Monday, 6 July 2009

AOB 6 - Regulation

Before 1954, ANY comic or graphic novel could be published at will and without interference from busybody fusspots worried about the contents and from this period, comics such as 'Astonishing' were produced to cater for the darker audience.
But soon concerned parents and adults started calling for such profane and disgusting publications to be regulated as they were believed to have a detrimental effect on its readers, of which whom were proportionately under 18


From this concern came the CCA or Comics Code Authority as a regulatory body for the entire comics/graphic novels industry which is a self governing regulation, instead of government regulated.

The aim of this regulatory body was to prohibit:
- The depiction of authority figures (such as the Police, Judges, etc.) being seen as evil, dying as a result of or being harmed by criminal behavior.
- Depictions of gore, graphic violence, horror and murder.
- Depictions, references and hints of illicit sex acts, sexual perversion including seduction, rape, sadism, masochism were specifically censored and ruled out.
- Subject matter for the comic/graphic novel was closely regulated as crime was subject to many restrictions and horror/terror were strictly off limits.
- Language used in the comic titles were also carefully watched, words such as Terror, Crime and horror were outlawed.
- Mythical/fictional beasts (eg. Zombies, vampires, werewolves, ghosts) were subject to the ban as they went along with horror/terror and also extreme violence.
- Advertisments helped bring extra revenue for the publishers but the CCA banned ads for liquor, tobacco, fireworks, nude pin-ups and postcards as they all portrayed a positive view of adult products on children. Ads for objects such as knives were also banned as they could encourage violence.

These restrictions were all in place to not only protect the audience but also the population, as the comic content could effect somebody so severely they could re-enact the ultra-violence as seen in their comics.
Considering such regulation and censorship, many publishers decided to simply comply, others had to amend comic titles or just discontinue them.
William Gaines of EC comics believed the CCA regulations were specifically targeted to his comics as a measure to drive EC Comics out of business as their bestsellers 'Crime SuspenStories, The Vault of Horror, and The Crypt of Terror' ALL came under violation
meaning the company would lose money.

Even today comics/graphic novels are under regulations and censorship such as Watchmen by Alan Moore and DC Comics, The Punisher by Gerry Conway and Marvel Comics, and the world famous Batman by Bob Kane and DC Comics. All these comics soon could be facing a total ban due to changes in the Criminal Justice Act (2008) which comes into effect at the end of January 2009.

A hot topic in graphic novel regulation and censorship is 'Lost girls' by Alan Moore.

'Lost Girls' features 3 prominent yet fictional characters from 19th and 20th century publications. Alice from Alice in wonderland, Dorothy Gale from The Wizard of Oz, and Wendy Darling from Peter Pan, describing their earliest sexual encounters. This recieved widespread controversy as it dealt with child sexuality, gratuitous sex, group sex acts, same sex relationships and sexual acts and also incestuous sex acts.

With the internet, people can see reviews written by civilians giving their view on the subject which can be considered a form of regulation as if something is given bad reviews, less and less people will take interest, an example below is shown of such a review.


Friday, 3 July 2009

AOB 5 - Ownership and Distribution

Comic book distribution had 2 models:

1) Old model - Independent Distribution

Stage 1. Artist or writer would approach a publisher

Stage 2. Publisher would produce the comic


Stage 3. The publisher would then pass on the comics to a periodical Distributor.

Stage 4. Shops such as Toy shops, News stands and Drugstores would then sell the comics
but any unsold comics would be returned to the publisher and the shops would
then be compensated


2) New model - Direct Market

Stage 1. Artist or writer would approach a publisher

Stage 2. Publisher would produce the comic

Stage 3. Instead of comics then going to an independent distributor, the publisher distributes the comics themselfs

Stage 4. Places like headshops, book shops and comic book shops would then sell the comics directly.

This model was a gamble, comics were sold faster and for a better price but unsold comics were non-returnable and the shops could potentially lose money. However though, the unsold at release comics would then become collectors items and they were what led onto the publishing of all the comics of a storyline in an annuls which then led to graphic novels.


