Between the 1930s and the invention of the internet, American comics reached readers in a few distinct physical forms: the familiar monthly stapled pamphlet, the newspaper comics section, bubblegum wrappers, and bound books. From Gum Wrappers to Richie Rich: The Materiality of Cheap Comics places the history of four representative comics—Watchmen, Uncle Scrooge, Richie Rich, and Fleer Funnies featuring Pud—in the larger contexts of book history, children’s culture, and consumerism to understand the roles that comics have played as very specific kinds of books. While comics have received increasing amounts of scholarly attention over the past several decades, their material form is a neglected aspect of how creators, corporations, and readers have constructed meaning inside and around narratives.Neale Barnholden traces the unusual and surprising histories of comics ranging from the most acclaimed works to literal garbage, analyzing how the physical objects containing comics change the meaning of those comics. For example, Carl Barks’s Uncle Scrooge comics were gradually salvaged by a fan-driven project, an evolution that is evident when considering their increasingly expensive forms. Similarly, Watchmen has been physically made into the epitome of ""prestigious graphic novel"" by the DC Comics corporation. On the other hand, Harvey Comics’ Richie Rich is typically misunderstood as a result of its own branding, while Fleer Funnies uses its inextricable association with bubblegum to offer unexpectedly sophisticated meanings. Examining the bibliographical histories of each title, Barnholden demonstrates how the materiality of consumer culture suggests meanings to comics texts beyond the narratives.
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Places the history of four representative comics in the larger contexts of book history, children’s culture, and consumerism to understand the roles that comics have played as very specific kinds of books.
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AcknowledgmentsIntroduction: Comics and BooksChapter 1: Back to ""Back to the Klondike"": Book History and Cultural SalvageChapter 2: ""I Will Give You Bodies beyond Your Wildest Imaginings"": Watchmen and the Editorial Construction of ValueChapter 3: Money, Money, Money: Reading Ri¢hie Ri¢hChapter 4: Trash Culture: Dubble Bubble Funnies and the Theory of Premium ComicsEpilogue: Comic Books and Their ReadersNotesWorks Cited
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Through brilliant close readings of a diverse range of comics, Barnholden advances the discourse on comics and materiality and expands our understanding of what comics and book history can bring to each other." - Aaron Kashtan, author of Between Pen and Pixel: Comics, Materiality, and the Book of the Future
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Produktdetaljer

ISBN
9781496851611
Publisert
2024-07-15
Utgiver
Vendor
University Press of Mississippi
Høyde
229 mm
Bredde
152 mm
Aldersnivå
P, 06
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Innbundet
Antall sider
277

Om bidragsyterne

Neale Barnholden is a lecturer at the University of Alberta in Edmonton. Originally from Vancouver, he studies American comics.