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War on Iraq

Anti-War Comics Surge

By Annalee Newitz, AlterNet. Posted May 30, 2006.


An anti-war comic book series shows why comics are surging in popularity: because they can help us make sense of our troubled times.
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This is really embarrassing. Last week I started crying while I was reading a comic book on the StairMaster at the gym. I got into this unenviable, geektastic situation because I've been reading everything I can find by Grant Morrison -- the British comic book writer who reinvented the X-Men in the late 1990s with his fantastic New X-Men series -- and it just so happened that I wasn't prepared for the plot of Morrison's "We3," a short series about three cybernetic animals. Frank Quitely's anime-influenced art on the cover had me lulled into thinking "We3" would be a tale of animal heroism about a cute talking bunny, kitty, and doggy who escape the evil government that made them into cyber-weapons and find their way home.

But no. Instead, it was one of the most horrifying portraits of war I've ever seen. Fluffy creatures are mangled. Soldiers are sliced into bits. A senator pats himself on the back for getting animals to do his dirty human work. The animals, who've been given the power of speech and turned into highly efficient assassins via cybernetic implants, couldn't be more tragic as they try to understand what's happened to them. When the bunny got shot after innocently asking a human to help him fix his broken tail, I just couldn't take it anymore. Hence, the tears.

The older I get, the more I'm obsessed with comic books. Ironically, this is partly a result of what many call the end of the comic book. These days publishing houses like Marvel and DC are making most of their money on quality paperback-style bound collections, rather than on classic, individual issues. This shift is perfect for someone like me, who started reading comics as books rather than as monthly-installment magazines. Plus, collections are really the only way for a late bloomer like myself to get caught up with the soap operas behind four-decade-old titles like The Hulk and X-Men.

Like video games today, comic books were once the objects of intense moral outrage. During the 1950s anti-comic book crusader Frederic Wertham condemned the adventures of Batman, Green Lantern, and pals for promoting juvenile delinquency and homosexuality. Now, of course, his accusations sound positively quaint. How could any type of book promote anything among young people? These days it's "common sense" that games like Grand Theft Auto and World of Warcraft are to blame for angry kids.

Maybe comic books are the bugaboos of yesteryear, but they still share with video games one subversive characteristic that makes them dangerous to anyone -- politician, moralist, or other -- who clings to the status quo. Comic books lend themselves well to fantasies about multiple, parallel universes. Because these are narratives that last over decades and spawn multiple spin-offs by hundreds of different authors and artists, comic books inevitably train readers to imagine how one scenario might lead to several different outcomes. And comics also invite readers to explore how one little change in the present can lead to whole new interpretations of history. There's even a word -- retcon, for retroactive continuity -- that comic book geeks use to describe what happens when a new comic book author changes a character's history to explain a new present. Like video games, where different characters and players take the game play in new directions, comic books remind us that there is no one perfect path to follow, and that the future can always be changed.

When the retconning and multiple story lines get too complicated, though, sometimes a crisis occurs. Thus the subject of my current obsession: the "crisis on infinite Earths" story lines from DC comics of the 1980s. This was a period when DC decided its authors had created too many parallel worlds containing multiple versions of each character. To solve the problem, DC wiped out all but one Earth and all but one version of every hero, in a plot tangle that spanned several dozen titles. In fact, I don't claim to understand it all -- I haven't read enough from that era. Honestly, it's probably better in concept than execution.

But I love the concept: the idea that there are many Earths existing in parallel and all of them are having a crisis at the same time. It's a perfect reminder that our lives are a tangle of possible futures, struggling to extricate themselves from a morass of multiple pasts. Choosing between them, and choosing justly, is what makes heroes out of ordinary people.

Digg!

Annalee Newitz is a surly media nerd whose favorite comic book store is still Comix Experience because Brian Hibbs is a hero.

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Twilight Zen
Posted by: kunndunn on May 31, 2006 5:22 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Bravo for this marvelous article. Where can I find a link to some of the best comics that illustrate the example of reconning?

