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Underground comix

Underground comix are small press or self-published comic books that are often socially relevant or satirical in nature. They differ from mainstream comics in depicting content forbidden to mainstream publications by the Comics Code Authority, including explicit drug use, sexuality, and violence. They were most popular in the United States in the late 1960s and 1970s, and in the United Kingdom in the 1970s.

Underground comix
The cover artwork for the first issue of Zap Comix, featuring the character Mr. Natural.
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Robert Crumb, Gilbert Shelton, Barbara "Willy" Mendes, Trina Robbins and numerous other cartoonists created underground titles that were popular with readers within the counterculture scene. Punk had its own comic artists like Gary Panter. Long after their heyday, underground comix gained prominence with films and television shows influenced by the movement and with mainstream comic books, but their legacy is most obvious with alternative comics.

History edit

United States edit

The United States underground comics scene emerged in the 1960s, focusing on subjects dear to the counterculture: recreational drug use, politics, rock music, and free love. The underground comix scene had its strongest success in the United States between 1968 and 1975,[1] with titles initially distributed primarily though head shops.[2] Underground comix often featured covers intended to appeal to the drug culture, and imitated LSD-inspired posters to increase sales.[1]

These titles were termed "comix" in order to differentiate them from mainstream publications. The "X" also emphasized the X-rated contents of the publications.[1] Many of the common aspects of the underground comix scene were in response to the strong restrictions forced upon mainstream publications by the Comics Code Authority, which refused publications featuring depictions of violence, sexuality, drug use, and socially relevant content, all of which appeared in greater levels in underground comix.[1] Robert Crumb stated that the appeal of underground comix was their lack of censorship: "People forget that that was what it was all about. That was why we did it. We didn't have anybody standing over us saying 'No, you can't draw this' or 'You can't show that'. We could do whatever we wanted".[1]

Antecedents edit

Between the late 1920s and late 1940s, anonymous underground artists produced counterfeit pornographic comic books featuring unauthorized depictions of popular comic strip characters engaging in sexual activities. Often referred to as Tijuana bibles, these books are often considered the predecessors of the underground comix scene.[3][4]

American comix were strongly influenced by 1950s EC Comics and especially magazines edited by Harvey Kurtzman, including Mad (which first appeared in 1952).[1] Kurtzman's Help! magazine, published from 1960 to 1965, featured the works of artists who would later become well known in the underground comix scene, including R. Crumb and Gilbert Shelton.[1] Other artists published work in college magazines before becoming known in the underground scene.[1]

1962–1968: Early history edit

Early underground comix appeared sporadically in the early- and mid-1960s, but did not begin to appear frequently until after 1967. The first underground comix were personal works produced for friends of the artists. Perhaps the earliest of the underground comic strips was Frank Stack's (under the pseudonym Foolbert Sturgeon)[5][6] The Adventures of Jesus, begun in 1962 and compiled in photocopied zine form by Gilbert Shelton in 1964. It has been credited as the first underground comic.[5][6] Shelton's own Wonder Wart-Hog appeared in the college humor magazine Bacchanal #1-2 in 1962. Jack Jackson's God Nose, published in Texas in 1964,[7][8] has also been given that title. One guide lists two other underground comix from that year, Vaughn Bodē's Das Kampf and Charles Plymell's Robert Ronnie Branaman.[9]

Joel Beck began contributing a full-page comic each week to the underground newspaper the Berkeley Barb and his full-length comic Lenny of Laredo was published in 1965.[10] Another underground paper, the East Village Other, was an important precursor to the underground comix movement, featuring comic strips by artists including Crumb, Shelton, Kim Deitch, Trina Robbins, Spain Rodriguez, and Art Spiegelman before true underground comix emerged from San Francisco with the first issue of Zap Comix. Zap and many of the first true underground comix publications began with reprints of comic strip pages which first appeared in underground papers like the East Village Other, the Berkeley Barb, and Yarrowstalks.[1][a]

1968–1972: Underground's "Golden Age" edit

In February 1968, in San Francisco, Robert Crumb published (with the help of poet Charles Plymell and Don Donahue of Apex Novelties)[11] his first solo comic, Zap Comix. The title was financially successful and almost single-handedly developed a market for underground comix.

Within a few issues, Zap began to feature other cartoonists — including S. Clay Wilson, Robert Williams, Spain Rodriguez, and Gilbert Shelton — and Crumb launched a series of solo titles, including Despair, Uneeda (both published by Print Mint in 1969), Big Ass Comics, R. Crumb's Comics and Stories, Motor City Comics (all published by Rip Off Press in 1969), Home Grown Funnies (Kitchen Sink Press, 1971) and Hytone Comix (Apex Novelties, 1971), in addition to founding the pornographic anthologies Jiz and Snatch (both Apex Novelties, 1969).[1]

The San Francisco Bay Area was an epicenter of the underground comix movement; Crumb and many other underground cartoonists lived in San Francisco's Haight-Ashbury neighborhood in the mid-to-late 1960s.[12] Just as importantly, the major underground publishers were all based in the area: Don Donahue's Apex Novelties, Gary Arlington's San Francisco Comic Book Company, and Rip Off Press were all headquartered in the city, with Ron Turner's Last Gasp and the Print Mint based in Berkeley.[13] Last Gasp later moved to San Francisco.

By the end of the 1960s, there was recognition of the movement by a major American museum when the Corcoran Gallery of Art staged an exhibition, The Phonus Balonus Show (May 20-June 15, 1969). Curated by Bhob Stewart for famed museum director Walter Hopps, it included work by Crumb, Shelton, Vaughn Bodé, Kim Deitch, Jay Lynch and others.[14][15]

Crumb's best known underground features included Whiteman, Angelfood McSpade, Fritz the Cat, and Mr. Natural. Crumb also drew himself as a character, caricaturing himself as a self-loathing, sex-obsessed intellectual.[1] While Crumb's work was often praised for its social commentary, he was also criticized for the misogyny that appeared within his comics. Trina Robbins said: "It's weird to me how willing people are to overlook the hideous darkness in Crumb's work... What the hell is funny about rape and murder?"[1] Because of his popularity, many underground cartoonists tried to imitate Crumb's work.[1] While Zap was the best-known anthology of the scene, other anthologies appeared, including Bijou Funnies, a Chicago publication edited by Jay Lynch and heavily influenced by Mad.[1] The San Francisco anthology Young Lust (Company & Sons, 1970), which parodied the 1950s romance genre, featured works by Bill Griffith and Art Spiegelman. Another anthology, Bizarre Sex (Kitchen Sink, 1972), was influenced by science fiction comics and included art by Denis Kitchen and Richard "Grass" Green, one of the few African-American comix creators.[1]

Other important underground cartoonists of the era included Shelton, Wilson, Deitch, Rodriguez, Skip Williamson, Rick Griffin, George Metzger, and Victor Moscoso. Shelton became famous for his characters Wonder Wart-Hog, a superhero parody, and The Fabulous Furry Freak Brothers, a strip about a trio of "freaks" whose time is spent attempting to acquire drugs and avoid the police, both of which first appeared in the self-published Feds 'N' Heads in 1968.[1] Wilson's work is permeated by shocking violence and ugly sex; he contributed to Zap and created the infamous The Checkered Demon,[1] a portly, shirtless being who is frequently called upon to kill the various demented bikers, pirates, and rapists who populate Wilson's universe. Spain worked for the East Village Other before becoming known within underground comix for Trashman and his solo titles Zodiac Mindwarp and Subvert.[1] Williamson created his character Snappy Sammy Smoot, appearing in several titles.

