Cartoons did not originate in the United States, but Americans were innovative in the art, and its artists invented the newspaper comic strip and comic book. Stephen Becker wrote a survey of American comics of all types from their origins until his book was published in 1959: Comic Art in America.
Becker covers
every type of cartoon in the book. Comic strips get a lot of attention because
that is where a lot of the development occurred and gave rise to something
distinctly American. Though comic strips are a thread throughout, Becker
devotes chapters to editorial cartoons, single-panel humor and even animation.
Many of the
comics Becker discusses are still published today, such as Beatle Bailey and Blondie.
Others are well-known because of their former popularity or lasting influence: Krazy Kat, Terry
and the Pirates, Flash Gordon. Others are largely
forgotten, even if they were pioneers of their time that shaped the work of
others or the popular taste. Fans of particular types of cartooning may notice
omissions that seem glaring, at least in hindsight; the chapter on comic books
makes no mention of Will Eisner, though perhaps his fame stems more
form later work.
Of course,
the intent was not to be exhaustive. It’s a single volume, not an encyclopedia. As a survey for a general audience,
it works very well. At the time, it probably reminded readers of old favorites
that had fallen out of print. It might introduce modern readers to those old
masters for the first time. Necessarily it does not address some of the great
work that came out after it was published; I suspect Becker would have been
delighted by Bill Watterson’s Calvin
and Hobbes, as many of us are.
Becker was
primarily a fiction writer. Comic Art in America is very informative, but it is not primarily
an academic book. Neither does Becker come off as entirely fan-ish, though he
certainly has the tone of someone who enjoys comics and finds them interesting,
especially humor and editorial comics from newspapers and magazines. He mixes commentary with history and spices things up gossipy tidbits.
The book was
published in a larger format to accommodate reproduction of comics that
originally appeared in an even larger broadsheet newspaper. Though it has the
look of a coffee table book, it is not dominated by images. The images are an
accompaniment to the text. Even so, one can enjoy it for the comics reproduced
in it, though many are of their time and may not make much sense without the
context provided by Becker.
If you’re interested in this book, you
may also be interested in
Becker,
Stephen. Comic Art in America: A Social
History of the Funnies, the Political Cartoons, Magazine Humor, Sporting
Cartoons and Animated Cartoons. New York: Simon and Schuster, 1959.
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