Colegiul Economic "Dimitrie Cantemir" Suceava Lucrare de Atestat Limba Engleză The History of Comic Books
Colegiul Economic "Dimitrie Cantemir" Suceava Lucrare de Atestat Limba Engleză The History of Comic Books
Colegiul Economic "Dimitrie Cantemir" Suceava Lucrare de Atestat Limba Engleză The History of Comic Books
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CONTENTS
1. Introduction
4. Other facts
6. Conclusion
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1. Introduction
I have decided to discuss about this topic because, in my opinion, comics are an
interesting topic to talk. In the last century comics began to gain in popularity among people.
Every single comic has its own story about people with superpowers. Growing up with them
or receiving them after a tragic accident, I see comics as an outer space. They help me get rid
of the daily stress, of the problems that I have on my mind. I started being fascinated by
comic books at a very young age.
In my childhood, my favorite thing was going to the comic books store and staring at
the comic spinner rack, thinking about which one I was going to buy with my limited
allowance. I gave up on them around 2010 or so when I moved to Romania and I started
getting too old. Or maybe because I could hardly find them here. I gradually started getting
back into it in my freshman high school year, and I have been collecting them ever since.
Now I have an entire book shelf in my library devoted to my collection.
From time to time I find myself listening to podcasts about comics, they help me
focus on my homework or on everything that I am doing at that moment.
I still remember buying my first comic book from the quarter bin of a local comic shop.
It was an issue of Detective comics with Batman fighting Clayface on the cover. There were
three issues for the entire story and I bought them all. After that point, I was hooked. There
were several things happening in my life at that time, too much for the average third grader.
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2. A brief history of comic books
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printed page in strips like Dreams of a Rarebit Fiend, Little Sammy Sneeze, and, most
successfully, Little Nemo.
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tried to enter the horror comics niche in 1946, but EERIE, their sole offering, lasted
only one issue. But by 1949, the war was over, and monsters were making a
comeback in both films and comics. 1951 gave us “The Thing.” “It Came From Outer
Space,” “War Of The Worlds,” “Robot Monster” terrified us in 1953.
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The Silver Age was in full swing. Fueled in part by the burgeoning “Pop Art”
movement championed by such influential artists as Andy Warhol and Roy
Lichtenstein, both of which drew inspiration from the four-color page, and stoked by
the growing number of fans on college campuses and in the “adult” world, comics
were “cool.” Batmania, a brief but intense national obsession ignited in 1966 with the
premiere of the “Batman” TV show starring Adam West and Burt Ward, helped to
kick the Silver Age into high gear, as even the day’s most popular and powerful
entertainment stars vied for a chance to cross paths as colorful villains with the
Gotham Guardian and his youthful ward. “POW!,” ZAP!,” and “WHAM!” were the
watchwords of the day, given life in glaring, day-glo colors.
It’s not as easy to precisely define the end of the Silver Age as it is to place the
end of other ages. Different people have different ideas about when this halcyon time
came to an end. Some say it happened as early as 1970 when Jack Kirby left Marvel
to go to DC and the first OVERSTREET COMIC BOOK PRICE GUIDE was
published.
But just because the Silver Age ended didn’t mean that
comics came to a crashing halt. Far from it. The form was
alive and well, and entering a new age with new artists and
new ideas. “Relevant” comics were big in the Bronze Age,
with characters like Green Lantern and Green Arrow (in
stories masterfully told by Denny O’Neill and Neal Adams)
confronting such topical issues as drug abuse, pollution,
racism, and poverty. Stan Lee actually challenged the
Comics Code when he wrote a story spanning AMAZING
SPIDER-MAN #96-98 (1971) that dealt with drug abuse. The Code refused to
approve the book, so Lee ran those three issues
without the Code Seal. It had taken 15 years, but the
Comics Code armor was beginning to crack.
Other new, young creators began to enter the
field as well, bringing with them new sensibilities
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and new ideas. Bernie Wrightson, Mike Ploog, Jim Starlin, Howard Chaykin… these
were just a few of the “young turks” that invaded the comics industry during the
Bronze Age. They were The Beatles of comics. It was a time of experimentation and
expansion, about seeing how far the envelope could be pushed. It was a time of
transformation. For the first time, heroes began questioning their motivations, just as
their creators had been questioning their government on topics ranging from Vietnam
to drug enforcement laws for several years. Captain America, once the unflagging
symbol of the US of A, began to question his role as a symbol of America in light of
the atrocities in Southeast Asia that were then coming to light. Green Lantern
explored a range of topical issues, from racism to environmentalism to Native
American concerns, all the while questioning his current role as part of an
intergalactic police force. Even Lois Lane got into the act, going so far as to submit
to an experimental procedure that changed her from Caucasian to African-American
so she could better understand the plight of blacks during the height of the Civil
Rights era. It was, indeed, a brave new world between the slick covers of America’s
comic books. But, as with all things, it too would come to an end.