Underground horror comics also became popular, with titles such as Skull (Rip Off Press, 1970), Bogeyman (San Francisco Comic Book Company, 1969), Fantagor (Richard Corben, 1970), Insect Fear (Print Mint, 1970), Up From the Deep (Rip Off Press, 1971), Death Rattle (Kitchen Sink, 1972), Gory Stories (Shroud, 1972), Deviant Slice (Print Mint, 1972) and Two Fisted Zombies (Last Gasp, 1973). Many of these were strongly influenced by 1950s EC Comics like Tales from the Crypt.[1]

The male-dominated scene produced many blatantly misogynistic works, but female underground cartoonists made strong marks as well. Edited by Trina Robbins, It Ain't Me, Babe, published by Last Gasp in 1970, was the first all-female underground comic;[1] followed in 1972 by Wimmen's Comix (Last Gasp), an anthology series founded by cartoonist Patricia Moodian [fr] that featured (among others) Melinda Gebbie, Lynda Barry, Aline Kominsky, and Shary Flenniken. Joyce Farmer and Lyn Chevli's Tits & Clits Comix all-female anthology debuted in 1972 as well.

1972–1975: Controversy and recognition edit

By 1972–1973, the city's Mission District was "underground headquarters": living and operating out of The Mission in that period were Gary Arlington, Roger Brand, Kim Deitch, Don Donahue, Shary Flenniken, Justin Green, Bill Griffith & Diane Noomin, Rory Hayes, Jay Kinney, Bobby London, Ted Richards, Trina Robbins, Joe Schenkman, Larry Todd, Patricia Moodian and Art Spiegelman.[16]

Mainstream publications such as Playboy and National Lampoon began to publish comics and art similar to that of underground comix.[1] The underground movement also prompted older professional comic book artists to try their hand in the alternate press. Wally Wood published witzend in 1966, soon passing the title on to artist-editor Bill Pearson. In 1969, Wood created Heroes, Inc. Presents Cannon, intended for distribution to armed forces bases. Steve Ditko gave full vent to his Ayn Rand-inspired philosophy in Mr. A and Avenging World (1973). In 1975, Flo Steinberg, Stan Lee's former secretary at Marvel Comics, published Big Apple Comix, featuring underground work by ostensibly "mainstream" artists she knew from Marvel.

Film and television began to reflect the influence of underground comix in the 1970s, starting with the release of Ralph Bakshi's Crumb adaptation, Fritz the Cat, the first animated film to receive an X rating from the MPAA.[2] Further adult-oriented animated films based on or influenced by underground comix followed, including The Nine Lives of Fritz the Cat and Down and Dirty Duck.[2] The influence of underground comix has also been attributed to films such as The Lord of the Rings (1978) and Forbidden Zone (1980).[2] The animation sequences – created by Help! contributor Terry Gilliam – and surrealistic humor of Monty Python's Flying Circus have also been partly attributed to the influence of the underground comix scene.[1][2]

Despite the form's influence on the culture at large, however, by 1972 only four major underground publishers remained in operation: the Print Mint, Rip Off Press, Last Gasp, and Krupp Comic Works (Kitchen Sink Press).[17] For much of the 1970s, Rip Off Press operated a syndication service, managed by cartoonist and co-owner Gilbert Shelton, that sold weekly comix content to alternative newspapers and student publications.[18] Each Friday, the company sent out a distribution sheet with the strips it was selling, by such cartoonists as Shelton, Joel Beck, Dave Sheridan, Ted Richards, Bill Griffith, and Harry Driggs (as R. Diggs). The syndicate petered out by 1979; much of the material produced for it was eventually published in the company's long-running anthology Rip Off Comix, which had debuted in 1977. Griffith's strip, Zippy, which had debuted in 1976 as a weekly strip with the syndicate,[19] was eventually picked up for daily syndication by King Features Syndicate in 1986.

Critics of the underground comix scene claimed that the publications were socially irresponsible, and glorified violence, sex and drug use.[1] In 1973, the U.S. Supreme Court, in Miller v. California, ruled that local communities could decide their own First Amendment standards with reference to obscenity. In the mid-1970s, sale of drug paraphernalia was outlawed in many places, and the distribution network for these comics (and the underground newspapers) dried up, leaving mail order as the only commercial outlet for underground titles.[2]

In 1974, Marvel launched Comix Book, requesting that underground artists submit significantly less explicit work appropriate for newsstands sales.[1] A number of underground artists agreed to contribute work, including Spiegelman, Robbins and S. Clay Wilson, but Comix Book did not sell well and lasted only five issues.[1][20] In 1976, Marvel achieved success with Howard the Duck, a satirical comic aimed at adult audiences that was inspired by the underground comix scene. While it did not depict the explicit content that was often featured in underground comix, it was more socially relevant than anything Marvel had previously published.[1]

By the mid-1970s, independent publishers began to release book-length collections of underground comics. Quick Fox/Links Books released two important collections, The Apex Treasury of Underground Comics, published in 1974, and The Best of Bijou Funnies, released in 1975. The Apex Treasury featured work by Crumb, Deitch, Griffith, Spain, Shelton, Spiegelman, Lynch, Shary Flenniken, Justin Green, Bobby London, and Willy Murphy;[21] while the Bijou Funnies book highlighted comics by Lynch, Green, Crumb, Shelton, Spiegelman, Deitch, Skip Williamson, Jay Kinney, Evert Geradts, Rory Hayes, Dan Clyne, and Jim Osborne.[22] Similarly, and around this time, the publishing cooperative And/Or Press published The Young Lust Reader (1974), a "best-of" collection from Griffith and Kinney's Young Lust anthology, and Dave Sheridan and Fred Schrier's The Overland Vegetable Stagecoach presents Mindwarp: An Anthology (1975). And/Or Press later published the first paperback collections of Griffith's Zippy the Pinhead comics.

