The comics industry

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The newspaper strip and comic book have become arguably the largest and most influential iconographic field in history, with literally millions, perhaps billions, of discrete pictures produced since 1900. They certainly represent the dominant graphic mythology of the 20th century. Not even film or television can boast of reaching a third of humanity, as can the comic strip. By mid-century, more than 100 million Americans, young and old, educated and not, read one or more comic strips in their Sunday and daily newspapers. In 1963 there were more than 300 different syndicated strips in the United States, but the number was down to 200 in 1975. Pogo and Dick Tracy reached more than 50 million readers in more than 500 newspapers. Superman comics circulated in the 1950s at the rate of 1.5 million monthly; in 1943 American comic books totaled 18 million copies monthly and constituted a third of total magazine sales, to a value of $72 million. Not surprisingly, reader participation reached extraordinary heights. For example, when his character Blondie gave birth to Baby Dumpling in the spring of 1934, Chic Young received from his readers 400,000 suggestions for a name.

Perhaps in no other form of art has the creator become to such an extent prisoner of his creation, to which he may be locked for his lifetime; it becomes in a real sense independent of his own existence, for the successful strip will almost always be continued by other artists if its originator should die or lose interest in it. Traditionally the newspaper strip was also at the mercy of the syndicates, publishers, and editors who regarded it primarily as a circulation booster and were quick to censor. The conventional view has been that it must not offend any conceivable readership or commercial-interest group and therefore must observe strict conservative codes of morality and decorum. This explains the extent to which the newspaper strip generally has avoided controversial issues of the day. It was against such restrictions that the American underground comic and the European bande dessinée pour adultes (adult strip) rebelled, and in their wake some innovative newspaper strips—notably Trudeau’s Doonesbury—began to break new ground.

The comic book and strip may be the capitalist art form par excellence, tying in so readily with other visual art forms. They also help market to children all kinds of consumer commodities under an extremely lucrative licensing system. This type of marketing started in the early 20th century with Buster Brown (begun 1902), which sold the use of the character’s name and image to the Brown Shoe Company, and the profits to be gained thereby have tempted almost every successful strip creator since. Bill Watterson is a notable exception who discontinued Calvin and Hobbes rather than face pressure from the syndicate to license. Meanwhile, Jim Davis, the creator of Garfield, embraced licensing and merchandising wholeheartedly. Disney, of course, has pushed the marketing of film and comics characters to the extreme. It is probable too that comics strips are the art form with the greatest variety of “cultural overflow,” affecting live-action and animated films, stage plays, video and computer games, advertising techniques, and merchandising of every kind of consumer product (including greeting cards and calendars). Comic books, comic strips, and graphic novels clearly have entered the global cultural bloodstream.

David M. Kunzle