If all thats confusing, just look below =]


Diamond comics is the largest comics distribution company in the USA and has exclusive deals with several of the leading comic publishers such as DC Comics, Image Comics and Marvel.
Fantagraphics is a publishing house of several of the alternative comics avalible, like Ghost world and Black hole. Diamond distributions was able to strike a deal with Fantagraphics in which all of Fantagraphics back catalog is readilly avalible to reorder, the consumers get a better price and shipping fee's.


DC Comics was
founded originally in 1934 as National Allied Publications and publish comics such as Adventures of superman, Aquaman, Batman, The Flash, Justice League and more.


Vertigo(DC Comics) is the DC Comics range targeted towards the late teen/adult market and was established in 1993, producing such comics as V for Vendetta, A history of violence and House of Mystery.


Fantagraphics Books is a publisher of alternative (when compared to the typical 'Pow' 'Zoom' superhero story) comics/graphic novels and was established in 1976 and they do offer a broad range of material such as classic comic strip anthologies, magazines, graphic novels, and the adult-oriented Eros Comix seried.

Marvel comics were originally called Timely Publications when the company was set up in 1939. Stan lee is commonly regarded as the godfather of superhero comics, bringing us Superman, The Incredible Hulk, The Fantastic Four, X-men, Spiderman and many of marvels comics have been adapted into films.


Drawn and Quarterly is a Canadian publisher of Graphic novels and underground/alternative comics, making this company the Canadian equivalent of Fantagraphics. Established in 1991 and making comics such as Peepshow, Fallen angel, Berlin and Underwater.

Mmmmm, Ever heard of Webcomics?

There free to read, cheap and easy to produce (with the right know how) an generally a great way to enjoy comics. Online comics are an ideal way for an amateur artist to get their work seen because anybody can make a webcomic and perhaps if there good enough, you could get them published and make a sack full of cash.

Quite simply Webcomics are fantastic, often talking about sensitive subject matter or maybe non-mainstream material, such as political satire, giving the reader a brief chuckle while toiling away in their over-crowded office's. Some people even find comics boring and if thats true about you, maybe give a webcomic a try, you can find them by simply searching something like 'Online Comics' or maybe.......'Free Web Comic' in a search engine like Google.



Monday, 29 June 2009

AOB 4 - Representation

Maus

On page 25, Vladek and Artie are discussing the contents of the book. Speigelman has just written about Vladek’s relationship with a woman (Lucia) before he married Anja. Vladek clearly states that he doesn’t wish for it to be included in the book as he thinks it has nothing to do with the Holocaust.

This is an example of mediation because Artie is choosing what should be included in the final story, as he is taking the entire story as dictated to him from his father Vladek and picking which bits to include.

The characters in Maus and the way there portrayed is a prime example of representation in Maus.

The jewish race are selectively chosen to be shown as mice and during WWII, the jews were portrayed as a parasite in nazi propaganda and they were needed to be exterminated. The binary opposite of the jews in this story is the Germans and as there the enemy to the jewish mice, the Germans are cats, who will toy with there prey before they inevitably kill them.
This is an ample metaphor for the relationship between the Jews and Nazi's.

In the second book, Spiegelman is clearly having doubts about the animal metaphors that form the backbone of the story.

Here, people are still characterized by animals based on race, but these characterizations are now clearly only masks that have been tied to their heads with a bit of string. Thus the idea of race is only an deception, Spiegelman suggests, and underneath the masks we are all basically the same. The fact that the animalistic face masks are mearly tied on is suggesting that everybody wears a mask but were simply all the same behind them, without all the social divisions we have today such as sexuality, race, religion, class, nationality and social standing.

Palestine

Joe Sacco doesn't understand the local customs or language and this helps the narrative because he can learn from talking to people in his journalistic profession and his reason for being there. Most of the Palestines find him to be a nice guy, give him a warm welcome but there are also some people who doubt he can help the situation.