1975–1982: The underground era comes to a close edit

By this time, some artists, including Art Spiegelman, felt that the underground comix scene had become less creative than it had been in the past. According to Spiegelman: "What had seemed like a revolution simply deflated into a lifestyle. Underground comics were stereotyped as dealing only with Sex, Dope and Cheap Thrills. They got stuffed back into the closet, along with bong pipes and love beads, as Things Started To Get Uglier".[1]

One of the last major underground titles was Arcade: The Comics Revue, co-edited by Spiegelman and Bill Griffith. With the underground movement encountering a slowdown, Spiegelman and Griffith conceived of Arcade as a "safe berth", featuring contributions from such major underground figures as Robert Armstrong, Robert Crumb, Justin Green, Aline Kominsky, Jay Lynch, Spain Rodriguez, Gilbert Shelton, and S. Clay Wilson (as well as Griffith and Spiegelman). Arcade stood out from similar publications by having an editorial plan, in which Spiegelman and Griffith attempted to show how comics connected to the broader realms of artistic and literary culture.[23] Arcade lasted seven issues, from 1975 to 1976.

Autobiographical comics began to come into prominence in 1976, with the premiere of Harvey Pekar's self-published comic American Splendor, which featured art by several cartoonists associated with the underground, including Crumb.[1] Comics critic Jared Gardner asserts that, while underground comix was associated with countercultural iconoclasm, the movement's most enduring legacy was to be autobiography.[24]

In the late 1970s, Marvel and DC Comics agreed to sell their comics on a no-return basis with large discounts to comic book retailers; this led to later deals that helped underground publishers.[2] During this period, underground titles focusing on feminist and Gay Liberation themes began to appear, as well as comics associated with the environmental movement.[1] Anarchy Comics focused on left-wing politics, while Barney Steel's Armageddon focused on anarcho-capitalism.[25] British underground cartoonists also created political titles, but they did not sell as well as American political comics.[1]

Artists influenced by the underground comix scene, who were unable to get work published by better-known underground publications, began self-publishing their own small press, photocopied comic books, known as minicomics.[26] The punk subculture began to influence underground comix.[27]

1982–present edit

In 1982, the distribution of underground comix changed through the emergence of specialty stores.[2]

In response to attempts by mainstream publishers to appeal to adult audiences, alternative comics emerged, focusing on many of the same themes as underground comix, as well as publishing experimental work.[27] Artists formally in the underground comix scene began to associate themselves with alternative comics, including Crumb, Deitch, Griffith, Lynda Barry, and Justin Green.[27]

In the 1980s, sexual comics came into prominence, integrating sex into storylines rather than utilizing sexual explicitness for shock value.[27] The first of these features was Omaha the Cat Dancer, which made its first appearance in an issue of the zine Vootie. Inspired by Fritz the Cat, Omaha the Cat Dancer focused on an anthropomorphic feline stripper.[28] Other comix with a sexual focus included Melody, based on the life story of Sylvie Rancourt and Cherry, a comedic sex comic featuring art similar in style to that of Archie Comics.[27][28]

In 1985, Griffith's comic strip Zippy the Pinhead — which originally appeared in underground titles — was syndicated as a daily feature by King Features.[2] Between 1980 and 1991 Spiegelman's graphic novel Maus was serialized in Raw, and published in two volumes in 1986 and 1991. It was followed by an exhibition at the Museum of Modern Art and a Pulitzer Prize for Spiegelman in 1992. The novel originated from a three-page story first published in an underground comic, Funny Aminals [sic], (Apex Novelties, 1972).[2]

Alternative cartoonist Peter Bagge was strongly influenced by underground comics,[27] and was reciprocally admired by Crumb, for whom Bagge edited Weirdo magazine in the 1980s; he could be considered part of a "second generation" of underground-type cartoonists, including such notables as Mike Diana, Johnny Ryan, Bob Fingerman, David Heatley, Danny Hellman, Julie Doucet, Jim Woodring, Ivan Brunetti, Gary Leib, Doug Allen, and Ed Piskor. Many of these artists were published by Fantagraphics Books, which was founded in 1977 and through the 1980s and '90s became a major publisher of alternative and underground cartoonists' work.

As of the 2010s, reprints of early underground comix continue to sell alongside modern underground publications.[2]

The 2010s Foreskin Man, a comic book published to protest against circumcision, has been referred to as "comix" by some reviewers.[29]

United Kingdom edit

 
OZ London, No.33, February 1971; art by Norman Lindsay

British cartoonists were introduced in the underground publications International Times (IT), founded in 1966, and Oz founded in 1967, which reprinted some American material.[1] During a visit to London, American comics artist Larry Hama created original material for IT.[30]

The first UK comix mag was Cyclops, started in July 1970 by IT staff members. In a bid to alleviate its ongoing financial problems, IT brought out Nasty Tales (1971), which was soon prosecuted for obscenity. Despite appearing before the censorious Old Bailey Judge Alan King-Hamilton, the publishers were acquitted by the jury.[31][32]

In the wake of its own high-profile obscenity trial, Oz launched cOZmic Comics in 1972, printing a mixture of new British underground strips and old American work. When Oz closed down the following year cOZmic Comics was continued by fledgling media tycoon Felix Dennis and his company, Cozmic Comics/H. Bunch Associates, which published from 1972 to 1975.[33]

While the American underground comix scene was beginning to decline, the British scene came into prominence between 1973 and 1974, but soon faced the same kind of criticism that American underground comix received.[1] UK-based underground cartoonists included Chris Welch, Edward Barker, Michael J. Weller, Malcolm Livingstone, William Rankin (aka Wyndham Raine), Dave Gibbons, Joe Petagno, Bryan Talbot, and the team of Martin Sudden, Jay Jeff Jones and Brian Bolland.[1]

The last UK underground comix series of note was Brainstorm Comix (1975–1978), which featured only original British strips (mostly by Bryan Talbot).

Hassle Free Press was founded in London in 1975 by Tony and Carol Bennett as a publisher and distributor of underground books and comics. Now known as Knockabout Comics, the company has a long-standing relationship with underground comix pioneers Gilbert Shelton and Robert Crumb, as well as British creators like Hunt Emerson and Bryan Talbot. Knockabout has frequently suffered from prosecutions from U.K. customs, who have seized work by creators such as Crumb and Melinda Gebbie, claiming it to be obscene.[34][35]

The 1990s witnessed a renaissance in the genre in the United Kingdom, through titles like Brain Damage, Viz, and others.

Archives edit

After the death of King Features Syndicate editor Jay Kennedy, his personal underground comix collection was acquired by the Billy Ireland Cartoon Library & Museum in Ohio.

The University of California, Berkeley's Bancroft Library has a large underground comix collection, especially related to Bay Area publications; much of it was built by a deposit account at Gary Arlington's San Francisco Comic Book Store. The collection also includes titles from New York, Los Angeles, and elsewhere.

