Comics in the Here and Now

Similar documents
Spring 2015 ENG : Comics & Graphic Novels TR 9-10:30 Room: TBD

#BlackSuperheroesMatter The Revolutionary Power of Black Panther

Opinion: Lamenting the impending loss of Nighthawk, a black superhero

3. What are some of the factors that seem important for pulling Kubo into the otaku group?

Joshua M. Plencner, Ph.D.

Preservation of Popular Culture

PUBLIC RELATIONS PRCM EFFECTIVE FALL 2016

ART I: UNIT SEVEN COMICS

WEEKLY SCHEDULE (subject to change)

Developing Collections for Fiction and Nonfiction Graphic Novels in Libraries. Michelle Mirabal. Emporia State University

Edgewood College General Education Curriculum Goals

FOREWORD. Enjoy the book! Sharad Sharma Founder World Comics Network

Comic Books and the Addressing of Social Issues. Jason Juniewicz COMMU 310. Dr. Troester

Young people and media What is media literacy? 3. Media education approaches

THE FALL OF THE CCA 1

The Lord of the Rings: An Exploration of the Films & Its Literary Influences

Boundaries to Fill: Alison Piepmeier s Girl Zines. The 1990 s represent a significant shift in the history of women and selfpublishing,

SEED: General Overview Introducing A New Sci-Fi Series Unlike Anything You ve Ever Seen Before!

Bachelor s Degree in Audiovisual Communication. 3 rd YEAR Sound Narrative ECTS credits: 6 Semester: 1. Teaching Objectives

Dr. Coffman, ENG IV DE/H

Cap the Chameleon: A Review of Captain America, Masculinity, and Violence

Afro-American literature in the wake of the Civil Rights movement

Sociology Curriculum Map

SOCIAL STUDIES 10-1: Perspectives on Globalization

SOCIOLOGY. Standard 6 Social Change

Wednesday, November 20, noon to 1 p.m. Presenter: Francisca Goldsmith

Modern World History Grade 10 - Learner Objectives BOE approved

Disney and its Critics I. Mickey Mouse Monopoly

Grade 6: Creating. Enduring Understandings & Essential Questions

The following is terminology for graphic novels. Be sure to use this terminology as you analyze the text.

DOWNLOAD OR READ : YOUNG JUSTICE VOL 4 INVASION PDF EBOOK EPUB MOBI

An Introduction to the Graphic Novel

"Black Panther" Redefines The World Of Superheroes. Breaking New Ground In Film. The Story Of The "Black Panther"

Fahrenheit 451. By Ray Bradbury

GLOBALIZATION AND TECHNOLOGY

READING "THE X-MEN" AS A QUEER TEXT

YEAR 7 & 8 THE ARTS. The Visual Arts

NY STATE STANDARD 1: HISTORY OF THE UNITED STATES AND NEW YORK

Signature Area Development Process

Contemporary Literature 1939 to Present

Palgrave Studies in Comics and Graphic Novels. Series Editor Roger Sabin University of the Arts London London, United Kingdom

Visual Art Standards Grades P-12 VISUAL ART

Maine New Textbook Approval

Comic Book Publishing A Brief History

Visual Arts What Every Child Should Know

RATIONALE. Using only the space provided in the box below, briefly state why this course should be approved as a first year seminar course.

Dr. Anita K. McDaniel University of North Carolina Wilmington

Buffy the Vampire Slayer: What it Means to be a Female Hero

Dreaming of Comics Neil Gaiman s Sandman, the Unconscious, and the Comic Book as Literature

Essay 4: Arguing for a Superhero. on whether or not they are beneficial to society. I believe superheroes offer an abundance of

Media Studies 2011 Year 12 (NCEA Level 2) Teaching and Assessment Context Elaborations

OXNARD COLLEGE ACADEMIC SENATE

The Literature of Rebellion. The voice of dissent in contemporary American Literature and Society.

