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23 - Comic art and bande dessinée: from the funnies to graphic novels

from PART FOUR - AESTHETIC EXPERIMENTS, 1960 AND AFTER

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  28 September 2010

Coral Ann Howells
Affiliation:
University of Reading; University of London
Eva-Marie Kröller
Affiliation:
University of British Columbia, Vancouver
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Summary

The Super Heroes Stamp Pack issued by Canada Post on October 2, 1995 sported the likeness of Superman, the quintessential American superhero. It may have seemed a prank to many Canadians but it was actually a quirk of fate: Superman’s co-creator Joseph Shuster (1914–92) was born in Toronto and moved with his family to Cleveland at age ten. Much later, in the 1960s, Mordecai Richler interpreted the “Man from Krypton” as a metaphor of the “Canadian psyche,” that is, a convenient self-image for individuals with great abilities yet content to live under the disguise of a self-effacing alter ego.

However debatable Richler’s tongue-in-cheek contention may be, it at least implies that comics are no different from any other narrative species: they simultaneously tell stories and impart collective representations. Today’s Canadians are often unaware of their country’s comic art heritage – they know at best that Lynn Johnston, the author of the long-running soap-opera-cum-sitcom newspaper comic-strip “For Better or For Worse” (since 1979) is one of them. And yet, from the political commentaries of editorial cartoons to the escapism of twentieth-century comic strips to the mature creativity of present-day graphic novels, English-language comics and French-language bande dessinée have been vivid elements in the landscape of Canadian news and entertainment media since the mid-nineteenth century.

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Chapter
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Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2009

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References

Bell, John. Invaders from the North: How Canada Conquered the Comic Book Universe. Toronto: Dundurn, 2006.Google Scholar
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Lacroix, Yves, “La Bande dessine dans les journaux québécois (1930–1950),La Nouvelle barre du jour 1101–11 (February 1982).Google Scholar
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Richler, Mordecai, The Great Comic Book Heroes and Other Essays (Toronto: McClelland and Stewart, 1978).Google Scholar
Salinas, Eva, “Comics Shed Light on the Darker Side of Native Life; Format Helps Get Message Out, Artist Says,The Globe and Mail (14 August 2006).Google Scholar

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