The Rhode Island School of Design's Fleet Library acquired a thousand-item collection of underground comix through a donation by Bill Adler in 2021.[36]

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ Reprints were popular with publishers because underground artists originally had few claims on their own work.[1] The basis for this was that material originally printed in publications that belonged to the Underground Press Syndicate (such as the Berkeley Barb and the East Village Other) was available to reprint for free by other UPS members. This permission was exploited by some underground comix publishers, bulking up or entirely filling their own magazines with work whose creators didn't receive any payment even when those publishers made a profit.[citation needed]

References edit

  1. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z aa ab ac ad ae af ag ah Sabin, Roger (1996). "Going underground". Comics, Comix & Graphic Novels: A History Of Comic Art. London, United Kingdom: Phaidon Press. p. 92. ISBN 0-7148-3008-9.
  2. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k Estren, Mark James (1993). "Foreword: Onward!". A History of Underground Comics. Ronin Publishing. pp. 7–8, 10. ISBN 0-914171-64-X.
  3. ^ Sabin, Roger (1996). "Comical comics". Comics, Comix & Graphic Novels: A History Of Comic Art. London, United Kingdom: Phaidon Press. p. 35. ISBN 0-7148-3008-9.
  4. ^ Les Daniels, Comix: A History of Comic Books in America, 1971, chapter 8
  5. ^ a b Shelton, Gilbert (2006). "Introduction". The New Adventures of Jesus. Fantagraphics Books. p. 9. ISBN 978-1-56097-780-3.
  6. ^ a b Skinn, Dez (2004). "Heroes of the Revolution". Comix: The Underground Revolution. Thunder's Mouth Press. p. 34. ISBN 1-56025-572-2.
  7. ^ Booke, Keith M. 2010, Encyclopedia of Comic Books and Graphic Novels, ABC-CLIO, LLC, Santa Barbara, CA
  8. ^ Maurice Horn. ed., The World Encyclopedia of Comics, 1976, Robert Crumb
  9. ^ Kennedy, Jay. The Official Underground and Newave Comix Price Guide. Boatner Norton Press, 1982.
  10. ^ "Joel Beck: Underground comic artist", San Francisco Chronicle, September 21, 1999 January 16, 2004, at the Wayback Machine
  11. ^ Zap Comix entry at the Grand Comics Database. Accessed October 27, 2009.
  12. ^ Lopes, Paul. Demanding Respect: The Evolution of the American Comic Book (Temple University Press, 2009), p. 77.
  13. ^ Levin, Bob. The Pirates and the Mouse: Disney's War Against The Underground (Fantagraphics Books, 2003), p. 41.
  14. ^ Corcoran Gallery of Art Exhibitions 2011-01-03 at the Wayback Machine
  15. ^ Richard, Paul. "Walter Hopps, Museum Man with a Talent for Talent". Washington Post, March 22, 2005.
  16. ^ Kinney, Jay. "The Rise and Fall of Underground Comix in San Francisco and Beyond" from Ten Years That Shook the City: San Francisco 1968-78 (City Lights Foundation, 2011), edited by Chris Carlsson.
  17. ^ "New Comix!" Bijou Funnies #7 (Krupp Comic Works, Inc., 1972).
  18. ^ Fox, M. Steven. "Rip Off Comix — 1977-1991 / Rip Off Press", Comixjoint. Retrieved Dec. 5, 2022.
  19. ^ "Zippy Congratulates Rip-Off Press", Rip Off Comix #21 (Winter 1988), p. 50.
  20. ^ Sabin, Roger (1996). "Picking up the pieces". Comics, Comix & Graphic Novels: A History of Comic Art. London, United Kingdom: Phaidon Press. p. 151. ISBN 0-7148-3008-9.
  21. ^ "The Apex Treasury of Underground Comics", Grand Comics Database. Accessed Dec. 2, 2016.
  22. ^ The Best of Bijou Funnies (Links Books/Quick Fox, 1975) ISBN 9780825630545.
  23. ^ Grishakova, Marina; Ryan, Marie-Laure (2010). Intermediality and Storytelling. Walter de Gruyter. ISBN 978-3-11-023774-0,pp=67–68.
  24. ^ Gardner, Jared (2008). "Autography's Biography, 1972–2007" (PDF). Biography. 31 (1). University of Hawaii Press: 6–7 – via Project MUSE.
  25. ^ Multicultural Comics: From Zap to Blue Beetle - Race and Comix by Leonard Rifas pp. 33-34
  26. ^ Dowers, Michael (2010). "Introduction". Newave! The Underground Mini Comix Of The 1980s. Fantagraphics Books. pp. 9–11. ISBN 978-1-60699-313-2.
  27. ^ a b c d e f Sabin, Roger (1996). "Alternative Visions". Comics, Comix & Graphic Novels: A History Of Comic Art. London, United Kingdom: Phaidon Press. pp. 177–78, 182, 188, 200, 208–209. ISBN 0-7148-3008-9.
  28. ^ a b Skinn, Dez (2004). "Can't Get Enuff". Comix: The Underground Revolution. Thunder's Mouth Press. pp. 71, 73. ISBN 1-56025-572-2.
  29. ^ Cavanaugh, Tim (6 June 2011). "San Francisco Circumcision Intactivist's Anti-Semitic Comix". Reason.
  30. ^ Coke, Travis Hedge (Feb 5, 2012). "Ethics and Choreography: An Interview With Larry Hama". Unimaginable! Pretensile!! Perambulations!!!.
  31. ^ . Funtopia.pwp.blueyonder.co.uk. 1973-02-09. Archived from the original on 2011-10-08. Retrieved 2010-10-10.
  32. ^ . Funtopia.pwp.blueyonder.co.uk. 1973-02-09. Archived from the original on 2011-10-08. Retrieved 2010-10-10.
  33. ^ Cozmic Comics/H. Bunch Associates, Grand Comics Database. Accessed Dec. 28, 2016.
  34. ^ Sabin, Roger (2000) The Last Laugh: Larfing All the Way to the Dock 2008-05-13 at the Wayback Machine, Index on Censorship #6
  35. ^ Knocking about with Tony Bennett 2011-09-29 at the Wayback Machine, Forbidden Planet, September 13, 2006
  36. ^ Solondz, Simone (2021). Underground Comix Meet the Fleet. Rhode Island School of Design News. (7/13).