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Twlight Zen
Posted by: kunndunn on May 31, 2006 5:25 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Correction(due to dsylexia): links for retconning comics?

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If I may, Annalee, ...
Posted by: Orwells_nightmare on May 31, 2006 5:57 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
...and if you don't already know about it, I'd recommend a DC Vertigo series by Warren Ellis called 'TransMetropolitan.' The run has finished, but it's out in TPB. It's about a grim future place called the City, and a grumpy, borderline psychotic journalist who's been forced to come down from his mountain to live there. Imagine if Hunter S. Thompson had been in some horrible transporter accident with Rick "Blade Runner" Deckard and a fistful of amphetamines. Between moments of achingly funny bitterness, ludicrously plausible technology and diatribe vicious enough to blow a hole in a pregnant woman's thigh, there are moments of very sweet humanity. It sounds just your cup of speed-spiked tea. It's also a favorite of Patrick Stewart's, so you can't go far wrong.

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If I may, Annalee,..
Posted by: Orwells_nightmare on May 31, 2006 6:15 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
...and if you haven't already heard of it, I recommend a DC Vertigo TPB series by Warren Ellis called 'TransMetropolitan.' It's about a grumpy, borderline psychotic journalist, one of the last real ones, called Spider Jerusalem, forced to come back down from his mountain to a grim future metropolis known only as the city. For the style, imagine Hunter S. Thompson got into a horrible transporter accident with Rick Deckard and a fistful of amphetamines. It manages to be both present and prescient at the same time, and in between moments of achingly funny bitterness, ludicrously plausible technology and diatribe vicious enough to blow a hole in a pregnant woman's thigh, there are moments of surprising sweet humanity. It sounds just your cup of speed-laced tea. (This is not an infomercial. I promise, I'm not Warren Ellis and I don't work for DC.) And it has Patrick Stewart's seal of approval; what more do you want?

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» RE: If I may, Annalee,.. Posted by: Orwells_nightmare
» RE: If I may, Annalee,.. Posted by: Orwells_nightmare
On the other hand,...
Posted by: Orwells_nightmare on May 31, 2006 6:31 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
...that one was just stupid.

8D

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» RE: On the other hand,... Posted by: medstudgeek
Re: your column
Posted by: JoseM on May 31, 2006 6:50 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
While I agree that comics can be dangerous to those in power or those who simply claim to be, I don't think the ability to portray varying universes is either particularly significant or unique to the medium. If anything, comics' most "dangerous" aspect is its low barrier or entry. You can sit at your desk with nothing more then pen and paper and create something as powerful and valid as the glossiest volume from any major publisher.

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A new crossever event worth a look-see
Posted by: chaoslegs on May 31, 2006 7:38 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I read comics in the mid 80s through the early 90s. Recently I read an article about a huge Marvel crossover series called Civil War and I am hooked again.

(spoiler)

See there was this reality TV show featuring b-rate superheroes. They find some pretty tough villians and take them on the show, but not very well because they are out of their league. One of the villians blows up a huge area that kills at least 600 people. Remember this is caught on reality TV, so there is this huge backlash against superheroes for being loose cannons and the government is moving to do a Super Human Registration Act (SHRA) and the heroes are split on the topic. In fact they will use some pro SHRA heroes to track down the anti SHRA heroes (who are now concerned enemies) even those that had been teammates recently. Iron Man and Captain America are on opposite sides

To me it is a great exploration of civil liberty rights. The claim is the government should know who these superhumans are, but some are concerned for their families and worry that government can't protect the data (this came out before the whole VA problem last week) that contains their identity.

You can find out about it on the web at Wikipedia and Marvel which is not very helpful.

