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Commies, Cowboys, and Jungle Queens: Comic Books and America, 1945-1954


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Description

Includes five short comic book stories.

From the publisher:

Comic books crystallize the social and political problems of a troubled period in American culture.

In addition to their entertainment value, comic books offered a unique world-view to a large segment of the American public in the confusing decade following World War II. Millions were distributed to service personnel during the war years, and by 1945, adults as well as children were reading an astounding 60 million comic books per month. These books treated such contemporary concerns as the atomic and hydrogen bombs, growth of international Communism, and the Korean War, and they offered heroes and heroines to deal with such problems. In response to moral criticism, the industry established a Comics Code that specified acceptable content. The code prohibited most of what had appeared in the medium prior to 1954, thus ending what has since come to be known as the "golden age" of comic books. With reproductions of five representative stories supplementing the text, William Savage's book (first published in 1990), will appeal to social historians and others interested in this vivid expression of American culture.

Features

William W. Savage Jr.

Condition & Attributes

Fine

Creators

William W.
Savage Jr.

Publishing Information

Middletown, CT
Wesleyan University Press
1998
1st
9780819563385

Physical Description

8.5 inches
5.5 inches
152 pages
Softcover
color wraps
English