Bibliography edit

  • Estren, Mark James. A History of Underground Comics (Straight Arrow Books/Simon and Schuster, 1974; revised ed., Ronin publishing, 1992)
  • Kennedy, Jay. The Underground and New Wave Comix Price Guide. Cambridge, Massachusetts: Boatner Norton Press, 1982.
  • Rosenkranz, Patrick. Rebel Visions: the Underground Comix Revolution, 1963–1975 Fantagraphics Books, 2002. ISBN 1-56097-464-8

External links edit

  • Moore Collection of Underground Comix - a special collection of the library of California Polytechnic State University (Cal Poly)
  • Lynn R. Hansen Underground Comics Collection - a special collection of the library of Washington State University
  • UG Comix Info 2011-07-19 at the Wayback Machine and "A Visual Guide to Underground Comix Reprints" 2012-08-26 at the Wayback Machine, main page. .
  • World Comics & Graphic Novels News (WCGNN)
  • Mark J. Estren, largest collection of underground comics, some drawn especially for this book.
  • Frank Stack Collection 2013-08-01 at the Wayback Machine - a special collection of the University of Missouri Libraries. Also see the Comic Art Collection 2011-07-19 at the Wayback Machine at the University of Missouri, which specializes in underground comics.
  • Comixjoint's Underground Comix Collection, annotated publishing information on hundreds of issues.
  • Underground comix Lambiek

