[Harry Donenfeld]] had ousted him, National Allied editor [[Vin Sullivan]] pulled a Siegel/Shuster creation from the [[slush pile]] and used it as the cover feature (but only as a backup story)<ref>Daniels, Les. ''DC Comics: 60 Years of the World's Favorite Comic Book Heroes'' (Little Brown, 1995).</ref> in ''[[Action Comics]]'' [[Action Comics 1|#1]] (June 1938). The duo's alien hero, [[Superman]], dressed in colorful tights and a cape evoking costumed [[circus]] daredevil performers, became the archetype of the "[[superheroes]]" that would follow. ''Action'' would become the American comic book with the second-largest number of issues, next to [[Dell Comics]]' ''[[Four Color]]'', with over 860 issues published {{As of| 2008 | lc = on}}.
In 1938, after Wheeler-Nicholson's partner [[Harry Donenfeld]] had ousted him, National Allied editor [[Vin Sullivan]] pulled a Siegel/Shuster creation from the [[slush pile]] and used it as the cover feature (but only as a backup story)<ref>Daniels, Les. ''DC Comics: 60 Years of the World's Favorite Comic Book Heroes'' (Little Brown, 1995).</ref> in ''[[Action Comics]]'' [[Action Comics 1|#1]] (June 1938). The duo's alien hero, [[Superman]], dressed in colorful tights and a cape evoking costumed [[circus]] daredevil performers, became the archetype of the "[[superheroes]]" that would follow. ''Action'' would become the American comic book with the second-largest number of issues, next to [[Dell Comics]]' ''[[Four Color]]'', with over 860 issues published {{As of| 2008 | lc = on}}.{{cn|date=April 2012}}


[[File:Action Comics 1.jpg|thumb|left|''[[Action Comics]]'' [[Action Comics 1|#1]] (June 1938). The debut of Superman. Cover art by [[Joe Shuster]].]]
[[File:Action Comics 1.jpg|thumb|left|''[[Action Comics]]'' [[Action Comics 1|#1]] (June 1938). The debut of Superman. Cover art by [[Joe Shuster]].]]


Siegel and Shuster's Superman, influenced by the [[pulp magazine|pulp fiction]] stories and by the legend of the [[Golem]] of [[Prague]],{{Citation needed|date=November 2007}}<!--Siegel & Shuster consistently denied the following: and by [[Philip Wylie]]'s novel ''Gladiator''--> had [[superhuman]] strength, speed and other abilities, and lived day-to-day in his [[secret identity]] as a mild-mannered [[reporter]] named Clark Kent. Within two years, most comic-book companies had started publishing large lines of superhero titles, and Superman has gone on to become one of the world's most recognizable characters.
Siegel and Shuster's Superman, influenced by the [[pulp magazine|pulp fiction]] stories and by the legend of the [[Golem]] of [[Prague]],{{Citation needed|date=November 2007}}<!--Siegel & Shuster consistently denied the following: and by [[Philip Wylie]]'s novel ''Gladiator''--> had [[superhuman]] strength, speed and other abilities, and lived day-to-day in his [[secret identity]] as a mild-mannered [[reporter]] named Clark Kent. Within two years, most comic-book companies had started publishing large lines of superhero titles, and Superman has gone on to become one of the world's most recognizable characters.{{cn|date=April 2012}}


Aficionados know the period from the late 1930s through roughly the end of the 1940s as the [[Golden Age of comic books]]. It featured extremely large print-runs, with ''Action'' and [[Captain Marvel (DC Comics)#Development and inspirations|''Captain Marvel'']] selling over half a million copies a month each;<ref>Daniels {{Page needed|date=September 2010}}</ref> comics provided very popular cheap entertainment during [[World War II]] especially among soldiers, but erratic quality in stories, art, and in printing. Unusually, the comics industry provided jobs to an ethnic cross-section of Americans (particularly [[Jew]]s), albeit often at low wages and in [[sweatshop]] working-conditions.
Aficionados know the period from the late 1930s through roughly the end of the 1940s as the [[Golden Age of comic books]]. It featured extremely large print-runs, with ''Action'' and [[Captain Marvel (DC Comics)#Development and inspirations|''Captain Marvel'']] selling over half a million copies a month each;<ref>Daniels {{Page needed|date=September 2010}}</ref> comics provided very popular cheap entertainment during [[World War II]] especially among soldiers, but erratic quality in stories, art, and in printing. Unusually, the comics industry provided jobs to an ethnic cross-section of Americans (particularly [[Jew]]s), albeit often at low wages and in [[sweatshop]] working-conditions.{{cn|date=April 2012}}


Following the end of [[War World II]], the popularity of superheroes greatly diminished,<ref name="CaM51" /> while the comic book industry itself expanded.{{cn|date=April 2012}} A few standard characters like Superman, Batman and Wonder Woman continued to sell, but superheroes as a genre became relegated to the status of a subgenre of adventure comics, a genre which itself was not amongst the popular genres at the time. Between 1950 and 1952 all attempts at publishing new superhero somic books were in vain.<ref name="CaM51" />
Following World War II the popularity of superhero comics rapidly declined. Publishers began to phase them out around 1945 and replace them with [[teen]] humor (epitomized by [[Archie Comics]]), [[funny animal]] comics (such as those featuring [[Walt Disney]] characters), [[science fiction]], [[Western (genre)|Western]], [[romance novel|romance]], and [[satire]] comics. [[Timely Comics|Timely]]'s superhero line ended in 1950 when it canceled [[Captain America]], which had already been converted into a horror title for its final issues. Except for National's Superman, [[Batman]], and [[Wonder Woman]], superheroes practically went extinct by 1952.


Dell's comic books accounted for a third of all North American sales in the early 1950s. Its 90 titles averaged a circulation of 800,000 copies each issue, with ''[[Walt Disney's Comics and Stories]]'' peaking with a circulation of three million in 1953. Eleven of the top 25 best-selling comic books at the time were Dell titles.<ref name="CaM40" /> Out of forty publishers active in 1954, Dell, Atlas (Marvel), DC and Archie were the major players sales-wise. By this time, former big-time players Fawcett and Fiction house had ceased publishing.<ref name="CaM44" />
Comics as an overall genre continued to increase their readership into the 1950s, however, with ''Walt Disney's Comics and Stories'' selling almost three million copies a month in 1953).<ref>Willits, Malcolm. "Interview with [[George Sherman (comics)|George Sherman]]". ''Vanguard'' 1968, reprinted in ''Duckburg Times'' #12 (1981).

</ref>
Circulation peaked out in 1952, when 3161 issues of various comics were published with total circulation at about one billion.<ref group="note">Actual estimates vary between 840 million and 1.3 billion{{ref|CaM46}}</ref> After 1952, the number of indivual releases dropped every year for the rest of the decade, with the biggest losses coming in 1955–56.<ref name="CaM46" /> These rapid losses followed the introduction of laws that curbed the sales of comic books that were seen as being harmful to children, as well as a crackdown on press wholesalers by the U.S. Senate, which freed retailers from tie-ins.<ref name="CaM48-49" /> While there was only a 9% drop in the number of releases between 1952 and 1953, circulation plummeted by an estimated 30–40%.<ref name="CaM47-48" /> The cause of the decrease is not entirely certain. Television had come to provide competition with comic books, or the rise of conservative values that came with the election of [[Dwight Eisenhower]]. The [[Comics Code Authority]], a self-censoring body founded to curb juvenile delinquency believed to be influenced by crime and horror comics, has been targeted as the culprit, though sales had begun to drop the year before it was founded.<ref name="CaM47" /> The major publishers were largely unaffected by the drop, but smaller publishers like EC (the prime target of the CCA) were wiped out.<ref name="CaM49" /> By the 1960s, output stabilized at about 1500 releases per year.<ref name="CaM46" />
Close to a dozen Dell funny-animal titles sold over one million copies each per month. [[Entertaining Comics|EC Comics]]' more adult-oriented [[horror fiction|horror]] titles sold 400,000 a month.{{Citation needed|date=October 2007}}

