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Comics Pearls

Comics PearlsA Quick History of Comics, Part One

If you look at the number of well-hyped superhero films at the box office could stake the claim comics have never been greater, but a brief overview of the history of comics, however, reveals while comics have never reached greater heights in the film gross fantastic The foundation has never been so unstable.

The cartoons were an easy fit for 1930 America. They were cheap, easy to produce, and even easier to sell. With larger ramps pasta radio, and comic books, comic books were the next logical step. It was the arrival of Superman and Batman in 1938 about a year later announcing not only the rise of superheroes, but the golden age of comics.

The entry of the United States in the Second World War did not stop reading comics - if anything it has gathered pace, with the heroes were cast with people like the Nazis and dictators even before the bombs fell on Pearl Harbor. Once the war began, the comics are not just morale - they were part of the war effort like any other industry. patriotic heroes like Captain America urged the purchase of war bonds, and manages all of the comics industry were from the stands or out of order for recycling to help our troops overseas. Although such sacrifices have played their part in the "Greatest Generation", they have profound ramifications on the industry of comics in future generations - nearly forty years later.

The 1950s significantly changed the landscape of super-heroes. Noted psychiatrist Frederic Wertham published "Seduction of the Innocent, a book that has pinned much of society's ills on the comic. He claimed Batman and Robin were homosexuals, and Wonder Woman was not only a lesbian, but a threat to the place of women in the American household. Wertham's scathing criticism of BD caused sales plummeting. Grizzly horror and crime comics like Tales from the Crypt and Vault of Horror were left paralyzed. The accident resulted in a Comics Code Authority, which oversaw the content of comic books, and, therefore, cartoons for the next decade have been largely restored.

Visit http://www.classic-comic-books.com

Posted on April 1, 2010.
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