underground, comix, comix, redirects, here, medium, general, comics, underground, comics, redirects, here, group, depicted, marvel, comics, underground, comics, comics, series, gotham, underground, small, press, self, published, comic, books, that, often, soci. Comix redirects here For the medium in general see Comics Underground comics redirects here For the group depicted in Marvel Comics see Underground comics For the DC Comics series see Gotham Underground Underground comix are small press or self published comic books that are often socially relevant or satirical in nature They differ from mainstream comics in depicting content forbidden to mainstream publications by the Comics Code Authority including explicit drug use sexuality and violence They were most popular in the United States in the late 1960s and 1970s and in the United Kingdom in the 1970s Underground comixThe cover artwork for the first issue of Zap Comix featuring the character Mr Natural AuthorsR CrumbKim DeitchTrina RobbinsSpain RodriguezGilbert SheltonPublishersApex NoveltiesKitchen Sink PressLast GaspPrint MintRip Off PressPublicationsZap ComixArcadeBijou FunniesFabulous Furry Freak BrothersWimmen s ComixRelated genresAlternative comics Robert Crumb Gilbert Shelton Barbara Willy Mendes Trina Robbins and numerous other cartoonists created underground titles that were popular with readers within the counterculture scene Punk had its own comic artists like Gary Panter Long after their heyday underground comix gained prominence with films and television shows influenced by the movement and with mainstream comic books but their legacy is most obvious with alternative comics Contents 1 History 1 1 United States 1 1 1 Antecedents 1 1 2 1962 1968 Early history 1 1 3 1968 1972 Underground s Golden Age 1 1 4 1972 1975 Controversy and recognition 1 1 5 1975 1982 The underground era comes to a close 1 1 6 1982 present 1 2 United Kingdom 2 Archives 3 See also 4 Notes 5 References 6 Bibliography 7 External linksHistory editUnited States edit The United States underground comics scene emerged in the 1960s focusing on subjects dear to the counterculture recreational drug use politics rock music and free love The underground comix scene had its strongest success in the United States between 1968 and 1975 1 with titles initially distributed primarily though head shops 2 Underground comix often featured covers intended to appeal to the drug culture and imitated LSD inspired posters to increase sales 1 These titles were termed comix in order to differentiate them from mainstream publications The X also emphasized the X rated contents of the publications 1 Many of the common aspects of the underground comix scene were in response to the strong restrictions forced upon mainstream publications by the Comics Code Authority which refused publications featuring depictions of violence sexuality drug use and socially relevant content all of which appeared in greater levels in underground comix 1 Robert Crumb stated that the appeal of underground comix was their lack of censorship People forget that that was what it was all about That was why we did it We didn t have anybody standing over us saying No you can t draw this or You can t show that We could do whatever we wanted 1 Antecedents edit Between the late 1920s and late 1940s anonymous underground artists produced counterfeit pornographic comic books featuring unauthorized depictions of popular comic strip characters engaging in sexual activities Often referred to as Tijuana bibles these books are often considered the predecessors of the underground comix scene 3 4 American comix were strongly influenced by 1950s EC Comics and especially magazines edited by Harvey Kurtzman including Mad which first appeared in 1952 1 Kurtzman s Help magazine published from 1960 to 1965 featured the works of artists who would later become well known in the underground comix scene including R Crumb and Gilbert Shelton 1 Other artists published work in college magazines before becoming known in the underground scene 1 1962 1968 Early history edit Early underground comix appeared sporadically in the early and mid 1960s but did not begin to appear frequently until after 1967 The first underground comix were personal works produced for friends of the artists Perhaps the earliest of the underground comic strips was Frank Stack s under the pseudonym Foolbert Sturgeon 5 6 The Adventures of Jesus begun in 1962 and compiled in photocopied zine form by Gilbert Shelton in 1964 It has been credited as the first underground comic 5 6 Shelton s own Wonder Wart Hog appeared in the college humor magazine Bacchanal 1 2 in 1962 Jack Jackson s God Nose published in Texas in 1964 7 8 has also been given that title One guide lists two other underground comix from that year Vaughn Bode s Das Kampf and Charles Plymell s Robert Ronnie Branaman 9 Joel Beck began contributing a full page comic each week to the underground newspaper the Berkeley Barb and his full length comic Lenny of Laredo was published in 1965 10 Another underground paper the East Village Other was an important precursor to the underground comix movement featuring comic strips by artists including Crumb Shelton Kim Deitch Trina Robbins Spain Rodriguez and Art Spiegelman before true underground comix emerged from San Francisco with the first issue of Zap Comix Zap and many of the first true underground comix publications began with reprints of comic strip pages which first appeared in underground papers like the East Village Other the Berkeley Barb and Yarrowstalks 1 a 1968 1972 Underground s Golden Age edit In February 1968 in San Francisco Robert Crumb published with the help of poet Charles Plymell and Don Donahue of Apex Novelties 11 his first solo comic Zap Comix The title was financially successful and almost single handedly developed a market for underground comix Within a few issues Zap began to feature other cartoonists including S Clay Wilson Robert Williams Spain Rodriguez and Gilbert Shelton and Crumb launched a series of solo titles including Despair Uneeda both published by Print Mint in 1969 Big Ass Comics R Crumb s Comics and Stories Motor City Comics all published by Rip Off Press in 1969 Home Grown Funnies Kitchen Sink Press 1971 and Hytone Comix Apex Novelties 1971 in addition to founding the pornographic anthologies Jiz and Snatch both Apex Novelties 1969 1 The San Francisco Bay Area was an epicenter of the underground comix movement Crumb and many other underground cartoonists lived in San Francisco s Haight Ashbury neighborhood in the mid to late 1960s 12 Just as importantly the major underground publishers were all based in the area Don Donahue s Apex Novelties Gary Arlington s San Francisco Comic Book Company and Rip Off Press were all headquartered in the city with Ron Turner s Last Gasp and the Print Mint based in Berkeley 13 Last Gasp later moved to San Francisco By the end of the 1960s there was recognition of the movement by a major American museum when the Corcoran Gallery of Art staged an exhibition The Phonus Balonus Show May 20 June 15 1969 Curated by Bhob Stewart for famed museum director Walter Hopps it included work by Crumb Shelton Vaughn Bode Kim Deitch Jay Lynch and others 14 15 Crumb s best known underground features included Whiteman Angelfood McSpade Fritz the Cat and Mr Natural Crumb also drew himself as a character caricaturing himself as a self loathing sex obsessed intellectual 1 While Crumb s work was often praised for its social commentary he was also criticized for the misogyny that appeared within his comics Trina Robbins said It s weird to me how willing people are to overlook the hideous darkness in Crumb s work What the hell is funny about rape and murder 1 Because of his popularity many underground cartoonists tried to imitate Crumb s work 1 While Zap was the best known anthology of the scene other anthologies appeared including Bijou Funnies a Chicago publication edited by Jay Lynch and heavily influenced by Mad 1 The San Francisco anthology Young Lust Company amp Sons 1970 which parodied the 1950s romance genre featured works by Bill Griffith and Art Spiegelman Another anthology Bizarre Sex Kitchen Sink 1972 was influenced by science fiction comics and included art by Denis Kitchen and Richard Grass Green one of the few African American comix creators 1 Other important underground cartoonists of the era included Shelton Wilson Deitch Rodriguez Skip Williamson Rick Griffin George Metzger and Victor Moscoso Shelton became famous for his characters Wonder Wart Hog a superhero parody and The Fabulous Furry Freak Brothers a strip about a trio of freaks whose time is spent attempting to acquire drugs and avoid the police both of which first appeared in the self published Feds N Heads in 1968 1 Wilson s work is permeated by shocking violence and ugly sex he contributed to Zap and created the infamous The Checkered Demon 1 a portly shirtless being who is frequently called upon to kill the various demented bikers pirates and rapists who populate Wilson s universe Spain worked for the East Village Other before becoming known within underground comix for Trashman and his solo titles Zodiac Mindwarp and Subvert 1 Williamson created his character Snappy Sammy Smoot appearing in several titles Underground horror comics also became popular with titles such as Skull Rip Off Press 1970 Bogeyman San Francisco Comic Book Company 1969 Fantagor Richard Corben 1970 Insect Fear Print Mint 1970 Up From the Deep Rip Off Press 1971 Death Rattle Kitchen Sink 1972 Gory Stories Shroud 1972 Deviant Slice Print Mint 1972 and Two Fisted Zombies Last Gasp 1973 Many of these were strongly influenced by 