The Israelis are the violent, aggressive, homicidal bad guys, causing all this conflict.

Friday, 26 June 2009

AOB 3 - Creating Meaning

How is meaning created?

provide a range of elements like: text, colour, layout, dialog, themes, the type of image.... ECT.








AOB 2 - Structure

When considering the narrative of any graphic novel, you must take several things into consideration such as, The narratives purpose, The Narrative hook and The framing devices used within.

Maus has an open narrative and does, to some extent follow Todorov’s theory as the story starts calmly, has peaks of disruption and destruction and eventually returns to a calm moment but this trend continues throughout the entire comic.
This also follows for Freytag’s pyramid theory as the story does increase in drama and suspense, reaching a climatic point then slowly drawing to a close (conclusion). The framing device used in Maus is the relationship between the father and the son, the father telling the son about his life during the Nazi occupation of europe and his survival in nazi concentration camps. This form uses flashbacks of the fathers capture wrapped around moments from the present day of the father-son relationship, rather similar to some film narratives such as The Shining and some telivision programs such as CSI.
The narrative hook within Maus is obviously the holocaust and this is a sensitive subject even today after 65 years, as many innocent people were needlessly persecuted and killed.

Persepolis has an closed narrative as the young girl divides up her precious possessions, packs her bags and head to the airport as her parents want her to go to France, far away from the violence and turmoil within Iran. Persepolis also does follow the Toderov theory as the story starts by introducing the main characters and telling the read about them, then the story gets disrupted because the girl cant be who she wants to be, she has no freedom and then eventually the equlibrium is restored as the girls parents send her to france, granting her her freedom and liberty she longs for.Persepolis is also a graphic novel which employes the use of binary opposites, somethings similar to the ying and yang symbols you may haveseen throughout your lifetime, the binary opposites being the government of the state enforcing law and the large groups of protesters who are trying to change the contry in some way. persepolis is written in the 1st person perception and the narrative hook in the story is to see weather the girl achieves her dream of freedom.

Palestine has a closed narrative as it is written from the perspective of a journalist visiting the war torn country who eventually leaves, but the story is ended in such a way so that he could return. The story is about the journalist's life in the country and comprised of his findings so it is non-fiction and features a man trying to survive after, being welcomed by many but also receiving much scepticism over how he could help the situation, possibly a narrative hook perhaps because the reader would want to find out how the conflict would end, making them read on through the comic.

AOB 1 - History of Sequential art

Graphic novels have long been enjoyed by many people and most often, people were introduced to them as a child in the form of comic books (eg. Beano, Dandy ect)

Sequential art - Pictures/images layed out in a decided sequence with the intent to convey a story, inform or produce a reaction from the viewer/reader.

Early cave paintings are probly the earliest form of sequential art as they were a way of telling a story about the live cave dwellers lived and there surroundings, the vegetation within there area and how they may have used things.


Hiyrogliphs such as The scribe of Menna which was produced roughly 4000 bc is another form of sequential art which again tells a story about farming the fields around the nile and the rule of the land.


The Bayeux tapestry, detailing the battle of Hastings in 1066 and the norman invasion of england is yet another form of sequential art throughout history.


William Hogarth's Marriage à-la-mode is a renaissance painting from between 1743 and 1745 and it is a series of 6 individual painting making a statement about the upper classes of the 18th Century. This is an example of how individual images, if viewed in a particular sequence, can tell a story, in this case its a story heavy drinking, adultery, gambling and much more.


Rodolphe Töpffer's was a swiss cartoonist and caricature artist who worked in the 1820's and could perhaps be called the "grandfather of modern day comics" as he introduced frame boarders which divided each single image but still allowed it to be on the same page, simplification of execution which was basically reducing each 'shot' in the story to the bare minimum needed and this was also aided by technological advances as his works were printed, not painted as they would have been before (such as Marriage à-la-mode by William Hogarth) and also inter-dependance of text allowed writing to go with the image to aid the storytelling.