The dominant comic book genres of the post-CCA 1950s were funny animals, humor, romance, television properties and Westerns. Detective, fantasy, teen and war comics were also popular, while adventure, science fiction, superheroes and comic strip reprints were in decline,<ref name="CaM49" /> with ''Famous Funnies'' seeing its last issue in 1955.<ref name="CaM50" />


===The Comics Code===
===The Comics Code===
{{Main|Comics Code Authority}}
{{Main|Comics Code Authority}}
In the late 1940s and early 1950s [[horror fiction|horror]] and [[True crime (genre)|true-crime]] comics flourished, many containing violence and gore. EC ("[[Educational Comics]]", later renamed "Entertaining Comics") owned by Max Gaines' son, [[William M. Gaines]], became the most successful and artistically creative of all the publishers. The careers of many famous artists such as [[Al Feldstein]], [[Wallace Wood]], [[Reed Crandall]], [[Jack Davis (cartoonist)|Jack Davis]], [[Will Elder]] and others began in the offices of EC. However, in spite of the quality of the work, psychiatrist [[Fredric Wertham]] singled out Gaines as the most infamous of the comic moguls.
In the late 1940s and early 1950s [[horror fiction|horror]] and [[True crime (genre)|true-crime]] comics flourished, many containing violence and gore. EC ("[[Educational Comics]]", later renamed "Entertaining Comics") owned by Max Gaines' son, [[William M. Gaines]], became the most successful and artistically creative of all the publishers. The careers of many famous artists such as [[Al Feldstein]], [[Wallace Wood]], [[Reed Crandall]], [[Jack Davis (cartoonist)|Jack Davis]], [[Will Elder]] and others began in the offices of EC. However, in spite of the quality of the work, psychiatrist [[Fredric Wertham]] singled out Gaines as the most infamous of the comic moguls.{{cn|date=April 2012}}


Wertham's book ''[[Seduction of the Innocent]]'' (1954), concerned with what he perceived as [[Sadomasochism|sadistic]] and [[homosexual]] undertones in horror comics and in superhero comics respectively, raised public anxiety about comics. Soon [[moral panic|moral crusader]]s blamed comic books as a cause of poor grades, [[juvenile delinquency]], drug use, and ultimately, "[[crime]]" itself.<ref>An example of the sensational coverage of comics in the mass media is [http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=GI8IJA8kdkI Confidential File: Horror Comic Books!], broadcast October 9, 1955 on Los Angeles television station [[KTTV]].</ref> This led the [[Senate Subcommittee on Juvenile Delinquency]] to take an interest in comic books (April–June, 1954). Schools and parent groups held public comic-book burnings, and some cities [[ban (law)|banned]] comic books. Industry circulation declined drastically.
Wertham's book ''[[Seduction of the Innocent]]'' (1954), concerned with what he perceived as [[Sadomasochism|sadistic]] and [[homosexual]] undertones in horror comics and in superhero comics respectively, raised public anxiety about comics. Soon [[moral panic|moral crusader]]s blamed comic books as a cause of poor grades, [[juvenile delinquency]], drug use, and ultimately, "[[crime]]" itself.<ref group="note">An example of the sensational coverage of comics in the mass media is [http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=GI8IJA8kdkI Confidential File: Horror Comic Books!], broadcast October 9, 1955 on Los Angeles television station [[KTTV]].</ref> This led the [[Senate Subcommittee on Juvenile Delinquency]] to take an interest in comic books (April–June, 1954). Schools and parent groups held public comic-book burnings, and some cities [[ban (law)|banned]] comic books. Industry circulation declined drastically.{{cn|date=April 2012}}


In the wake of these events, many comics publishers, most notably National and Archie, founded the [[Comics Code Authority]] in 1954 and drafted the [[Comics Code]], intended as "the most stringent code in existence for any communications media".<ref>{{cite book|title=Comix: A history of comic books in America|page=84|publisher=Bonanza Books|year=1971|author=Daniels, Les}}</ref> A Comic Code Seal of Approval soon appeared on virtually every comic book carried on newsstands. EC, after experimenting with less controversial comic books, dropped its comics line to focus on the satiric ''[[Mad Magazine|Mad]]'' — a comic book that changed to magazine format in order to circumvent the Code.
In the wake of these events, many comics publishers, most notably National and Archie, founded the [[Comics Code Authority]] in 1954 and drafted the Comics Code, intended as "the most stringent code in existence for any communications media".<ref>{{cite book|title=Comix: A history of comic books in America|page=84|publisher=Bonanza Books|year=1971|author=Daniels, Les}}</ref> A Comic Code Seal of Approval soon appeared on virtually every comic book carried on newsstands. EC, after experimenting with less controversial comic books, dropped its comics line to focus on the satiric ''[[Mad (magazine)|Mad]]'' — a comic book that changed to magazine format in order to circumvent the Code.{{cn|date=April 2012}}


===Silver Age of Comic Books===
===Silver Age of Comic Books===
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[[Image:Showcase4.JPG|thumb|left|''Showcase'' #4 (Oct. 1956), the launch of comics' [[Silver Age of comic books|Silver Age]]. Cover art by [[Carmine Infantino]] and [[Joe Kubert]].]]
[[Image:Showcase4.JPG|thumb|left|''Showcase'' #4 (Oct. 1956), the launch of comics' [[Silver Age of comic books|Silver Age]]. Cover art by [[Carmine Infantino]] and [[Joe Kubert]].]]


DC started a revival in superhero comics in 1956 with the October 1956 revival of The Flash in ''Showcase'' #4. Many comics historians peg this as the beginning of the Silver Age of American comic books, although Marvel had started reviving some of its old superheroes as early as 1954.<ref name="CaM51" /> The new Flash is taken symbolically as the beginning of a new era, although his success was not immediate. It took two years for the Flash to receive his own title, and ''Showcase'' itself was only a bimonthly title, though one that was to introduce a large number of enduring characters. By 1959, the slowly building superhero revival had become clear to DC's competitors. Archie jumped on board that year, and Charlton joined the bandwagon in 1960.<ref name="CaM52" />
The [[Silver Age of comic books|Silver Age]] represents the period in which superheroes returned and came to dominate the comic book lines of the two major publishers, DC and Marvel. In the mid-1950s, following the popularity of the television series ''The Adventures of Superman'', publishers experimented with the superhero once more. ''[[Showcase (comics)|Showcase]]'' #4 (National, 1956) [[Reboot (continuity)|re-introduced]] [[The Flash]] and began a second wave of superhero popularity that became known as the Silver Age. National expanded its line of superheroes over the next six years, introducing new versions of [[Green Lantern]], [[Atom (comics)|the Atom]], [[Hawkman]], and others.


In 1961 writer/editor [[Stan Lee]] and artist/co-plotter [[Jack Kirby]] created the [[Fantastic Four]] for [[Marvel Comics]]. With an innovation that changed the comic-book industry, ''The Fantastic Four'' #1 initiated a [[naturalism (literature)|naturalistic]] style of superheroes with human failings, fears, and inner demons - heroes who squabbled and worried about the likes of rent-money. In contrast to the super-heroic do-gooder archetypes of established superheroes at the time, this ushered in a revolution. With dynamic artwork by Kirby, [[Steve Ditko]], [[Don Heck]], and others complementing Lee's colorful, catchy prose, the new style was known to be very popular among college students who could identify with the angsty and irreverent nature of the characters such as the likes of Spider-Man,X-Men and the Fantastic Four during a time period of massive social upheaval which birthed a new generation of hipper and more countercultural young men and women who found a voice in these books. Marvel was initially restricted in the number of titles it could produce in that its books were distributed by rival National, a situation not alleviated until the late 1960s.
In 1961 writer/editor [[Stan Lee]] and artist/co-plotter [[Jack Kirby]] created the [[Fantastic Four]] for [[Marvel Comics]]. With an innovation that changed the comic-book industry, ''The Fantastic Four'' #1 initiated a [[naturalism (literature)|naturalistic]] style of superheroes with human failings, fears, and inner demons - heroes who squabbled and worried about the likes of rent-money. In contrast to the super-heroic do-gooder archetypes of established superheroes at the time, this ushered in a revolution. With dynamic artwork by Kirby, [[Steve Ditko]], [[Don Heck]], and others complementing Lee's colorful, catchy prose, the new style was known to be very popular among college students who could identify with the angsty and irreverent nature of the characters such as the likes of Spider-Man,X-Men and the Fantastic Four during a time period of massive social upheaval which birthed a new generation of hipper and more countercultural young men and women who found a voice in these books. Marvel was initially restricted in the number of titles it could produce in that its books were distributed by rival National, a situation not alleviated until the late 1960s.{{cn|date=April 2012}}