1950s EC Comics like Tales from the Crypt 1 The male dominated scene produced many blatantly misogynistic works but female underground cartoonists made strong marks as well Edited by Trina Robbins It Ain t Me Babe published by Last Gasp in 1970 was the first all female underground comic 1 followed in 1972 by Wimmen s Comix Last Gasp an anthology series founded by cartoonist Patricia Moodian fr that featured among others Melinda Gebbie Lynda Barry Aline Kominsky and Shary Flenniken Joyce Farmer and Lyn Chevli s Tits amp Clits Comix all female anthology debuted in 1972 as well 1972 1975 Controversy and recognition edit By 1972 1973 the city s Mission District was underground headquarters living and operating out of The Mission in that period were Gary Arlington Roger Brand Kim Deitch Don Donahue Shary Flenniken Justin Green Bill Griffith amp Diane Noomin Rory Hayes Jay Kinney Bobby London Ted Richards Trina Robbins Joe Schenkman Larry Todd Patricia Moodian and Art Spiegelman 16 Mainstream publications such as Playboy and National Lampoon began to publish comics and art similar to that of underground comix 1 The underground movement also prompted older professional comic book artists to try their hand in the alternate press Wally Wood published witzend in 1966 soon passing the title on to artist editor Bill Pearson In 1969 Wood created Heroes Inc Presents Cannon intended for distribution to armed forces bases Steve Ditko gave full vent to his Ayn Rand inspired philosophy in Mr A and Avenging World 1973 In 1975 Flo Steinberg Stan Lee s former secretary at Marvel Comics published Big Apple Comix featuring underground work by ostensibly mainstream artists she knew from Marvel Film and television began to reflect the influence of underground comix in the 1970s starting with the release of Ralph Bakshi s Crumb adaptation Fritz the Cat the first animated film to receive an X rating from the MPAA 2 Further adult oriented animated films based on or influenced by underground comix followed including The Nine Lives of Fritz the Cat and Down and Dirty Duck 2 The influence of underground comix has also been attributed to films such as The Lord of the Rings 1978 and Forbidden Zone 1980 2 The animation sequences created by Help contributor Terry Gilliam and surrealistic humor of Monty Python s Flying Circus have also been partly attributed to the influence of the underground comix scene 1 2 Despite the form s influence on the culture at large however by 1972 only four major underground publishers remained in operation the Print Mint Rip Off Press Last Gasp and Krupp Comic Works Kitchen Sink Press 17 For much of the 1970s Rip Off Press operated a syndication service managed by cartoonist and co owner Gilbert Shelton that sold weekly comix content to alternative newspapers and student publications 18 Each Friday the company sent out a distribution sheet with the strips it was selling by such cartoonists as Shelton Joel Beck Dave Sheridan Ted Richards Bill Griffith and Harry Driggs as R Diggs The syndicate petered out by 1979 much of the material produced for it was eventually published in the company s long running anthology Rip Off Comix which had debuted in 1977 Griffith s strip Zippy which had debuted in 1976 as a weekly strip with the syndicate 19 was eventually picked up for daily syndication by King Features Syndicate in 1986 Critics of the underground comix scene claimed that the publications were socially irresponsible and glorified violence sex and drug use 1 In 1973 the U S Supreme Court in Miller v California ruled that local communities could decide their own First Amendment standards with reference to obscenity In the mid 1970s sale of drug paraphernalia was outlawed in many places and the distribution network for these comics and the underground newspapers dried up leaving mail order as the only commercial outlet for underground titles 2 In 1974 Marvel launched Comix Book requesting that underground artists submit significantly less explicit work appropriate for newsstands sales 1 A number of underground artists agreed to contribute work including Spiegelman Robbins and S Clay Wilson but Comix Book did not sell well and lasted only five issues 1 20 In 1976 Marvel achieved success with Howard the Duck a satirical comic aimed at adult audiences that was inspired by the underground comix scene While it did not depict the explicit content that was often featured in underground comix it was more socially relevant than anything Marvel had previously published 1 By the mid 1970s independent publishers began to release book length collections of underground comics Quick Fox Links Books released two important collections The Apex Treasury of Underground Comics published in 1974 and The Best of Bijou Funnies released in 1975 The Apex Treasury featured work by Crumb Deitch Griffith Spain Shelton Spiegelman Lynch Shary Flenniken Justin Green Bobby London and Willy Murphy 21 while the Bijou Funnies book highlighted comics by Lynch Green Crumb Shelton Spiegelman Deitch Skip Williamson Jay Kinney Evert Geradts Rory Hayes Dan Clyne and Jim Osborne 22 Similarly and around this time the publishing cooperative And Or Press published The Young Lust Reader 1974 a best of collection from Griffith and Kinney s Young Lust anthology and Dave Sheridan and Fred Schrier s The Overland Vegetable Stagecoach presents Mindwarp An Anthology 1975 And Or Press later published the first paperback collections of Griffith s Zippy the Pinhead comics 1975 1982 The underground era comes to a close edit By this time some artists including Art Spiegelman felt that the underground comix scene had become less creative than it had been in the past According to Spiegelman What had seemed like a revolution simply deflated into a lifestyle Underground comics were stereotyped as dealing only with Sex Dope and Cheap Thrills They got stuffed back into the closet along with bong pipes and love beads as Things Started To Get Uglier 1 One of the last major underground titles was Arcade The Comics Revue co edited by Spiegelman and Bill Griffith With the underground movement encountering a slowdown Spiegelman and Griffith conceived of Arcade as a safe berth featuring contributions from such major underground figures as Robert Armstrong Robert Crumb Justin Green Aline Kominsky Jay Lynch Spain Rodriguez Gilbert Shelton and S Clay Wilson as well as Griffith and Spiegelman Arcade stood out from similar publications by having an editorial plan in which Spiegelman and Griffith attempted to show how comics connected to the broader realms of artistic and literary culture 23 Arcade lasted seven issues from 1975 to 1976 Autobiographical comics began to come into prominence in 1976 with the premiere of Harvey Pekar s self published comic American Splendor which featured art by several cartoonists associated with the underground including Crumb 1 Comics critic Jared Gardner asserts that while underground comix was associated with countercultural iconoclasm the movement s most enduring legacy was to be autobiography 24 In the late 1970s Marvel and DC Comics agreed to sell their comics on a no return basis with large discounts to comic book retailers this led to later deals that helped underground publishers 2 During this period underground titles focusing on feminist and Gay Liberation themes began to appear as well as comics associated with the environmental movement 1 Anarchy Comics focused on left wing politics while Barney Steel s Armageddon focused on anarcho capitalism 25 British underground cartoonists also created political titles but they did not sell as well as American political comics 1 Artists influenced by the underground comix scene who were unable to get work published by better known underground publications began self publishing their own small press photocopied comic books known as minicomics 26 The punk subculture began to influence underground comix 27 1982 present edit In 1982 the distribution of underground comix changed through the emergence of specialty stores 2 In response to attempts by mainstream publishers to appeal to adult audiences alternative comics emerged focusing on many of the same themes as underground comix as well as publishing experimental work 27 Artists formally in the underground comix scene began to associate themselves with alternative comics including Crumb Deitch Griffith Lynda Barry and Justin Green 27 In the 1980s sexual comics came into prominence integrating sex into storylines rather than utilizing sexual explicitness for shock value 27 The first of these features was Omaha the Cat Dancer which made its first appearance in an issue of the zine Vootie Inspired by Fritz the Cat Omaha the Cat Dancer focused on an anthropomorphic feline stripper 28 Other comix with a sexual focus included Melody based on the life story of Sylvie Rancourt and Cherry a comedic sex comic featuring art similar in style to that of Archie Comics 27 28 In 1985 Griffith s comic strip Zippy the Pinhead which originally appeared in underground titles was syndicated as a daily feature by King Features 2 Between 1980 and 1991 Spiegelman s graphic novel Maus was serialized in Raw and published in two volumes in 1986 and 1991 It was followed by an exhibition at the Museum of Modern Art and a Pulitzer Prize for Spiegelman in 1992 The novel originated from a three page story first published in an underground comic Funny Aminals sic Apex Novelties 1972 2 Alternative cartoonist Peter Bagge was strongly influenced by underground comics 27 and was reciprocally admired by Crumb for whom Bagge edited Weirdo magazine in the 1980s he could be considered part of a second generation of underground type cartoonists