Monday, March 24, 2008

Graphic Lit: 'The Ten-Cent Plague'


Comic books have never really been respected as an art form by the general public.

That being said, it might nevertheless surprise some folks to know that there was a time when comics were seen not only as kiddie fare but as harmful, vile, mind-alteringly dangerous kiddie fare.

That history is recounted in David Hajdu’s excellent new book, “The Ten-Cent Plague: The Great Comic Book Scare and How It Changed America.”

Hajdu provides a captivating, insightful and detailed look at how American parents in the 1950s became convinced that the crime, horror and romance comics their kids were devouring would turn them into sociopaths.

He builds his history slowly, taking readers through a basic history of how the medium took shape in America and describing how artists such as Charles Biro and publishers such as EC’s Bill Gaines saw a way to sell books by offering lurid, pulpy stories of criminals, killers, vampires and other monsters.

Parents, psychiatrists and other do-gooders, led by one Dr. Fredric Wertham, whose book “Seduction of the Innocent” accused the industry of being little more than Nazis, feared such material would lead to antisocial behavior.

They began a pogrom of attacks in the media, attempts at censorship through legislation and book burnings in towns, all of which Hajdu recounts with flair.

While Hajdu makes it clear what side he’s on, he nevertheless is careful not to portray the comics industry as being rife with innocents.

He chastises certain people for their naivete and greed, not to mention disregard for seeing their books as anything other than product.

It all came to a somewhat literal head during a congressional hearing in which Gaines, high on diet pills, was asked whether a cover depicting a severed woman’s head could be in “good taste,” Hajdu said.

His answer inadvertently led to the Comics Code, a self-policing organization that proceeded to violently neuter every book on the stands.

Comics quickly lost whatever cultural cache they had and more than 800 talented people lost their jobs as companies folded.

Only Gaines managed to salvage through, taking his humor comic, Mad, and turning it into a 25-cent magazine that still thumbs its nose at popular culture today.

Hajdu’s central conceit is that the comic book was the opening salvo in baby boomer culture wars. He makes a strong point.

The kids who read “Crime Does Not Pay,” after all, would go on to discover rock ¤’n’ roll, grow out their hair and protest the Vietnam War.

And yet this sort of cultural battle has occurred throughout history.

People freaked out about the waltz, for example, when it was introduced in the 18th century, calling it vulgar and sinful.

To those who think such censorship scares could never happen in today’s enlightened times, I only ask you to consider the pillorying video games receive today from such upstanding moral folk as Sens. Hillary Clinton and Joe Lieberman.

‘Comic Book Comics’

If you prefer to have your comic book history told in a more ... well, comic book fashion, then perhaps you should pick up a copy of the oddly titled “Comic Book Comics.”

Having explored the lives of deep thinkers such as Nietzsche and Kant in their previous series, “Action Philosophers,” writer Fred van Lente and artist Ryan Dunlavey decided to take on the convoluted and at times controversial history of the comics industry.

“We realized we couldn’t keep [“Philosophers”] going on forever. We were running out of thinkers,” van Lente said during a recent interview. “The one thing we could be certain all comic fans like are comics.”

“Comics” takes a more linear approach than “Philosophers,” starting with the appearance of the Yellow Kid in newspaper pages in 1896, then hurtling forward to the birth of the comic book and animated cartoon while touching on important figures such as Will Eisner, Jack Kirby, Walt Disney and Max Fleischer.

There won’t be any resting on laurels however. Van Lente and Dunlavey plan a series on U.S. presidents.

Copyright The Patriot-News, 2008

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Friday, February 08, 2008

From the vault: Tintin the Complete Companion

Note: This review originally ran in issue #252 of The Comics Journal

Tintin the Complete Companion
By Michael Farr
Last Gasp Press
$29.95

No doubt there are plenty of hardcore Tintin-philes out there to whom a book like the new Complete Companion offers little they haven’t seen or heard before. I am not one of those people. For folks like me – devout fans of Herge’s books who nonetheless remain woefully unfamiliar with how they came to be – this coffee-table sized book is an enjoyable if at times didactic background primer for what has for all intents and purposes become one of Belgium’s primary exports.

The book itself is a thorough and by-the-numbers tour through the Tintin oeuvre. From the barely formed “Tintin in the Land of the Soviets” all the way through the unfinished “Tintin and Alpha Art,” Farr delves into the history of each volume, starting with the general facts and then winding his way down into the more niggling details and artistic decisions.

The central reason for reading this book is the wealth of photos, preliminary drawings and reference material that line the pages, showing how Herge and his studio got from here to there. One wonders if the Herge foundations sends a generous check to the folks at National Geographic after seeing the few samples from the Tintin swipe file included here.

In addition, Farr reveals the real-life influences that inspired characters or certain incidents in the books. For a clueless American like myself, many of these facts were revelatory. I was completely unaware, for example, of the anti-fascist subtext that ran through what I took to be the simple boy’ adventure of “King Ottokar’s Scepter.” Not that such a discovery leads me to completely re-evaluate the book, mind you, but it did make me run downstairs and reread the darn thing to see what else I missed.

If there’s a serious flaw to the book, it’s that it seems to bog down far too much in the minutia and doesn’t give us enough of a general picture. To put it a bit more eloquently, he puts the trees under such a powerful microscope that this reader started to wonder if there was any forest around. I’m not sure, for example, that I need a four-page inventory of every single difference between the original 1943 color edition of “The Black Island” and the overhauled 1966 version. Do I really care, ultimately, that Dr. Mueller’s tie is altered into a waistcoat? Or that one of the Scotsmen the intrepid reporter comes across carries a crook in one version and an umbrella in the next?

What’s especially maddening is that at the end of the chapter Farr exclaims that the ‘66 version is far inferior to its predecessor, yet he has given us no definitive reason to think so; he has merely compiled a list of superficial differences. A tighter focus on the aesthetic merits of the two books and some more thought-out opinions might have made for a more compelling argument.

Ok, I lied. There’s another big problem with this book; namely that Farr feels the perverse need to quote verbatim dialogue from the books at length and often. I confess to being completely flummoxed by this desire. I mean, I’ve already got all the books (not bragging, just saying). I know the various plots and dialogue, as, I imagine, most people who pick up this book will. If I’m confused about a particular passage or quote Farr alludes to, I can always pull out the original work in question. I don’t need to have the entire comic sequence laid out to me in prose. I want to forgive this constant urge of Farr’s, but the cynic in me suggests it’s padding designed to up the page count and nothing more.

Still, for those Tintin fans not already intimately familiar with all of the details, “The Complete Companion” does a decent job of living up to its title. To the die hard Herge scholars, the book probably comes off as old hat, though even they might get a kick at some of the reproduced materials on display here. And it’s not as though there are that many Tintin reference books available in English and on this side of the Atlantic. So let’s congratulate Farr for filling this niche so nicely.

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