While the creators of comics had been given credit in comic books' early days, this had all but vanished throughout the 1940s and 1950s. Comic books were produced by comic book ''companies'' rather than individual creators (EC being a notable exception, a company that not only credited its creative teams, but also featured creators' biographies). Even comic books by revered and collectable artists like [[Carl Barks]] were not known by their creators' names—Disney comics like Barks' were signed "Walt Disney". In the 1960s, DC, and then Marvel, began including writer and artist credits on the comics they published.<ref name="CaM67" />
Other notable companies included the [[American Comics Group]] (ACG), the low-budget [[Charlton Comics|Charlton]], where many professionals such as [[Dick Giordano]] got their start; [[Dell Comics|Dell]]; [[Gold Key Comics|Gold Key]]; [[Harvey Comics]], home of the Harvey cartoon-characters ([[Casper the Friendly Ghost]]) and non-animated others ([[Richie Rich (comics)|Richie Rich]]); and [[Tower Comics|Tower]], best-known for [[T.H.U.N.D.E.R. Agents]].


Other notable companies included the [[American Comics Group]] (ACG), the low-budget [[Charlton Comics|Charlton]], where many professionals such as [[Dick Giordano]] got their start; [[Dell Comics|Dell]]; [[Gold Key Comics|Gold Key]]; [[Harvey Comics]], home of the Harvey cartoon-characters ([[Casper the Friendly Ghost]]) and non-animated others ([[Richie Rich (comics)|Richie Rich]]); and [[Tower Comics|Tower]], best-known for [[T.H.U.N.D.E.R. Agents]].{{cn|date=April 2012}}
===Underground comics===
During the late 1960s and early 1970s a surge of [[Underground comix|underground comics]] occurred. These comics, published independently of the established comic-book publishers, mostly reflected the youth [[counterculture]] and [[drug culture]] of the time. Many featured an uninhibited, irreverent style, which hadn't been seen in comics before. The movement is often considered{{Citation needed|date=February 2007}} to have been started by [[R. Crumb]]'s publication of ''[[Zap Comix]]'' #1 in 1968, though there were antecedents such as pornographic "[[Tijuana bibles]]", dating to the 1920s, and [[Frank Stack]]'s ''The Adventures of Jesus'', published in 1962.


===Underground comix===
Although many of the underground artists continued to produce work, most historians{{Who|date=August 2009}} regard the underground comix movement as having ended by 1980, to be replaced that decade by a rise in independent, non-[[Comics Code Authority]] compliant [[alternative comics]] and the stigma amongst critics and the general public of regarding comic books as "child's play" being shedded off gradually.
{{Main|Underground comix}}
Sex, drugs and rock 'n roll were featured as the anti-authoritarian [[underground comix]] saw made waves in 1968 following the publication of [[Robert Crumb]]'s irregularly-published ''[[Zap Comix]]''. [[Frank Stack]] had published ''The Adventures of Jesus'' as far back as 1962, and there had been a trickle of such publications until Crumb's success.<ref name="CaM65" /> What had started as a self-publishing scene soon grew into a minor industry, with [[Print Mint]], [[Kitchen Sink Press|Kitchen Sink]], [[Last Gasp]] and [[Apex Novelties]] among the more well-known publishers. These comix were often extremely graphic, and largely distributed in [[head shop]]s that flourished in the countercultural era.<ref name="CaM66" />

Legal issues and paper shortages led to a decline in underground comix output from its 1972 peak. The death knell was sounded in 1974, when the passage of anti-paraphernalia laws led to the closing of most head shops, which throttled underground comix' distribution. Its readership also dried up as the hippie movement itself petered out around the mid-1970s.<ref name="CaM82" /> Some underground cartoonists stayed in comics, however—[[Robert Crumb]] and [[Art Spiegelman]] would become two of the leading lights of the [[alternative comics]] era, and [[Bill Griffiths]] would take to comic strips.{{cn|date=April 2012}}


===Bronze Age of Comic Books===
===Bronze Age of Comic Books===
{{Main|Bronze Age of Comic Books}}
{{Main|Bronze Age of Comic Books}}


''[[Wizard (magazine)|Wizard]]'' originally used the phrase "Bronze Age" in 1995 to denote the Modern Horror age. But {{As of| 2009 | lc = on}} historians and fans use [[Bronze Age of Comic Books|"Bronze Age"]] to describe the period of American mainstream comics history that begins with a period of concentrated changes to comic books circa 1970. Unlike the Golden/Silver Age transition, the Silver/Bronze transition involved many continually published books, making the transition less sharp; not every book entered the Bronze Age at the same time.<ref>[http://www.collectortimes.com/~comichistory/Hist4.html History of Comics-Bronze Age]{{Dead link|date=September 2010}}</ref>
''[[Wizard (magazine)|Wizard]]'' originally used the phrase "Bronze Age" in 1995 to denote the Modern Horror age. But {{As of| 2009 | lc = on}} historians and fans use [[Bronze Age of Comic Books|"Bronze Age"]] to describe the period of American mainstream comics history that begins with a period of concentrated changes to comic books circa 1970. Unlike the Golden/Silver Age transition, the Silver/Bronze transition involved many continually published books, making the transition less sharp; not every book entered the Bronze Age at the same time.{{cn|date=April 2012}}


Changes commonly considered{{Citation needed|date=February 2007}} to mark the transition between Silver and Bronze ages include:
Changes commonly considered{{Citation needed|date=February 2007}} to mark the transition between Silver and Bronze ages include:
Line 103: Line 109:
===The Modern Age===
===The Modern Age===
{{Main|Modern Age of Comic Books}}
{{Main|Modern Age of Comic Books}}
The development of a non-returnable "[[direct market]]" distribution system in the 1970s coincided with the appearance of comic-book [[specialty store]]s across North America. These specialty stores were a haven for more distinct voices and stories, but they also marginalized comics in the public eye. Serialized comic stories became longer and more complex, requiring readers to buy more issues to finish a story. Between 1970 and 1990, comic-book prices rose sharply because of a combination of factors: a nationwide paper shortage, increasing production values, and the minimal profit incentive for stores to stock comic books (due to the small unit price of an individual comic book relative to a magazine).
The development of a non-returnable "[[direct market]]" distribution system in the 1970s coincided with the appearance of comic-book [[specialty store]]s across North America. These specialty stores were a haven for more distinct voices and stories, but they also marginalized comics in the public eye. Serialized comic stories became longer and more complex, requiring readers to buy more issues to finish a story. Between 1970 and 1990, comic-book prices rose sharply because of a combination of factors: a nationwide paper shortage, increasing production values, and the minimal profit incentive for stores to stock comic books (due to the small unit price of an individual comic book relative to a magazine).{{cn|date=April 2012}}


[[Image:Spawn.jpg|thumb|''[[Spawn (comics)|Spawn]]'' #1 (May 1992). Cover art by [[Todd McFarlane]].]]
[[Image:Spawn.jpg|thumb|''[[Spawn (comics)|Spawn]]'' #1 (May 1992). Cover art by [[Todd McFarlane]].]]