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Comic books and politics
Posted by: medstudgeek on May 31, 2006 8:24 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
The X-Men was about the Holocaust, civil rights, and gay rights; the threat of widespread extermination of mutants a la Nazi Germany is frequently brought up, and Magneto (the head evil mutant)'s distrust of humanity arises from his experience as a concentration camp victim; Magneto and Professor X(the head good mutant)'s views on mutants separating versus living with humanity paralleled Malcolm X versus Martin Luther Kng; being a mutant is nowadays paralleled with homosexuality (for example in the first two movies), as mutant powers manifest at puberty and place the mutant inseparate social circles. Some of Morrison's work also touches on this ('we won't hide our powers and beautiful minds anymore' says one of the mutants, in an analogy to gay pride).

Ellis's Transmetropolitan starts out as a muckraking journalist in an over-the-top city of tomorrow (probably, I suspect, based on New York, what with the insane diversity, skyscrapers, etc.). It gradually turns more political, with the protagonist trying to bring down a corrupt President. I suspect many alternet fans would enjoy it.

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» RE: Comic books and politics Posted by: Orwells_nightmare
» RE: Comic books and politics Posted by: sterlingwisdom
» RE: Comic books and politics Posted by: medstudgeek
JamesNostack
Posted by: James_Nostack on May 31, 2006 6:58 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
In the same anti-war/media meta-commentary, I'd also recommend Grant Morrison's comic series, "The Invisibles," which is sort of a mixture of Derrida, the X Files, the Prisoner, and Robert Anton Wilson. It's hard to describe, but I suspect the people who enjoy Annalee's take on things might enjoy it.

Morrison's "Seaguy" is also very touching. It seems to involve the commodification of animals, innocence, and the corporate drive to brand everything in sight---but emotionally it's even harder to nail down than "The Invisibles." I've been giving it to non-comics-reading friends as a gift; even people who don't like comics seem to enjoy it.

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» RE: JamesNostack Posted by: medstudgeek
and don't forget.
Posted by: yorimoto on May 31, 2006 8:54 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Yes Transmet is excellent and Spider Jerusalem is my hero. People should also check out V For Vendetta. Not the movie but the original graphic novel. I would argue with anyone that it's one of the best works of fiction of the last half century.

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» RE: and don't forget. Posted by: medstudgeek
» RE: and don't forget. Posted by: medstudgeek
No votes for Art Spiegelman?
Posted by: Longdream on Jun 3, 2006 3:51 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Sorry if this is embedded in everyone's chromosomes already, but you never know.

Spiegelman's chronicles of the Holocaust, Maus and Maus II, was first serialized in part in RAW in 1986, and won the Pulitzer in 1992.

His next major piece of work was his visceral, gut-punch of a reaction to 9/11--In the Shadow of No Towers. You want to make a few connections you hadn't before, read it.

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COMICS IN THE NEWSPAPERS ALSO
Posted by: Ellie1 on Jun 3, 2006 9:52 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Doonesbury has been publishing a list of soldiers killed in Iraq, and Funky Winkerbean had a story line on a returning soldier suffering from battle fatigue. None are funny, but it is ridiculous when you have to get your news from the comic page and comedy shows (The Daily Show and Colbert Report). What a tragic state our country is in.

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Bad dog. . .
Posted by: erisian75 on Jun 3, 2006 10:59 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I also cried at We3. For me it was seeing the dog repeat over and over "Bad dog. Bad dog. . ." I cannot express how valuable comics have been to my intellectual and moral development since childhood. I can only hope that the shift to collections and graphic novels brings more readers to the art form.

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www.mnftiu.cc
Posted by: Longdream on Jun 3, 2006 4:33 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
?

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More Anti-War GNs Out There
Posted by: waynebeamer on Jun 4, 2006 10:59 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Hi Annalee,

Liked your essay very much, so it inspired me to post a blog of my own about some of the better anti-war books that have been published recently. Let me know what you think of my list and books or creators I've missed. And please check out my new blog about the graphic novel surge if you get a minute or two...

Thanks,

Wayne Beamer, Illustrated Fiction.com

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