3. Describe themes in the novel and trace their development throughout the text.

THE ROAD TO THE MODERN AGE. the rise of the independent publisher and the birth of the direct market

Global learning outcomes Philosophy

Lynching Photographs (Defining Moments In American Photography) By Dora Apel, Shawn Michelle Smith READ ONLINE

Strategic Plan

A selective list of sociology journals suitable for qualitative paper submission

BOOKS. The Language of Me. UKZN Press (April 2004) Author: MUSA E. ZULU Format: Hard Cover ISBN-13: ISBN-10:

Pathway Descriptions. Titles 100 Characters Descriptions 1000 Characters. 1. Ancient Civilizations

Crime Files Series General Editor: Clive Bloom Since its invention in the nineteenth century, detective fiction has never been more popular.

Objective What impact did the Harlem Renaissance have on American society in the 1920s and today?

HKBU Institutional Repository

Pictures (and Words) Speak Louder: Graphic Novels in the ELL Classroom

Case 4:74-cv DCB Document Filed 09/01/17 Page 293 of 322 APPENDIX V 156

Revised East Carolina University General Education Program

SOME OUTSTANDING AMERICAN WRITERS 2

Education Interest Tracks Denver Comic Con 2017

SOCIOLOGY (SOCI) SOCI 2260 (formerly SOCI 1260)

Research Question: To What Extent Were Women's Rights. Marginalized Through the Misuse of Religious Texts by the

For many hundreds of years, literature has been one of the most important. human art forms. It allows us to give voice to our emotions, create

Arts and Humanities. Survey of the historical development of world art including painting, sculpture and architecture from Early Medieval to High

Spartan Writing Camp

You should evidence this by: > A written report or a presentation with detailed speaker notes.

THE FUTURE OF STORYTELLINGº

Visual Trends Edition

Using Manga to Teach Superheroes: Implications for the Classroom

Fiction. The short story

Women's Issues in Margaret Atwood's The Handmaid's Tale

CULMINATING ACTIVITY: IDC 4U MEDIA PROJECT AND PRESENTATION

Why Are We Obsessed With Superheroes? By ABC News January 6, 2013

The Raven & Other Tales, A Graphic Horror Novel By Edgar Allan Poe

English In the long run, a people is known, not by its statements or its statistics, but by the stories it tells.

National Core Arts Standards Grade 8 Creating: VA:Cr a: Document early stages of the creative process visually and/or verbally in traditional

ABSTRACT A STUDY OF THE WOMEN CHARACTERS IN THE SELECTED NOVELS OF D. H. LAWRENCE

That s Entertainment: A Survey of British and American TV. Jung & Dewhurst

ENGLISH TEXT SUMMARY NOTES Dear America- Letters Home from Vietnam

Unit Plan: 11 th Grade US History

Department of English Tentative Course Offerings as of April 26th,

DESIGN IN THE ERA OF THE ALGORITHM. josh bigmedium.com

NACAE. An Aesthetic History of Comics Instructor: Dan Nadel

INCLUSIVEVT AND SGA: THE CONTEXT FOR EQUITY AND SOCIAL DISPARITY IN THE HUMAN CONDITION

TV Categories. Call for Entries Deadlines Pricing. National: 1 Actress in a Leading Role - Comedy or Musical [TV National]

History comes to life in comic book about civil rights era by a congressman

EDITHA BY WILLIAM DEAN HOWELLS. Presenter Danielle Reites

The United States Since World War II HIS Spring 2015, TR 12:30-1:45, MHRA 2211

6 5 LX553 Language, Identity and Power 6 5 LZ524 Contested Stories 6 5 LX556 Regional Englishes 6 5 LX555

Communication and Perception of Visual Language in Comic Books, Khai Hua Roh: Smile of the King and Maha Sanook: When the Prince became King

Comic Cons. Comic Cons A Reading A Z Level X Leveled Book Word Count: 1,398 X Z 1 Z 2 LEVELED BOOK X

Transcription:

Rollins College Rollins Scholarship Online Faculty Publications Spring 2016 Comics in the Here and Now Julian Chambliss Rollins College, jchambliss@rollins.edu Follow this and additional works at: http://scholarship.rollins.edu/as_facpub Published In Chambliss, Julian. "Comics in the Here and Now." Review of Artists against Police Brutality: A Comic Book Anthology, by Bill Campbell, Jason Rodriguez, and John Jennings, eds. Scandinavian Journal of Comic Art, Spring 2016. http://sjoca.com/wp-content/ uploads/2016/06/sjoca-2-2-08-chambliss.pdf This Book Review is brought to you for free and open access by Rollins Scholarship Online. It has been accepted for inclusion in Faculty Publications by an authorized administrator of Rollins Scholarship Online. For more information, please contact rwalton@rollins.edu.

COMICS IN THE HERE AND NOW by Julian C. Chambliss

Bill Campbell, Jason Rodriguez, and John Jennings, eds., APB: Artists against Police Brutality: A Comic Book Anthology. Greenbelt, MD: Rosarium Publishing, 2015. ISBN: 978-1495607523. 200 pages. From the first pages of APB: Artists Against Police Brutality, the reader is made aware of the political landscape that inspired the project. Written by co- editor and publisher Bill Campbell, the introduction explains that this anthology was borne out of anger (6). Reacting to recent deaths at the hands of police in the United States, this volume s political and social engagement is front and center. Like the #BLACKLIVESMATTER movement, the collective work presented in APB works to highlight the oppressive environment that has been created by patterns of coercive policing directed at racial minorities. It would be easy to assume the volume s goal makes it an outlier in United States comic history. However, APB intersects with Martin Luther King and the Montgomery Story (1957), a comic produced by the Fellowship of Reconciliation to spread the message of the U.S. Civil Rights movement, and with the broader transformation of comic literature toward artistic maturation in the United States. Mass market comic books are often defined by the superhero genre, and recent scholarship has pointed to the New Deal- influenced politics of Jerry Siegel and Joe Shuster s Superman in the late 1930s, and the implicit anti- racist message in All Negro Comics (1947) published by Orrin Evans, as examples of how such popular artifacts have included sociopolitical messages. Like other media, comic books also saw their own creative evolution influenced by post- WWII uncertainty linked to communist fears. Books such as David Hajdu s Ten Cent Plague: The Great Comic Book Scare and How it Changed America and Amy Kiste Nyberg s Seal of Approval: The History of the Comic Code explore how the emergence of crime and horror comics in the late 1940s triggered an investigation 93

by the U.S. Senate Subcommittee on Juvenile Delinquency in 1954. In the aftermath of the self- censorship that followed, mainstream comic book publishing became defined by the assumption of a juvenile readership. Works such as Comic Books and the Cold War: Essays on Graphic Treatment of Communism, the Code and Social Concerns and Hand of Fire: The Art of Jack Kirby have convincingly argued that the resurgence of superhero comics in the early 1960s integrated emerging youth counterculture perspectives with broader sociopolitical anxieties within their pages. Despite the hidden complexity of superhero comic books, the genre that has best lent itself to social commentary closely aligned with legitimacy was the Underground Comix movement. The artists associated with the Underground were heavily influenced by the post- WWII tumult and mass media in the United States. These figures absorbed the movies, television, and music designed for the baby boom generation. Highly politicized by the social justice crusades of the 1960s and the United States involvement in the Vietnam war, the roots of Underground Comix ran through counterculture publications such as The Chicago Seed, The Berkeley Barb, and The East Village Other. Historian Paul Buhle writes in Underground Classics: The Transformation of Comics into Comix that, Undergound Comix deftly united the most vernacular of all arts, the comic book, with political rebellion and a reflective critique of American culture (41). Steeped in critiques of middle- class social, political, and economic assumptions in the United States, and drawing voices from across the country, Underground artists such as Robert Crumb represented an expansion of the comic aesthetic in the United States that bridged the gap between traditional cartooning and comic books form. The Undergrounds synthesized a critique of U.S. imperialism, racism, corporate greed, and environmental degradation into an art form. Always fluid, the evolution of the Underground Comix movement into the alternative comic movement of the 1980 can be traced through the emergence of comic anthology publications such as Arcade: The Comic Revue edited by Art 94