In the mid-to-late 1980s, two series published by [[DC Comics]], ''[[Batman: The Dark Knight Returns]]'' and ''[[Watchmen]]'', had a profound impact upon the American comic-book industry. Their popularity, along with mainstream media attention and critical acclaim, combined with changing social tastes, led to{{cn|date=September 2011}} a considerably darker tone in comic books during the 1990s nicknamed by fans as the "grim-and-gritty" era.{{Citation needed|date=April 2007}} The growing popularity of [[antihero]]es such as the [[Punisher]] and [[Wolverine (comics)|Wolverine]] underscored this change, as did the darker tone of some independent publishers such as [[First Comics]], [[Dark Horse Comics]], and (founded in the 1990s) [[Image Comics]]. This tendency towards darkness and nihilism was manifested in DC's production of heavily promoted comic book stories such as "[[Batman: A Death in the Family|A Death in the Family]]" in the ''[[Batman]]'' series (in which [[Joker (comics)|The Joker]] brutally murdered Batman's sidekick [[Robin (comics)|Robin]]), while at Marvel the continuing popularity of the various ''[[X-Men]]'' books led to storylines involving the genocide of superpowered "mutants" in allegorical stories about religious and ethnic persecution.
In the mid-to-late 1980s, two series published by [[DC Comics]], ''[[Batman: The Dark Knight Returns]]'' and ''[[Watchmen]]'', had a profound impact upon the American comic-book industry. Their popularity, along with mainstream media attention and critical acclaim, combined with changing social tastes, led to{{cn|date=September 2011}} a considerably darker tone in comic books during the 1990s nicknamed by fans as the "grim-and-gritty" era.{{Citation needed|date=April 2007}} The growing popularity of [[antihero]]es such as the [[Punisher]] and [[Wolverine (comics)|Wolverine]] underscored this change, as did the darker tone of some independent publishers such as [[First Comics]], [[Dark Horse Comics]], and (founded in the 1990s) [[Image Comics]]. This tendency towards darkness and nihilism was manifested in DC's production of heavily promoted comic book stories such as "[[Batman: A Death in the Family|A Death in the Family]]" in the ''[[Batman]]'' series (in which [[Joker (comics)|The Joker]] brutally murdered Batman's sidekick [[Robin (comics)|Robin]]), while at Marvel the continuing popularity of the various ''[[X-Men]]'' books led to storylines involving the genocide of superpowered "mutants" in allegorical stories about religious and ethnic persecution.{{cn|date=April 2012}}


Though a speculator boom in the early 1990s temporarily increased specialty store sales &mdash; collectors "invested" in multiple copies of a single comic to sell at a profit later &mdash; these booms ended in a collectibles glut, and comic sales declined sharply in the mid-1990s, leading to the demise of many hundreds of stores. In the 2000s, fewer comics sell in North America than at any time in their publishing history.{{Citation needed|date=April 2007}} The large superhero-oriented publishers like Marvel and DC are still often referred to as the "mainstream" of comics and are still considered a mass medium like in previous decades.
Though a speculator boom in the early 1990s temporarily increased specialty store sales &mdash; collectors "invested" in multiple copies of a single comic to sell at a profit later &mdash; these booms ended in a collectibles glut, and comic sales declined sharply in the mid-1990s, leading to the demise of many hundreds of stores. In the 2000s, fewer comics sell in North America than at any time in their publishing history.{{Citation needed|date=April 2007}} The large superhero-oriented publishers like Marvel and DC are still often referred to as the "mainstream" of comics and are still considered a mass medium like in previous decades.{{cn|date=April 2012}}


While the actual publications are no longer as widespread, however, [[licensing]] and [[merchandising]] have made many comic-book characters, aside from such perennials as Superman and Batman, more widely known to the general public than ever{{Citation needed|date=April 2010}}. In particular, several [[movies]] and [[videogames]] based on comic-book characters have been released, and such heavily promoted events as [[Mary Jane Watson#Fictional character biography|Spider-Man's wedding]], the [[death of Superman]], and the [[Captain America#21st century|death of Captain America]] received widespread media coverage.
While the actual publications are no longer as widespread, however, [[licensing]] and [[merchandising]] have made many comic-book characters, aside from such perennials as Superman and Batman, more widely known to the general public than ever{{Citation needed|date=April 2010}}. In particular, several [[movies]] and [[videogames]] based on comic-book characters have been released, and such heavily promoted events as [[Mary Jane Watson#Fictional character biography|Spider-Man's wedding]], the [[death of Superman]], and the [[Captain America#21st century|death of Captain America]] received widespread media coverage.{{cn|date=April 2012}}


==Prestige format==
==Prestige format==
[[Prestige format]] comic books are typically longer than standard comic books, typically being of between 48 and 72 pages, and printed on glossy paper with a spine and card stock cover. The format was first used by DC on [[Frank Miller (comics)|Frank Miller]]'s ''Batman: The Dark Knight Returns''. The success of this work led to the establishment of the format, and it is now used generally to showcase works by big name creators or to spotlight significant storylines.
[[Prestige format]] comic books are typically longer than standard comic books, typically being of between 48 and 72 pages, and printed on glossy paper with a spine and card stock cover. The format was first used by DC on [[Frank Miller (comics)|Frank Miller]]'s ''Batman: The Dark Knight Returns''. The success of this work led to the establishment of the format, and it is now used generally to showcase works by big name creators or to spotlight significant storylines.{{cn|date=April 2012}}


These storylines can be serialized over a limited number of issues, or can be stand-alone. Stand-alone works published in the form, such as ''[[Batman: The Killing Joke]]'', are sometimes referred to{{By whom|date=April 2010}} either as [[graphic novel]]s or novellas.
These storylines can be serialized over a limited number of issues, or can be stand-alone. Stand-alone works published in the form, such as ''[[Batman: The Killing Joke]]'', are sometimes referred to{{By whom|date=April 2010}} either as [[graphic novel]]s or novellas.{{cn|date=April 2012}}


==Independent and alternative comics==
==Independent and alternative comics==
{{Main| Alternative comics}}
{{Main| Alternative comics}}
Comic specialty stores did help encourage several waves of independent-produced comics, beginning in the mid-1970s. The first of these was generally referred to as "independent" or "alternative" comics; some of these, such as ''[[Big Apple Comix]]'', continued somewhat in the tradition of underground comics, while others, such as ''[[Star Reach]]'', resembled the output of mainstream publishers in format and genre but were published by smaller artist-owned ventures or by a single artist; a few (notably ''[[RAW (magazine)|RAW]]'') represented experimental attempts to bring comics closer to the world of [[fine art]].
Comic specialty stores did help encourage several waves of independent-produced comics, beginning in the mid-1970s. The first of these was generally referred to as "independent" or "alternative" comics; some of these, such as ''[[Big Apple Comix]]'', continued somewhat in the tradition of underground comics, while others, such as ''[[Star Reach]]'', resembled the output of mainstream publishers in format and genre but were published by smaller artist-owned ventures or by a single artist; a few (notably ''[[RAW (magazine)|RAW]]'') represented experimental attempts to bring comics closer to the world of [[fine art]].{{cn|date=April 2012}}


The "small press" scene continued to grow and diversify, with a number of small publishers in the 1990s changing the format and distribution of their books to more closely resemble non-comics publishing. The "[[minicomic]]s" form, an extremely informal version of self-publishing, arose in the 1980s and became increasingly popular among artists in the 1990s, despite reaching an even more limited audience than the small press. "Art comics" has sometimes been used{{By whom|date=April 2010}} as a general term for alternative, small-press, or minicomic artists working outside of mainstream traditions. Publishers and artists working in all of these forms stated a desire to refine [[comics]] further as an art form.
The "small press" scene continued to grow and diversify, with a number of small publishers in the 1990s changing the format and distribution of their books to more closely resemble non-comics publishing. The "[[minicomic]]s" form, an extremely informal version of self-publishing, arose in the 1980s and became increasingly popular among artists in the 1990s, despite reaching an even more limited audience than the small press. "Art comics" has sometimes been used{{By whom|date=April 2010}} as a general term for alternative, small-press, or minicomic artists working outside of mainstream traditions. Publishers and artists working in all of these forms stated a desire to refine [[comics]] further as an art form.{{cn|date=April 2012}}