Which brings us to the current age, the Modern Age of comics. This has
definitely been a period of booms and busts for comics. Black and white comics were
on fire in the early 1980s, led by the unlikely success of such garage-projects as
TEENAGE MUTANT NINJA TURTLES.
Now you’d be hard pressed to give them away.
Speculators found comics in the early 1990s.
Like the prospectors who discovered “gold in
them thar hills,” they strip-mined the field for
all it was worth, buying and hoarding massive
quantities of current comics, certain that they’d
be able to retire and live a life of ease on the
resale proceeds to be gained in just a few short
years. A few short years later, they all but lost
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their shirts and cratered the industry. The end of the century saw the rise of trade
paperbacks, which caused creators to rethink the ways in which comics were
traditionally packaged and marketed. Currently, a small but passionate group are
exploring the frontiers of web comics. A few, like Dallas-area cartoonist Scott Kurtz,
creator of PVP (www.pvponline.com), have found enormous success in this field, but
it’s still too early to know what the future of this branch of the industry will be.
The 1980s also saw the influx of British creators to American comics, in a move
that has been termed “The Second British Invasion.” Writers such as Alan Moore and
artists including Dave Gibbons, John Bolton, Brian Bolland, and Alan Davis brought
a new, fresh sensibility to comics. Moore and Gibbons created one of the most
revolutionary works of the decade with WATCHMEN, a book that was both
popularly and critically acclaimed, and is today considered one of the cornerstones of
comics literature. It artfully deconstructed the superhero genre, and brought cape-
and-cowl characters, some kicking and screaming, into the new era.
Today, the comics industry is as diverse as it’s ever been. Readers and collectors
can find comics to fit any taste, including crime, horror, western, romance…. even
superheroes! Major bookstores carry comic books now, and their offshoots, the
“graphic novel.” Even more importantly, comics and comic characters are entering
people’s everyday lives through the medium of big-budget movies, which are
increasingly drawing inspiration and subject matter from the four-color page. In just
the last few years, we’ve seen multi-million dollar films focusing on the exploits of
such spandex-clad superstars as Spider-Man, The X-Men, Batman, the Hulk,
Daredevil and Elektra, with Superman and Wonder Woman soon to follow. In
addition, films such as THE ROAD TO PERDITION, THE LEAGUE OF
EXTRAORDINARY GENTLEMEN, V FOR VENDETTA, and FROM HELL are
all based on comics and graphic novels.
It wasn’t all that long ago that any adult seen reading a comic book in public
was looked on as stupid and slow. Public ridicule was the price one often paid for
indulging in these four-color fantasies. Now, with film, TV, and the popular media
making comics “hip,” it’s cool to be a geek. Comics have finally come into their
own, and those of us that have been around for the ride since we were kids couldn’t
be happier.
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3. Who’s who in comics
3.1 C.C. Beck
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Chesler. He went to work for Lev Gleason in 1939, where he created Daredevil (no
relation to the Marvel character of the same name), and assisted Will Eisner on The
Spirit. In 1941, Cole created Plastic Man, a former crook who gained the ability to
stretch his body into any shape imaginable. Surreal and bizarre, Cole’s Plastic Man
stories remain a high water mark of the Golden Age, and his work is increasingly
studied by those interested in graphic storytelling. Beginning in 1954, Cole became
the premiere artist for Playboy, and his gag cartoons graced that magazine for several
years until his death by suicide on August 15, 1958. The reasons for his suicide have
never been made public.
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and Ditko stayed with the book until issue #38, when he left due to creative
differences with Lee. During this time, he also co-created Dr. Strange, and worked
on the Hulk, Iron Man, and other Marvel characters. After leaving Marvel, Ditko
returned to Charlton, where he created Captain Atom and revamped the Blue Beetle,
then went to DC to bring to life such offbeat heroes as The Hawk and The Dove and
the Creeper. In later years, Ditko would briefly return to Marvel before abandoning
company-owned comics all together in favor of his own creations. Steve Ditko is,
reportedly, a staunch adherent to Ayn Rand’s philosophy of Objectivism, which
states, in Rand’s own words, “My philosophy, in essence, is the concept of man as a
heroic being, with his own happiness as the moral purpose of his life, with productive
achievement as his noblest activity, and reason as his only absolute.” (excerpt from
Atlas Shrugged, 1957)
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field full of giants, Eisner continued writing and drawing almost until the day he
died, on January 3, 2005.