Rodolphe Töpffer

Hogan's Alley was a sunday supplement cartoon strip which appeared in 'Truth' During the 1890's and was writen/drawn by Richard F. Outcault. Cartoon strips by now had already been used for political reasons as well as other forms of entertainment but its main character 'Yellow Kid' was eccentially the first cartoon character, he was a bald, snaggle-toothed child with a goofy grin in a yellow nightshirt who hung around in a ghetto alley filled with equally odd characters


It is understood that comics and cartoons are very different, cartoons are a single image with a caption whereas comics are a number of images, each in single frames, with speech bubbles.

in 1935, Max Gaines came up with the thoughtful idea of taking daily/weekly comics and comic strips and publishing them alltogether in the sequence they should be read in, this was called a comic anthology which would eventually turn into the modern day comic. Publishers of these anthologys were such as National and they would soon become DC Comics, a major comic book company in the states.

DC Comics were soon to be the headliners of comics as in 1938 with the publication of Action Comics #1, the genisis of the superhero genre began as superman was first introduced, the creation of Joe Shuster and Jerry Seigel. After supermans success came Batman, Wonder woman, Captain america and many others, all of which found success.

by the early 1950s, most superhero comics had died out and DC comics only produced batman, superman and wonder woman. After superhero's, the only successful comic genre was horror. The Leading horror publisher was EC Comics. EC Comics was pushing the bounderies as the content got more and more adult orientated. Remember Max Gaines? well EC Comics was run by his son, Bill.

During the 1950s, comics became blamed for mentally effecting children.


'Seduction of the innocent' by Fredric Wertham was an example of how people thought comics were corrupting the innocent(the children). Prolonged exposure to the filth and disgraceful and distateful comics were responcible for the bad behaviour from youth.


Soon after CCA or comics code authority was brought in to regulate comic book content under the obscene publications act. This led to a steep drop in EC comics sales as shops wanted nothing to do with this provayor of filth.

in 1952, EC comics proclaimed 'Mad' magazine soon became the leader as this was changed to a black and white publication, exempt from the CCA regulations. MAD magazine is known throughout the US and Monty Python's Terry Gilliam once said.... "Mad became the Bible for me and my whole generation."

Classic MAD Cover


Modern day MAD Cover


Say hello to the sixties! This decade saw the 'teenager' being created, a young, productive member of society still under legal drinking age, meaning they have nothing to do but work meaningless jobs like McDonald's and read their old childish reading material like superman.......BOR-ING!

This decade saw an attempt to widen the range of comic material and change the typical conventions of comic readers, which were generally seen as children, simply meaning 'Lets make a comic for the adults' and these comics still used the same language, layout and things like speech and thought bubbles. Many of the adult comics or graphic novels or whatever you want to call them were still comics but did tend to follow the general themes seen in the melodrama films of the1960's, such as Spartacus or All that heaven allow's.

Teenagers or 'Young adults' as their sometimes called, have money and still want to read comics but maybe something abit more atune to their own thinking which is where the alternative comics genre arose from, producing such comics as......


It Rhymes With Lust - published originally in 1950 by St. John Publications (a magazine and comic book publishing company) and was written by Arnold Drake and Leslie Waller and the Black and white artwork was done by Matt Baker. The story is influenced by Pult fiction and film noir and features a empowered female lead character called Rust.

Then not much happened till the release of....

His name is...Savage, first published by Adventure House Press in 1968. This was a comic that took the whole consept of a comic in an entirely new direction, disgusing kidnap, cyborgs (robot with living tissue) and world wars, going along with the whole cold war fears people were struggling with.

Ok now tell me, What exactly IS a graphic novel?

The term wasnt used until Will Eisner used it as a way to describe the new way of telling a comicbook story. This involves being produced not on a weekly or monthly basis, but in a book, dealing with adult themes such as relationships (good or bad), politics, graphic violence and so on. These books used the typical conventions of the comic book, meaning they used panel boxes, speech and thought bubbles but also the language of the audience its trying to reach.
Although, Eisner didnt create the term originally :-(
Richard Kyle came up with the name 'Graphic Story' which then developed into 'Graphic Novel' in a 1964 fanzine manifesto because he felt calling such stories 'Comics' limited them somewhat in the titles apeal to its audience, because 'comic' suggests childishness and simplistic humour.