==Artist recognition==
==See also==
{{Portal box|United States|Comics}}
Some comic books have gained recognition and earned their creators awards from outside the genre. Thus [[Art Spiegelman]]'s ''[[Maus]]'' won a [[Pulitzer Prize]], and an issue of [[Neil Gaiman]]'s ''[[The Sandman (DC Comics/Vertigo)|The Sandman]]'' won the [[World Fantasy Award]] for "Best Short Story". Though not a comic book itself, [[Michael Chabon]]'s comic-book themed ''[[The Amazing Adventures of Kavalier & Clay]]'' won the 2001 [[Pulitzer Prize]] for [[fiction]].
* [[List of films based on English-language comics]]
* [[List of years in comics]]
* [[List of comic book publishing companies]]
{{-}}


==References==
Popular interest in superheroes increased with the success of [[feature film]]s such as ''[[X-Men (film)|X-Men]]'' (2000) and ''[[Spider-Man (film)|Spider-Man]]'' (2002). To capitalize on this interest, comics publishers launched concerted promotional efforts such as [[Free Comic Book Day]] (first held on May 5, 2002). In addition, filmed adaptations of non-superhero comic books, such as ''[[Ghost World]]'', ''[[A History of Violence]]'', ''[[Road to Perdition]]'', and ''[[American Splendor]]'', followed.
{{Reflist|colwidth=25em|refs=


<ref name="HoCB-Platinum">{{cite web
==Production==
|last = Coville
{{Original research|section|date=July 2009}}
|first = Jamie
<!-- Does this section belong in the 'American comic book' article -- or elsewhere? -->
|url = http://www.thecomicbooks.com/old/Platinum.html
Mainstream American comic books generally come to be collaboration. Generally, a writer/scripter/plotter will outline the whole story and act as a core of the storytelling process. (At EC, [[Al Feldstein]] and [[Bill Gaines]] came up with a new story every working day for over five years - an accomplishment unequaled in the field.)
|title = The History of Comic Books: Introduction and "The Platinum Age 1897 - 1938"
|publisher = TheComicBooks.com, n.d.}} [http://web.archive.org/web/20030415153354/www.collectortimes.com/~comichistory/Platinum.html Archive of original page] published at defunct site [http://www.collectortimes.com CollectorTimes.com]</ref>


<ref name="CaM40">Gabilliet, page 40</ref>
The [[penciller]] is the first step in rendering the story in visual form and may require several steps of feedback with the writer. These artists are concerned with layout (positions and vantages on scenes) to showcase steps in the plot. In earlier generations it was more common for artists to use a loose pencilling approach, in which the penciller does not take much care to reduce the vagaries of the pencil art, leaving it to the [[inker]] to interpret the penciller's intent and render the art in a more finished state.
<ref name="CaM44">Gabilliet, page 44</ref>
<ref name="CaM46">Gabilliet, page 46</ref>
<ref name="CaM47-48">Gabilliet, page 47–48</ref>
<ref name="CaM48-49">Gabilliet, page 48–49</ref>
<ref name="CaM47">Gabilliet, page 47</ref>
<ref name="CaM49">Gabilliet, page 49</ref>
<ref name="CaM50">Gabilliet, page 50</ref>
<ref name="CaM51">Gabilliet, page 51</ref>
<ref name="CaM52">Gabilliet, page 52</ref>
<ref name="CaM65">Gabilliet, page 65</ref>
<ref name="CaM66">Gabilliet, page 66</ref>
<ref name="CaM67">Gabilliet, page 67</ref>
<ref name="CaM82">Gabilliet, page 82</ref>


<!-- end {{Reflist}} -->}}
Today many pencillers prefer to create very meticulously detailed pages, which indicate in pencil every nuance that they expect to see in the inked art - a technique known as "tight pencilling". Because the inking and the pencilling align so closely there are strong cross influences.


===Notes===
Then the [[colorist]] comes into the picture - with the responsibility for adding color to the black-and-white (possibly shaded) line-art. Almost all comic books are rendered in color and have been for much of the history of comic books. Sometimes color is not added for specific effect or when production resources don't allow for a colorist. A colorist also can add to or shift the emphasis of a page of comic art—the penciller laid out the basic scene—the inker emphasizes the depth and drama of the edges of things and their weight on the page, and the colorist can further emphasize what draws the eye and adds or subtracts to the realism of the scene.
{{Reflist|group="note"}}


===Works cited===
Finally the [[letterer]] renders what needs to be said on a page of art for the story: dialogue and the content of signs or print (if shown). This may seem like an easy job, but the right use of fonts, letter sizes, and layout of the words inside the balloons all contribute to the impact of the art. A good letterer has good calligraphy skills, and a great letterer has as much to do with the quality of the comic as the writer, penciller, inker, or colorist
{{Refbegin}}


: {{cite book
However, most independent works leave all of the art to one person, or sometimes the entire work is the result of one person.
|title = Of Comics and Men: A Cultural History of American Comic Books
|first1 = Jean-Paul
|last1 = Gabilliet
|first2 = Bart
|last2 = Beaty
|first3 = Nick
|last3 = Nguyen
|publisher = University Press of Mississippi
|year = 2010
|isbn = 9781604732672}}


{{Refend}}
==The superhero and other genres==
{{Main|Superhero}}
Superhero [[drama]]tic-[[adventure]] and [[science-fiction]] stories have dominated American comic books for most of the [[mass media|medium]]'s history. Before the 1960s the comic-book format featured many [[genre]]s, including [[humor]], [[western comics|Western]]s, [[romance comics|romance]], [[horror comics|horror]], [[war comics|military fiction]], [[crime fiction]], [[biography]], and adaptations of [[classic literature]]. Non-superhero comics have continued to exist as niche publishing, with humor titles, such as those from [[Archie Comics]] and [[Bongo Comics]], the most visible alternatives. DC's [[Vertigo (DC Comics)|Vertigo]] imprint publishes a wide range of non-superhero series, while originally heavily supernatural or fantastic (currently limited mainly to ''[[Hellblazer]]'', ''[[House of Mystery]]'', ''[[Madame Xanadu]]'', and ''[[Fables]]''--all but the latter having some connection to the [[DC Universe]]), more of their comics have been crime or music oriented over the years.

==Pricing==
Timing varies slightly by publisher, as not all publishers changed prices at the same time. (Data samples taken from ''X-Men'', ''Action Comics'', and ''Avengers'' cover-price listings in [[ComicBase]] 10 Archive Edition.) Typical prices of a new, standard-size, mainstream American comic book, in [[US$]]:
{{col-begin}}
{{col-break}}
* Until 1962: &nbsp;&nbsp; .10
* 1962–1969: &nbsp; .12
* 1969–1971: &nbsp; .15
* 1971–1974: &nbsp; .20
* 1974–1976: &nbsp; .25
* 1976–1977: &nbsp; .30
* 1977–1979: &nbsp; .35
* 1979–1980: &nbsp; .40
* 1980–1981: &nbsp; .50
* 1982–1985: &nbsp; .60
{{col-break}}
* 1985–1986: &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; .65
* 1986–1988: &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; .75
* 1988–1991: &nbsp; 1.00
* 1992–1995: &nbsp; 1.25
* 1995–1996: &nbsp; 1.50
* 1996–1997: &nbsp; 1.95
* 1997–2000: &nbsp; 1.99
* 2000–2005: &nbsp; 2.25
* 2005–2006: &nbsp; 2.50
* 2006–2010: &nbsp; 2.99 - 3.99
{{col-end}}

==See also==
{{Portal box|United States|Comics}}
* [[List of films based on English-language comics]]
* [[List of years in comics]]
* [[List of comic book publishing companies]]
{{-}}