Spiegelman and Bill Griffith and RAW edited by Art Spiegelman. These publications brought critical reassessment to comics and established a bridge between comics and art crucial to future growth. As explained in Masters of American Comics, this was a conscious effort, to move away from the stifling and limiting themes of the early underground- sex, dope, violence, etc."(128). This transformation allowed artists like Spiegelman to delve into a variety of topics, and the graphic novels that emerged in the 1980s became vehicles for both personal and political stories in the hands of skilled writer/artists. In doing so, a new adult audience found comics and embraced them as serious literature. The freedom to create content beyond the limitation of stereotypes and expectations of the commercial marketplace have allowed comic artists to explore a variety of issues. From historic works such as Don Glut and Alfredo Alcala s Daddy Cool (1984), based on the novel by African American writer Donald Goines, or Alison Bechdel s Fun Home: A Family Tragicomic (2007), the impact of race and gender minorities as creators and subjects of the graphic narrative demonstrate how much the medium can achieve to illuminate and empower marginalized voices. APB adds to this legacy of artistic purpose with a collection that at once continues traditional frameworks associated with graphic literature in the United States, but is unabashed in its intention to do something new. Rosarium Press published this volume and this origin informs the final project. Founded in 2013, the guiding mission for Rosarium is to bring talented multicultural voices to the public. Since its founding, the press has distinguished itself with a mix of fiction and non- fiction that challenges the mainstream construction around race and gender. The publisher s mission is on display in APB, but it is important to recognize that the volume does not systematically document a laundry list of deaths from police action. Despite the title, it does little to engage with persona and personalities of police officers. What APB does do is bring together over 50 creators to produce comics, critical essays, and short prose in a way that highlights the human cost of the police brutality in ways that statistics cannot. 95

The myriad voices and perspectives brought to bear provide insight while inciting reader reaction. A thoughtful essay on how the superhero model can inform collective action by Walidah Imarisha ( Alternative to Policing and the Superhero Model ) resonates with Reynaldo Anderson s damning critique of state violence and the need for grassroots activism ( White Supremacy: Ferguson and a New Message to the Grassroots ) in this volume. These critical essays, along with prose pieces from writers such as Yatasha L. Womack, author of Afrofuturism: The World of Black Sci- Fi and Fantasy Culture, provide a parallel intellectual experience to a collection with a wide range of comics content. Whether editorial cartoons from artists such as Keith Knight or Tak Toyoshima, that provide single- panel indictments to the racism and injustice associated with the death of unarmed black men, or more complex Twilight Zone- esque comics tales, such as Profile by Damien Duffy, Robert Love, and John Jennings, that capture the danger of being born black perfectly, the comics in this volume challenge the reader to recognize the underlying racist assumptions feeding police violence. APB is at its most powerful when creators capture the reality of societal norms that allow police killings to be a common part of minority lives. Whether told from the perspective of the man being stopped by police in David Brame s Shame or the child rendered fatherless in Melanie Stevens The Walker, these tales humanize the cost of racism linked to policing in way more powerful than endlessly cited data showing bias can. Expansive in its scope, this volume recognizes that Asian minorities and women suffer at the hands of the police and makes it clear the trauma experienced by families. All images are rendered in black and white and the clear page layouts makes this volume easy to read. A range of styles also help to give each story a unique feel for the reader. Whether you favor the cleaner line associated with superhero comics in the United States or a more expressive style, it is on display in this volume. 96

As a complete volume APB sparks a consideration of the contemporary politics through it pages. The public debate in the United States has evolved from the dream of post- racial society to a more complex critique of systemic oppression infused with regressive views on race, gender, and sexuality. In the pages of this anthology, voices informed by this intersectionality have gathered to create a unique narrative. This volume captures a single moment, but it will stand the test of time, because it adds to a legacy of comics as commentary on the U.S. experience. 97