But sometimes superhero's get a 'makeover' taking them from the clean streets and dumping them in the crime ridden gotham city (as an example) for one reason or another.
Original >> << face="georgia">Before the use of Graphic novel was widespread, previous titles of the artform were 'Picto-fiction', 'Sequential Art' or ‘bande dessinee’ (French for Drawn Strip) to name just a few.
Some artists such as Daniel Clowes believe that his own works are ‘comic book novels’ and think's there's no harm done in calling them 'comics' because thats what he grew up with, he has a life long enjoyment of them and he profits from them.

However, now were back to William Eisner, who has a fairly interesting story of how he volentarily took time off work(unpaid) at the grand old age of 50 to take a story, extend it and form it around the comic book connotations (panel boxes, speech bubbles and language ect.) with no help and no publisher in sight, taking the artform to new heights.
His reason for doing so? Well at the time, radical artists such as Robert Crumb were involved with Underground Comix (not comic's because there not hip anymore).
Up until the late 1960's, all comics were produced by large companies with control in the market, meaning only seemingly profitable comics were made and not always by the same artist('s) or writer('s) (who's skills were questionable at times) as these were knocked up in a rush and were designed to sell the image, personality and adventures of the character (eg. Spiderman) which greatly contrasts the world of graphic novels which intentionally sell the artist/writers personal style and USP (Unique Selling Point) over the subject matter of the material.

Examples of this are:
Maus by Art Spiegelman, in which he details his fathers life in Nazi occupied europe.


and Black hole by Charles Burns, a fictional story about sexualy transmitted desieses amongst teenagers who develope mutations from their desieses.


Underground Comix
These fella's arose in the later 1960's and were more commonly found in 'Head shops' (no sniggering now, its not what you think!) Head shops were stores which stocked drug related products and hippy related stuff, given to the huge rise in the counterculture of the hippy.
People involved with the underground comix, either directly as artists, editors or publishers were Robert Crumb, Jay lynch, Gilbert sheldon, Rick Griffin and Art Spiegelman.

ZAP! comix was first published in 1968, featuring “Fair warning - for adults and intellectuals only” on the cover so you cant say you wernt warned.

Artwork inspired by LSD trips, storylines so dirty you feel your eyes require scrubbing with bleach and a brilopad afterwords and YET still a masterpiece, challenging social normalities and beliefes. Taking the style of MAD and catapulting the comics genre into new, experimental terriotries. People who read Zap could get a feeling of being rebelious because this style of publication was new exciting and also highly explicit. Zap can be believed to be a milestone in the development of comics.

Welcome to the 1970's and a time when the direct market was introduced, opening the doors to new, more stylish and stranger comics into the published world.
By the early 1980's, comics such as:

'Elfquest' by Wendy and Richard Pini in 1978

And


'Cerebus' by Dave sim in 1977
proved to be a stunning suceess for black and white, self published comics.

In 1980 Art Spiegelman and Françoise Mouly devised 'RAW'

A groundbreaking anthology that was published by Mouly, the first of the alternative comics to come from the 1980's, a true Avant-garde piece. This is where art spiegelman first showed 'Maus' before producing it as a graphic novel. The comic was printed on much better quality paper than others and spiegelman encouraged the artists of 'RAW' to throw the consept of 'good drawing' away and focus more on a rough style, giving a sense of individuality to the piece.

Remember the CCA? well it was during this time that DC and Marvel published some works without CCA approval such as 'Moon Knight' and 'Camelot 3000'





Since their dawn as damp cave painting, all the way to monthly published comics and then to definitavly Graphic novels, there popularity is as strong as ever and seemingly never to end, were stuck with the graphic novels so you may was well like them.