==Footnotes==
{{Reflist}}


==External links==
==External links==
* [http://www.dereksantos.com/comicpage/pregold2.html CBW Comic History: The Early Years...1896 to 1937, Part II]
* [http://www.dereksantos.com/comicpage/pregold2.html CBW Comic History: The Early Years...1896 to 1937, Part II]
* Coville, Jamie. [http://www.thecomicbooks.com/old/Platinum.html The History of Comic Books: Introduction and "The Platinum Age 1897 - 1938]", TheComicBooks.com, n.d. Originally published at defunct site [http://www.collectortimes.com/~comichistory/Platinum.html CollectorTimes.com].
* [http://web.archive.org/web/20041109021729/http://www.geocities.com/mbrown123/newfuncomics.html The Greatest Comics: ''New Fun'' #1]
* [http://web.archive.org/web/20041109021729/http://www.geocities.com/mbrown123/newfuncomics.html The Greatest Comics: ''New Fun'' #1]
* [http://www.toonopedia.com/dell.htm Don Markstein's Toonopedia: Dell Comics]
* [http://www.toonopedia.com/dell.htm Don Markstein's Toonopedia: Dell Comics]
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[[de:Comic in Nordamerika]]
[[de:Comic in Nordamerika]]
[[es:Historieta en los Estados Unidos]]
[[es:Historieta en los Estados Unidos]]
[[fr:Comics]]
[[ko:미국의 만화]]
[[ja:アメリカン・コミックス]]
[[ja:アメリカン・コミックス]]
[[pt:Comics]]
[[pt:Comics]]
[[fr:Comics]]

Revision as of 03:35, 25 April 2012

American comics
Earliest publicationsc.1842 on
LanguagesEnglish

An American comic book is a thin periodical containing primarily comics content.

While the form originated in 1933, American comic books first gained popularity after the 1938 publication of Action Comics, which included the debut of the superhero Superman. This was followed by a superhero boom that lasted until the end of World War II. After the war, while superheroes were marginalized, the comic book industry rapidly expanded, and genres such as funny animals, westerns, romance and humor became popular. The 1950s saw a gradual decline, due especially to new censorship laws and the spread of television. The 1960s saw a superhero revival, and superheroes continue to be the dominant genre today, although other genres have continued to find audiences.

Since the later 20th century, comic books have gained note as collectable items. Comic shops cater to fans, and particularly valuable issues have fetched in excess of a million dollars. Systems of grading comic books have emerged, and plastic bags and backing boards are available to maintain the comic books' condition.

History

Proto-comic books and the Platinum Age

The development of the modern American comic book happened in stages. Publishers had collected comic strips in hardcover book form as early as 1833, with The Adventures of Obadiah Oldbuck, which appeared in New York in 1842, as the first example published in English.[1]

The Yellow Kid in McFadden's Flats (1897). The Yellow Kid did not speak; messages in a pidgin vernacular appeared on his nightshirt. This message reads: "Dis book is de story of me sweet young life".

The G. W. Dillingham Company published the first known proto-comic-book magazine in the U.S., The Yellow Kid in McFadden's Flats, in 1897. It reprinted material – primarily the October 18, 1896 to January 10, 1897 sequence titled "McFadden's Row of Flats" – from cartoonist Richard F. Outcault's newspaper comic strip Hogan's Alley, starring the Yellow Kid, the lead character. The 196-page, square-bound, black-and-white publication, which also includes introductory text by E. W. Townsend, measured 5x7 inches and sold for 50 cents. The neologism "comic book" appears on the back cover. Despite the publication of a series of related Hearst comics soon afterward (including the first known full-color comic, The Blackberries, in 1901) the first monthly comic book, Comics Monthly, did not appear until 1922 and only lasted a year. Produced in an 8½-by-9-inch format, it reprinted newspaper comic strips.[1]

The Funnies and Funnies on Parade

In 1929 Dell Publishing (founded by George T. Delacorte Jr.) published The Funnies, described by the Library of Congress as "a short-lived newspaper tabloid insert".[2] (not to be confused with Dell's later comic book of the same name, which began publication in 1936.) Historian Ron Goulart describes the 16-page, four-color periodical as "more a Sunday comic section without the rest of the newspaper than a true comic book. But it did offer all original material and was sold on newsstands".[3] The Funnies ran for 36 issues, published Saturdays through October 16, 1930.

In 1933, salesperson Maxwell Gaines, sales manager Harry I. Wildenberg, and owner George Janosik of the Waterbury, Connecticut company Eastern Color Printing – which (among other things) printed Sunday-paper comic-strip sections – produced Funnies on Parade as a way to keep their presses running. Like The Funnies, but only eight pages long,[4] this appeared as a newsprint magazine. Rather than using original material, however, it reprinted in color several comic strips licensed from the McNaught Syndicate and the McClure Syndicate. These included such popular strips as cartoonist Al Smith's Mutt and Jeff, Ham Fisher's Joe Palooka, and Percy Crosby's Skippy. Eastern Color neither sold this periodical nor made it available on newsstands, but rather sent it out free as a promotional item to consumers who mailed in coupons clipped from Procter & Gamble soap and toiletries products. The company printed ten-thousand copies.[4] The promotion proved a success, and Eastern Color that year produced similar periodicals for Canada Dry soft drinks, Kinney Shoes, Wheatena cereal and others, with print runs of from 100,000 to 250,000.[3]

Famous Funnies and New Fun

Eastern Color Press' Famous Funnies: A Carnival of Comics (Eastern Color Printing, 1933)

Also in 1933 Gaines and Wildenberg collaborated with Dell to publish the 36-page Famous Funnies: A Carnival of Comics, which historians consider the first true American comic book; Goulart, for example, calls it "the cornerstone for one of the most lucrative branches of magazine publishing".[3] Distribution took place through the Woolworth's department-store chain, though it remains unclear whether it was sold or given away; the cover displays no price, but Goulart refers, either metaphorically or literally, to "sticking a ten-cent pricetag [sic] on the comic books".[3]

When Delacorte declined to continue with Famous Funnies: A Carnival of Comics, Eastern Color on its own published Famous Funnies #1 (cover-dated July 1934), a 68-page giant selling for 10¢. Distributed to newsstands by the mammoth American News Company, it proved a hit with readers during the cash-strapped Great Depression, selling 90 percent of its 200,000 print — though putting Eastern Color more than $4,000 in the red.[3] That quickly changed, with the book turning a $30,000 profit each issue starting with #12.[3] Famous Funnies would eventually run 218 issues, inspire imitators, and largely launch a new mass medium.

Famous Funnies #1 (July 1934). Cover art by Jon Mayes.

When the supply of available existing comic strips began to dwindle, early comic books began to include a small amount of new, original material in comic-strip format. Inevitably, a comic book of all-original material, with no comic-strip reprints, debuted. Fledgling publisher Malcolm Wheeler-Nicholson founded National Allied Publications – which would evolve into DC Comics – to release New Fun #1 (Feb. 1935). This came out as a tabloid-sized, 10-inch by 15-inch, 36-page magazine with a card-stock, non-glossy cover. An anthology, it mixed humor features such as the funny animal comic "Pelion and Ossa" and the college-set "Jigger and Ginger" with such dramatic fare as the Western strip "Jack Woods" and the "yellow-peril" adventure "Barry O'Neill", featuring a Fu Manchu-styled villain, Fang Gow. Issue #6 (Oct. 1935) brought the comic-book debut of Jerry Siegel and Joe Shuster, the future creators of Superman, who began their careers with the musketeer swashbuckler "Henri Duval" (doing the first two installments before turning it over to others) and, under the pseudonyms "Leger and Reuths", the supernatural-crimefighter adventure Doctor Occult.[citation needed]

Superheroes and the Golden Age

In 1938, after Wheeler-Nicholson's partner Harry Donenfeld had ousted him, National Allied editor Vin Sullivan pulled a Siegel/Shuster creation from the slush pile and used it as the cover feature (but only as a backup story)[5] in Action Comics #1 (June 1938). The duo's alien hero, Superman, dressed in colorful tights and a cape evoking costumed circus daredevil performers, became the archetype of the "superheroes" that would follow. Action would become the American comic book with the second-largest number of issues, next to Dell Comics' Four Color, with over 860 issues published as of 2008.[citation needed]

Action Comics #1 (June 1938). The debut of Superman. Cover art by Joe Shuster.