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head writer of Marvel Comics, where he co-created SpiderMan, the Fantastic Four,
the Hulk, Iron Man, the X-Men, Daredevil, and countless other characters. In the
1970s, Stan moved to California to head Marvel’s burgeoning media efforts. He is
currently the head of POW! Entertainment, and is still creating characters and
content for a variety of media. He has had cameo roles in such films as “The X-
Men,” “The Fantastic Four,” and “Spider-Man.” Unfortunately he dies on 12
November 2018.
4. Other facts
1. Iron Man was created as a challenge by Stan Lee. He gave himself a dare to
create a hero that nobody would like and then force people to like him.
2. The Hulk was originally supposed to be grey, not green, but was portrayed so
because of a printing malfunction. His character was inspired after the creator saw a
woman lifting a car to free her child who was trapped underneath.
8. Wolverine’s signature blue and yellow mask was created by accident. When he
first appeared in the comics, he had stubby ears and peculiar whiskers.
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5. The 10 most valuable comics
5.1 THE 10 MOST VALUABLE GOLDEN AGE COMICS*
Action #1 (1938)
The origin and first appearance of Superman. 2006 NM- price: $550,000
The origins and first appearances of The Human Torch and Prince Namor, the
Sub-Mariner. 2006 NM- price: $400,000
Superman #1 (1939)
Origin and first appearance of The Green Lantern. 2006 NM- price: $200,000
Batman #1 (1940)
First Batman in his own comic. First appearances of The Joker and Cat-Woman.
2006 NM- price: $150,000
Origin and first appearance of Captain America and Bucky. 2006 NM- price:
$150,000
Origin and first appearances of the Golden Age Flash (Jay Garrick), Golden Age
Hawkman (Carter Hall), and Johnny Thunder. 2006 NM- price: $120,000
Origin (Part One) and first appearance of The Spectre. 2006 NM- price: $97,000
Origin and first appearance of Captain Marvel. 2006 NM- price: $90,000
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5.2 THE 10 MOST VALUABLE SILVER AGE COMICS*
Showcase #4 (1956)
Origin and first appearance of the Silver Age Flash (Barry Allen). 2006 NM-
price: $42,500
Origin and first appearance of the Fantastic Four (Mister Fantastic, the Invisible
Girl, the Human Torch, the Thing). 2006 NM- price: $36,000
First Spider-Man in his own comic. First appearance of J. Jonah Jameson. 2006
NM- price: $33,500
Origin and first appearance of the Hulk. 2006 NM- price: $26,000
Showcase #8 (1957)
Second appearance of the Silver Age Flash. 2006 NM- price: $17,300
X-Men #1 (1963)
Origin and first appearance of the X-Men (Cyclops, Marvel Girl, the Angel, the
Beast, Ice-Man, Professor Xavier). 2006 NM- price: $15,000
Showcase #9 (1957)
Lois Lane appearance/feature. First Showcase character to win own series. 2006
NM- price: $11,300
Origin Silver Age Flash retold. First Silver Age Flash in his own comic (Golden
Age Flash ended with #104). 2006 NM- price: $9,800
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6. Conclusion
In conclusion comics have always been a huge part of my life, from my questionable six
year old speculator phase (when I was convinced that any issue #1 was a prospective
goldmine) to my pretentious preteen obsessions with the “great works” of comics (feverishly
studying anything labeled with the words “sequential storytelling”). But it wasn’t until I
reached my mid-teens and hit one of the most temporarily devastating periods of my life that
I can really say I found a comic that changed my life. The stories of Xavier’s Institute for
Gifted Students had long been a place I had escaped to as a child, but suddenly this simple
analogue for puberty took on a whole different meaning. The feeling of not knowing your
own body, being unable to control it, and it is manifesting energy in ways you didn’t
understand or even actively partake in was now an acutely relatable experience in a widely
unrecognizable world.
Rediscovering these stories that I had always loved for their political undertones,
relatively diverse roster, and wildly imaginative universe as something that now related
directly to me and my then current situation was incredibly important. I had often navigated
the world through the lens of comics, one of my first true obsessions being Love and
Rockets. A that book that felt like the first time I saw women who I felt looked and loved like
me, that told stories of disabled people like me and many of my childhood friends. But my
rediscovery of mutants at a time when I had almost died and then seemingly been reborn in
what felt like a completely different body was revelatory.
Using comics as a coping mechanism has become a natural response for me, and as the
dumpster fire that has been 2016 slowly burns out, I’ve been inspired to try and write
things that focus on the positives, on things that we love, things that have inspired us, driven
us, and even just made us that little bit happier. I decided to reach out to some of my favorite
creators to ask them which books have made that positive impact on their life, or why not
finding that representation drives us to create art for ourselves and other people like us.
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