including such notables as Mike Diana Johnny Ryan Bob Fingerman David Heatley Danny Hellman Julie Doucet Jim Woodring Ivan Brunetti Gary Leib Doug Allen and Ed Piskor Many of these artists were published by Fantagraphics Books which was founded in 1977 and through the 1980s and 90s became a major publisher of alternative and underground cartoonists work As of the 2010s reprints of early underground comix continue to sell alongside modern underground publications 2 The 2010s Foreskin Man a comic book published to protest against circumcision has been referred to as comix by some reviewers 29 United Kingdom edit nbsp OZ London No 33 February 1971 art by Norman Lindsay British cartoonists were introduced in the underground publications International Times IT founded in 1966 and Oz founded in 1967 which reprinted some American material 1 During a visit to London American comics artist Larry Hama created original material for IT 30 The first UK comix mag was Cyclops started in July 1970 by IT staff members In a bid to alleviate its ongoing financial problems IT brought out Nasty Tales 1971 which was soon prosecuted for obscenity Despite appearing before the censorious Old Bailey Judge Alan King Hamilton the publishers were acquitted by the jury 31 32 In the wake of its own high profile obscenity trial Oz launched cOZmic Comics in 1972 printing a mixture of new British underground strips and old American work When Oz closed down the following year cOZmic Comics was continued by fledgling media tycoon Felix Dennis and his company Cozmic Comics H Bunch Associates which published from 1972 to 1975 33 While the American underground comix scene was beginning to decline the British scene came into prominence between 1973 and 1974 but soon faced the same kind of criticism that American underground comix received 1 UK based underground cartoonists included Chris Welch Edward Barker Michael J Weller Malcolm Livingstone William Rankin aka Wyndham Raine Dave Gibbons Joe Petagno Bryan Talbot and the team of Martin Sudden Jay Jeff Jones and Brian Bolland 1 The last UK underground comix series of note was Brainstorm Comix 1975 1978 which featured only original British strips mostly by Bryan Talbot Hassle Free Press was founded in London in 1975 by Tony and Carol Bennett as a publisher and distributor of underground books and comics Now known as Knockabout Comics the company has a long standing relationship with underground comix pioneers Gilbert Shelton and Robert Crumb as well as British creators like Hunt Emerson and Bryan Talbot Knockabout has frequently suffered from prosecutions from U K customs who have seized work by creators such as Crumb and Melinda Gebbie claiming it to be obscene 34 35 The 1990s witnessed a renaissance in the genre in the United Kingdom through titles like Brain Damage Viz and others Archives editAfter the death of King Features Syndicate editor Jay Kennedy his personal underground comix collection was acquired by the Billy Ireland Cartoon Library amp Museum in Ohio The University of California Berkeley s Bancroft Library has a large underground comix collection especially related to Bay Area publications much of it was built by a deposit account at Gary Arlington s San Francisco Comic Book Store The collection also includes titles from New York Los Angeles and elsewhere The Rhode Island School of Design s Fleet Library acquired a thousand item collection of underground comix through a donation by Bill Adler in 2021 36 See also editKeep On Truckin Doujinshi self published manga Silver Age of Comic Books Bronze Age of Comic BooksNotes edit Reprints were popular with publishers because underground artists originally had few claims on their own work 1 The basis for this was that material originally printed in publications that belonged to the Underground Press Syndicate such as the Berkeley Barb and the East Village Other was available to reprint for free by other UPS members This permission was exploited by some underground comix publishers bulking up or entirely filling their own magazines with work whose creators didn t receive any payment even when those publishers made a profit citation needed References edit a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z aa ab ac ad ae af ag ah Sabin Roger 1996 Going underground Comics Comix amp Graphic Novels A History Of Comic Art London United Kingdom Phaidon Press p 92 ISBN 0 7148 3008 9 a b c d e f g h i j k Estren Mark James 1993 Foreword Onward A History of Underground Comics Ronin Publishing pp 7 8 10 ISBN 0 914171 64 X Sabin Roger 1996 Comical comics Comics Comix amp Graphic Novels A History Of Comic Art London United Kingdom Phaidon Press p 35 ISBN 0 7148 3008 9 Les Daniels Comix A History of Comic Books in America 1971 chapter 8 a b Shelton Gilbert 2006 Introduction The New Adventures of Jesus Fantagraphics Books p 9 ISBN 978 1 56097 780 3 a b Skinn Dez 2004 Heroes of the Revolution Comix The Underground Revolution Thunder s Mouth Press p 34 ISBN 1 56025 572 2 Booke Keith M 2010 Encyclopedia of Comic Books and Graphic Novels ABC CLIO LLC Santa Barbara CA Maurice Horn ed The World Encyclopedia of Comics 1976 Robert Crumb Kennedy Jay The Official Underground and Newave Comix Price Guide Boatner Norton Press 1982 Joel Beck Underground comic artist San Francisco Chronicle September 21 1999 Archived January 16 2004 at the Wayback Machine Zap Comix entry at the Grand Comics Database Accessed October 27 2009 Lopes Paul Demanding Respect The Evolution of the American Comic Book Temple University Press 2009 p 77 Levin Bob The Pirates and the Mouse Disney s War Against The Underground Fantagraphics Books 2003 p 41 Corcoran Gallery of Art Exhibitions Archived 2011 01 03 at the Wayback Machine Richard Paul Walter Hopps Museum Man with a Talent for Talent Washington Post March 22 2005 Kinney Jay The Rise and Fall of Underground Comix in San Francisco and Beyond from Ten Years That Shook the City San Francisco 1968 78 City Lights Foundation 2011 edited by Chris Carlsson New Comix Bijou Funnies 7 Krupp Comic Works Inc 1972 Fox M Steven Rip Off Comix 1977 1991 Rip Off Press Comixjoint Retrieved Dec 5 2022 Zippy Congratulates Rip Off Press Rip Off Comix 21 Winter 1988 p 50 Sabin Roger 1996 Picking up the pieces Comics Comix amp Graphic Novels A History of Comic Art London United Kingdom Phaidon Press p 151 ISBN 0 7148 3008 9 The Apex Treasury of Underground Comics Grand Comics Database Accessed Dec 2 2016 The Best of Bijou Funnies Links Books Quick Fox 1975 ISBN 9780825630545 Grishakova Marina Ryan Marie Laure 2010 Intermediality and Storytelling Walter de Gruyter ISBN 978 3 11 023774 0 pp 67 68 Gardner Jared 2008 Autography s Biography 1972 2007 PDF Biography 31 1 University of Hawaii Press 6 7 via Project MUSE Multicultural Comics From Zap to Blue Beetle Race and Comix by Leonard Rifas pp 33 34 Dowers Michael 2010 Introduction Newave The Underground Mini Comix Of The 1980s Fantagraphics Books pp 9 11 ISBN 978 1 60699 313 2 a b c d e f Sabin Roger 1996 Alternative Visions Comics Comix amp Graphic Novels A History Of Comic Art London United Kingdom Phaidon Press pp 177 78 182 188 200 208 209 ISBN 0 7148 3008 9 a b Skinn Dez 2004 Can t Get Enuff Comix The Underground Revolution Thunder s Mouth Press pp 71 73 ISBN 1 56025 572 2 Cavanaugh Tim 6 June 2011 San Francisco Circumcision Intactivist s Anti Semitic Comix Reason Coke Travis Hedge Feb 5 2012 Ethics and Choreography An Interview With Larry Hama Unimaginable Pretensile Perambulations Nasty Tales trial memoir part 1 Funtopia pwp blueyonder co uk 1973 02 09 Archived from the original on 2011 10 08 Retrieved 2010 10 10 Nasty Tales trial pt 2 Funtopia pwp blueyonder co uk 1973 02 09 Archived from the original on 2011 10 08 Retrieved 2010 10 10 Cozmic Comics H Bunch Associates Grand Comics Database Accessed Dec 28 2016 Sabin Roger 2000 The Last Laugh Larfing All the Way to the Dock Archived 2008 05 13 at the Wayback Machine Index on Censorship 6 Knocking about with Tony Bennett Archived 2011 09 29 at the Wayback Machine Forbidden Planet September 13 2006 Solondz Simone 2021 Underground Comix Meet the Fleet Rhode Island School of Design News 7 13 Bibliography editEstren Mark James A History of Underground Comics Straight Arrow Books Simon and Schuster 1974 revised ed Ronin publishing 1992 Kennedy Jay The Underground and New Wave Comix Price Guide Cambridge Massachusetts Boatner Norton Press 1982 Rosenkranz Patrick Rebel Visions the Underground Comix Revolution 1963 1975 Fantagraphics Books 2002 ISBN 1 56097 464 8External links editMoore Collection of Underground Comix a special collection of the library of California Polytechnic State University Cal Poly Lynn R Hansen Underground Comics Collection a special collection of the library of Washington State University UG Comix Info Archived 2011 07 19 at the Wayback Machine and A Visual Guide to Underground Comix Reprints Archived 2012 08 26 at the Wayback Machine main page WebCitation archive World Comics amp Graphic Novels News WCGNN Mark J Estren largest collection of underground comics some drawn especially for this book Frank Stack Collection Archived 2013 08 01 at the Wayback Machine a special collection of the University of Missouri Libraries Also see the Comic Art Collection Archived 2011 07 19 at the Wayback Machine at the University of Missouri which specializes in underground comics Comixjoint s Underground Comix Collection annotated publishing information on hundreds of issues Underground comix Lambiek Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Underground comix amp oldid 1220052389, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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