Siegel and Shuster's Superman, influenced by the pulp fiction stories and by the legend of the Golem of Prague,[citation needed] had superhuman strength, speed and other abilities, and lived day-to-day in his secret identity as a mild-mannered reporter named Clark Kent. Within two years, most comic-book companies had started publishing large lines of superhero titles, and Superman has gone on to become one of the world's most recognizable characters.[citation needed]

Aficionados know the period from the late 1930s through roughly the end of the 1940s as the Golden Age of comic books. It featured extremely large print-runs, with Action and Captain Marvel selling over half a million copies a month each;[6] comics provided very popular cheap entertainment during World War II especially among soldiers, but erratic quality in stories, art, and in printing. Unusually, the comics industry provided jobs to an ethnic cross-section of Americans (particularly Jews), albeit often at low wages and in sweatshop working-conditions.[citation needed]

Following the end of War World II, the popularity of superheroes greatly diminished,[7] while the comic book industry itself expanded.[citation needed] A few standard characters like Superman, Batman and Wonder Woman continued to sell, but superheroes as a genre became relegated to the status of a subgenre of adventure comics, a genre which itself was not amongst the popular genres at the time. Between 1950 and 1952 all attempts at publishing new superhero somic books were in vain.[7]

Dell's comic books accounted for a third of all North American sales in the early 1950s. Its 90 titles averaged a circulation of 800,000 copies each issue, with Walt Disney's Comics and Stories peaking with a circulation of three million in 1953. Eleven of the top 25 best-selling comic books at the time were Dell titles.[8] Out of forty publishers active in 1954, Dell, Atlas (Marvel), DC and Archie were the major players sales-wise. By this time, former big-time players Fawcett and Fiction house had ceased publishing.[9]

Circulation peaked out in 1952, when 3161 issues of various comics were published with total circulation at about one billion.[note 1] After 1952, the number of indivual releases dropped every year for the rest of the decade, with the biggest losses coming in 1955–56.[10] These rapid losses followed the introduction of laws that curbed the sales of comic books that were seen as being harmful to children, as well as a crackdown on press wholesalers by the U.S. Senate, which freed retailers from tie-ins.[11] While there was only a 9% drop in the number of releases between 1952 and 1953, circulation plummeted by an estimated 30–40%.[12] The cause of the decrease is not entirely certain. Television had come to provide competition with comic books, or the rise of conservative values that came with the election of Dwight Eisenhower. The Comics Code Authority, a self-censoring body founded to curb juvenile delinquency believed to be influenced by crime and horror comics, has been targeted as the culprit, though sales had begun to drop the year before it was founded.[13] The major publishers were largely unaffected by the drop, but smaller publishers like EC (the prime target of the CCA) were wiped out.[14] By the 1960s, output stabilized at about 1500 releases per year.[10]

The dominant comic book genres of the post-CCA 1950s were funny animals, humor, romance, television properties and Westerns. Detective, fantasy, teen and war comics were also popular, while adventure, science fiction, superheroes and comic strip reprints were in decline,[14] with Famous Funnies seeing its last issue in 1955.[15]

The Comics Code

In the late 1940s and early 1950s horror and true-crime comics flourished, many containing violence and gore. EC ("Educational Comics", later renamed "Entertaining Comics") owned by Max Gaines' son, William M. Gaines, became the most successful and artistically creative of all the publishers. The careers of many famous artists such as Al Feldstein, Wallace Wood, Reed Crandall, Jack Davis, Will Elder and others began in the offices of EC. However, in spite of the quality of the work, psychiatrist Fredric Wertham singled out Gaines as the most infamous of the comic moguls.[citation needed]

Wertham's book Seduction of the Innocent (1954), concerned with what he perceived as sadistic and homosexual undertones in horror comics and in superhero comics respectively, raised public anxiety about comics. Soon moral crusaders blamed comic books as a cause of poor grades, juvenile delinquency, drug use, and ultimately, "crime" itself.[note 2] This led the Senate Subcommittee on Juvenile Delinquency to take an interest in comic books (April–June, 1954). Schools and parent groups held public comic-book burnings, and some cities banned comic books. Industry circulation declined drastically.[citation needed]

In the wake of these events, many comics publishers, most notably National and Archie, founded the Comics Code Authority in 1954 and drafted the Comics Code, intended as "the most stringent code in existence for any communications media".[16] A Comic Code Seal of Approval soon appeared on virtually every comic book carried on newsstands. EC, after experimenting with less controversial comic books, dropped its comics line to focus on the satiric Mad — a comic book that changed to magazine format in order to circumvent the Code.[citation needed]

Silver Age of Comic Books

Showcase #4 (Oct. 1956), the launch of comics' Silver Age. Cover art by Carmine Infantino and Joe Kubert.

DC started a revival in superhero comics in 1956 with the October 1956 revival of The Flash in Showcase #4. Many comics historians peg this as the beginning of the Silver Age of American comic books, although Marvel had started reviving some of its old superheroes as early as 1954.[7] The new Flash is taken symbolically as the beginning of a new era, although his success was not immediate. It took two years for the Flash to receive his own title, and Showcase itself was only a bimonthly title, though one that was to introduce a large number of enduring characters. By 1959, the slowly building superhero revival had become clear to DC's competitors. Archie jumped on board that year, and Charlton joined the bandwagon in 1960.[17]

In 1961 writer/editor Stan Lee and artist/co-plotter Jack Kirby created the Fantastic Four for Marvel Comics. With an innovation that changed the comic-book industry, The Fantastic Four #1 initiated a naturalistic style of superheroes with human failings, fears, and inner demons - heroes who squabbled and worried about the likes of rent-money. In contrast to the super-heroic do-gooder archetypes of established superheroes at the time, this ushered in a revolution. With dynamic artwork by Kirby, Steve Ditko, Don Heck, and others complementing Lee's colorful, catchy prose, the new style was known to be very popular among college students who could identify with the angsty and irreverent nature of the characters such as the likes of Spider-Man,X-Men and the Fantastic Four during a time period of massive social upheaval which birthed a new generation of hipper and more countercultural young men and women who found a voice in these books. Marvel was initially restricted in the number of titles it could produce in that its books were distributed by rival National, a situation not alleviated until the late 1960s.[citation needed]

While the creators of comics had been given credit in comic books' early days, this had all but vanished throughout the 1940s and 1950s. Comic books were produced by comic book companies rather than individual creators (EC being a notable exception, a company that not only credited its creative teams, but also featured creators' biographies). Even comic books by revered and collectable artists like Carl Barks were not known by their creators' names—Disney comics like Barks' were signed "Walt Disney". In the 1960s, DC, and then Marvel, began including writer and artist credits on the comics they published.[18]

Other notable companies included the American Comics Group (ACG), the low-budget Charlton, where many professionals such as Dick Giordano got their start; Dell; Gold Key; Harvey Comics, home of the Harvey cartoon-characters (Casper the Friendly Ghost) and non-animated others (Richie Rich); and Tower, best-known for T.H.U.N.D.E.R. Agents.[citation needed]

Underground comix

Sex, drugs and rock 'n roll were featured as the anti-authoritarian underground comix saw made waves in 1968 following the publication of Robert Crumb's irregularly-published Zap Comix. Frank Stack had published The Adventures of Jesus as far back as 1962, and there had been a trickle of such publications until Crumb's success.[19] What had started as a self-publishing scene soon grew into a minor industry, with Print Mint, Kitchen Sink, Last Gasp and Apex Novelties among the more well-known publishers. These comix were often extremely graphic, and largely distributed in head shops that flourished in the countercultural era.[20]

