Education.com

Comic Books and Graphic Novels (page 3)

By A.P. Nilsen|K.L. Donelson
Pearson Allyn Bacon Prentice Hall

Another aspect of comic strips that he finds fascinating is the crossover among genres. Milton Caniff, with his Terry and the Pirates, was a genius when he created the adventure strip by turning comic art into a storyboard. His Dragon Lady came straight from the movies and for generations circled back around in the popular culture. Soldiers in Vietnam were still using her as a reference point, and Anne McCaffrey (see her Margaret A. Edwards Award, p. 225) jokingly refers to herself as the Dragon Lady.

Comic books were a natural outgrowth of comic strips and almost from the very beginning newspapers began reprinting their strips, binding them together, and selling them through newsstands on a monthly, bimonthly, or quarterly basis. The term "comic magazine" was also used. It was the 1930s before original material was prepared and whole books were devoted to single characters.

The terms comic strips and comic books became so firmly entrenched that they continued to be used even when creators moved away from the kinds of humorous events and jokes that had been the norm in such "innocent" strips as Mutt and Jeff, The Yellow Kid, and Krazy Kat. What comic books have in common is their format and binding, not the subject matter or the attitudes that their creators take toward their stories. Every possible genre—adventure, romance, tragedy, informative nonfiction, horror, science fiction and fantasy—has been treated in so-called comic books.

Graphic novels are comic books that have gone off to college and come back with new sophistication and respect. Actually, many of them are not so different from comic books except that they have more durable bindings and cost more money. One of the reasons that the new term is coming into popularity is that it is more accurate because it focuses on what such books have in common, which is the drawings. The Merriam Webster Collegiate Dictionary (tenth edition, 2001) dates the term graphic novel at 1978 and defines it as "a fictional story for adults that is presented in comic-strip format and published as a book." Feiffer said while many graphic novels are junk, they are still the place where the most interesting forms of cartooning are being done today, especially with the alternative presses.

View Full Article

Add your own comment

Ask a Question

Have questions about this article or topic? Ask
Ask
150 Characters allowed