comic books  headline image
 

Welcome to Comic Books

horizontal bar

Comic Books - The Bronze Age

After the Golden Age of comic books came the Silver Age and this was followed by the Bronze Age which was the period between early 1970s and the mid 1980s. But now the tone of the comics was changing to a darker more adult theme.

 

The darkness was first emphasized by the death of Peter Parker's girlfriend of many years Gwen Stacy. The villain Green Goblin took a life for the first time and it was a sign that realism was making itself known in comics too. This incident somehow indicated the end of an era and the start of an entirely different one. Realism was taking a new and very bold step out. This acted as a wake up call and comic books took on the mantle of tackling social issues too.

The emergence of minority heroes of comic books dealt with social problems. With a co-star like Luke Cage it was clear that industries were keen on bringing in African Americans. Before Luke Cage comic book regulars were the likes of the Black Panther and Falcon. Since their stories had no portrayals that were stereotypical the resistance from these comics was not much while Luke Cage was being condemned as being just another ethnic typecast.

The X-men were a significant addition in comic books and they lent credence to the minorities. X–men were prejudiced against by humans as they were portrayed as mutants. This step of an evolution in humans was perhaps difficult for the Marvel comic world to swallow. Rebellion occurs when a particular thing is not understood or is feared. The X-men was an analogy to the minority with the underlying theory that if civilization could not handle the X-men as being mutants then would there be acceptance of the minority communities? It indicated a whole shift in the perception of humans as humans.

So as far as possible the Bronze Age tried to maintain realism within its pages. It was evident that the X-men were not acceptable at the individual level. There was fear of the unknown and the not-understood and this would lead to rage and violence. Violence is the outcome of ignorance and this was what was probably happening among the readers too.

As an analogy, this one where the minorities were being compared to the X-men was a brilliant one. While the prejudices may have been different the results were the same. What the Bronze Age did was to define what America was thinking during that time.

Speculation is rife about the so-called end of the Bronze Age. There was a suggestion that ‘Crisis on Infinite Earths' may have been the start of the end but it was never proven. There was another opinion that the Bronze Age sort of merged in to the modern era of comic books but whatever the case it was clear that the Bronze Age had an important role to play in the social changes that were taking place.

 

Warning: Invalid argument supplied for foreach() in /home/linkstoa/public_html/comic-books/includes/amazon.php on line 868

 

Comic Books Recommended Products
Marvel Comic Books Headlines

Comic Book Six Degrees: He-Man to James Bond - Comic Book Resources


Comic Book Resources

Comic Book Six Degrees: He-Man to James Bond
Comic Book Resources
But a licensed character is the same in all of their various comic book companies (so the Marvel Red Sonja is the same as the Dynamite Red Sonja) and approved appearances by a real person can go across comic book companies, as well (so, for instance, ...

Read more...


DC, Marvel comic book artist Ernie Chan dead at 71 - Big Cartoon News Blog (blog)


Big Cartoon News Blog (blog)

DC, Marvel comic book artist Ernie Chan dead at 71
Big Cartoon News Blog (blog)
Filipino-born comic book artist Ernie Chan, who worked on several episodes of Hanna-Barbera's Jonny Quest: The Real Adventures, died Thursday night from cancer. He was 71. Born Ernie Chua on July 27, 1940, he was inadvertently renamed Ernie Chan as the ...
Comics artist Ernie Chan, 71, passes awayGMA News
Ernie Chan RIPComix 411

all 4 news articles »

Read more...


Comics Cliffhanger as Unnamed DC Superhero to Come Out of Closet - ABC News (blog)


Hollywood.com

Comics Cliffhanger as Unnamed DC Superhero to Come Out of Closet
ABC News (blog)
Batwoman garnered DC comics an Outstanding Comic Book award from GLAAD, an advocacy and watchdog organization for LGBT issues. “DC and (archrival) Marvel are recognizing that there is an LGBT audience that has been reading their comics for years,” said ...
DC Comics will turn a formerly straight comic book character gayDaily Caller
DC Comics Will Reveal Gay Superhero: Now Do It in the MoviesHollywood.com
DC Comics' Gay Superhero In The Works: Publisher Dan DiDio Hints At ...Huffington Post
Technorati -Seattle Post Intelligencer
all 57 news articles »

Read more...


5 new comic books that deserve your support - Austin American-Statesman


Austin American-Statesman

5 new comic books that deserve your support
Austin American-Statesman
In February, the best-selling comic book in America, Marvel Comics' "Avengers vs. X-Men No. 2," sold 158650 copies at $3.99 a pop via the direct market (which is what industry folks call comic book stores such as Austin Books or Capstone Comics).
Superheroes rule at the box office: do we need a hero?Examiner.com
Spoiler Alert: Movies only a comic book lover could truly appreciateMansfield News Journal
WRIGHT WAY: Marvel at the real AvengersCleveland Daily Banner
KGTV San Diego -PolicyMic -Co.Design
all 13 news articles »

Read more...


John Rozum on writing Marvel-style - Comic Book Resources


Comic Book Resources

John Rozum on writing Marvel-style
Comic Book Resources
For those unfamiliar with the term, the Marvel Method is the approach developed by Stan Lee during the early days of Marvel in which Lee would provide brief outlines of the events in a comic book issue (as opposed to a full script), let the artist draw ...

Read more...


 
Home · Top Links · Sitemap