Legal issues and paper shortages led to a decline in underground comix output from its 1972 peak. The death knell was sounded in 1974, when the passage of anti-paraphernalia laws led to the closing of most head shops, which throttled underground comix' distribution. Its readership also dried up as the hippie movement itself petered out around the mid-1970s.[21] Some underground cartoonists stayed in comics, however—Robert Crumb and Art Spiegelman would become two of the leading lights of the alternative comics era, and Bill Griffiths would take to comic strips.[citation needed]

Bronze Age of Comic Books

Wizard originally used the phrase "Bronze Age" in 1995 to denote the Modern Horror age. But as of 2009 historians and fans use "Bronze Age" to describe the period of American mainstream comics history that begins with a period of concentrated changes to comic books circa 1970. Unlike the Golden/Silver Age transition, the Silver/Bronze transition involved many continually published books, making the transition less sharp; not every book entered the Bronze Age at the same time.[citation needed]

Changes commonly considered[citation needed] to mark the transition between Silver and Bronze ages include:

The Modern Age

The development of a non-returnable "direct market" distribution system in the 1970s coincided with the appearance of comic-book specialty stores across North America. These specialty stores were a haven for more distinct voices and stories, but they also marginalized comics in the public eye. Serialized comic stories became longer and more complex, requiring readers to buy more issues to finish a story. Between 1970 and 1990, comic-book prices rose sharply because of a combination of factors: a nationwide paper shortage, increasing production values, and the minimal profit incentive for stores to stock comic books (due to the small unit price of an individual comic book relative to a magazine).[citation needed]

Spawn #1 (May 1992). Cover art by Todd McFarlane.

In the mid-to-late 1980s, two series published by DC Comics, Batman: The Dark Knight Returns and Watchmen, had a profound impact upon the American comic-book industry. Their popularity, along with mainstream media attention and critical acclaim, combined with changing social tastes, led to[citation needed] a considerably darker tone in comic books during the 1990s nicknamed by fans as the "grim-and-gritty" era.[citation needed] The growing popularity of antiheroes such as the Punisher and Wolverine underscored this change, as did the darker tone of some independent publishers such as First Comics, Dark Horse Comics, and (founded in the 1990s) Image Comics. This tendency towards darkness and nihilism was manifested in DC's production of heavily promoted comic book stories such as "A Death in the Family" in the Batman series (in which The Joker brutally murdered Batman's sidekick Robin), while at Marvel the continuing popularity of the various X-Men books led to storylines involving the genocide of superpowered "mutants" in allegorical stories about religious and ethnic persecution.[citation needed]

Though a speculator boom in the early 1990s temporarily increased specialty store sales — collectors "invested" in multiple copies of a single comic to sell at a profit later — these booms ended in a collectibles glut, and comic sales declined sharply in the mid-1990s, leading to the demise of many hundreds of stores. In the 2000s, fewer comics sell in North America than at any time in their publishing history.[citation needed] The large superhero-oriented publishers like Marvel and DC are still often referred to as the "mainstream" of comics and are still considered a mass medium like in previous decades.[citation needed]

While the actual publications are no longer as widespread, however, licensing and merchandising have made many comic-book characters, aside from such perennials as Superman and Batman, more widely known to the general public than ever[citation needed]. In particular, several movies and videogames based on comic-book characters have been released, and such heavily promoted events as Spider-Man's wedding, the death of Superman, and the death of Captain America received widespread media coverage.[citation needed]

Prestige format

Prestige format comic books are typically longer than standard comic books, typically being of between 48 and 72 pages, and printed on glossy paper with a spine and card stock cover. The format was first used by DC on Frank Miller's Batman: The Dark Knight Returns. The success of this work led to the establishment of the format, and it is now used generally to showcase works by big name creators or to spotlight significant storylines.[citation needed]

These storylines can be serialized over a limited number of issues, or can be stand-alone. Stand-alone works published in the form, such as Batman: The Killing Joke, are sometimes referred to[by whom?] either as graphic novels or novellas.[citation needed]

Independent and alternative comics

Comic specialty stores did help encourage several waves of independent-produced comics, beginning in the mid-1970s. The first of these was generally referred to as "independent" or "alternative" comics; some of these, such as Big Apple Comix, continued somewhat in the tradition of underground comics, while others, such as Star Reach, resembled the output of mainstream publishers in format and genre but were published by smaller artist-owned ventures or by a single artist; a few (notably RAW) represented experimental attempts to bring comics closer to the world of fine art.[citation needed]

The "small press" scene continued to grow and diversify, with a number of small publishers in the 1990s changing the format and distribution of their books to more closely resemble non-comics publishing. The "minicomics" form, an extremely informal version of self-publishing, arose in the 1980s and became increasingly popular among artists in the 1990s, despite reaching an even more limited audience than the small press. "Art comics" has sometimes been used[by whom?] as a general term for alternative, small-press, or minicomic artists working outside of mainstream traditions. Publishers and artists working in all of these forms stated a desire to refine comics further as an art form.[citation needed]

See also

References

  1. ^ a b Coville, Jamie. "The History of Comic Books: Introduction and "The Platinum Age 1897 - 1938"". TheComicBooks.com, n.d. Archive of original page published at defunct site CollectorTimes.com
  2. ^ U.S. Library of Congress, "American Treasures of the Library of Congress" exhibition
  3. ^ a b c d e f Goulart, Ron. Comic Book Encyclopedia (Harper Entertainment, New York, 2004)
  4. ^ a b Brown, Mitchell. "The 100 Greatest Comic Books of the 20th Century: Funnies on Parade" (Internet archive link)
  5. ^ Daniels, Les. DC Comics: 60 Years of the World's Favorite Comic Book Heroes (Little Brown, 1995).
  6. ^ Daniels [page needed]
  7. ^ a b c Gabilliet, page 51
  8. ^ Gabilliet, page 40
  9. ^ Gabilliet, page 44
  10. ^ a b Gabilliet, page 46
  11. ^ Gabilliet, page 48–49
  12. ^ Gabilliet, page 47–48
  13. ^ Gabilliet, page 47
  14. ^ a b Gabilliet, page 49
  15. ^ Gabilliet, page 50
  16. ^ Daniels, Les (1971). Comix: A history of comic books in America. Bonanza Books. p. 84.
  17. ^ Gabilliet, page 52
  18. ^ Gabilliet, page 67
  19. ^ Gabilliet, page 65
  20. ^ Gabilliet, page 66
  21. ^ Gabilliet, page 82

Notes

  1. ^ Actual estimates vary between 840 million and 1.3 billion[1]
  2. ^ An example of the sensational coverage of comics in the mass media is Confidential File: Horror Comic Books!, broadcast October 9, 1955 on Los Angeles television station KTTV.

Works cited

Gabilliet, Jean-Paul; Beaty, Bart; Nguyen, Nick (2010). Of Comics and Men: A Cultural History of American Comic Books. University Press of Mississippi. ISBN 9781604732672.

External links

References

  • All in Color for a Dime by Dick Lupoff & Don Thompson ISBN 0-87341-498-5
  • The Comic Book Makers by Joe Simon with Jim Simon ISBN 1-887591-35-4
  • DC Comics: Sixty Years of the World's Favorite Comic Book Heroes by Les Daniels ISBN 0-8212-2076-4
  • The Great Comic Book Heroes by Jules Feiffer ISBN 1-56097-501-6
  • Marvel: Five Fabulous Decades of the World's Greatest Comics by Les Daniels ISBN 0-8109-3821-9
  • Masters of Imagination: The Comic Book Artists Hall of Fame by Mike Benton ISBN 0-87833-859-4
  • The Official Overstreet Comic Book Price Guide by Robert Overstreet—Edition #35 ISBN 0-375-72107-X
  • The Steranko History of Comics, Vol. 1 & 2, by James Steranko—Vol. 1 ISBN 0-517-50188-0

Further reading

  • Garrett, Greg, Holy Superheroes! Exploring the Sacred in Comics, Graphic Novels, and Film, Lousville (Kentucky): Westminster John Knox Press, 2008. (Translated into Spanish: La fe de los superhéroes. Descubrir lo religioso en los «comics» y en las películas, Sal Terrae, Santander 2009.)