Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://hdl.handle.net/10267/1359
Title: HIST 105-06, From Superman to Sin City: A Cultural History of Comic Books, Fall 2005
Authors: Pruitt, Dwain C.
Keywords: History, Department of;Syllabus;Curriculum;Academic departments;Text;2005 Fall
Issue Date: 13-Mar-2008
Publisher: Memphis, Tenn. : Rhodes College
Series/Report no.: Syllabi CRN
10766
Abstract: “From Superman to Sin City” analyzes the medium’s history from its precursors in nineteenth-century “Penny Dreadfuls,” the first comic strips and early pulp fiction to the birth of comics as an independent genre in the 1930s. It examines the culture from which Golden Age comics creators emerged. It tracks the comics explosion caused by the success of Superman in 1938 and the global popularization of American-style comic books, especially in Asia, and the post-World War II backlash that resulted in comics’ censorship in the 1950s. It considers the rebirth of American comics in the “Silver Age” of the 1960s and concludes by tracing the history of the medium into the early 1990s. Particular emphasis in the latter part of the course will be placed on the influential work of Neil Gaiman, Frank Miller and Alan Moore and the impact of Japanese comics and animation.
Description: This syllabus was submitted to the Rhodes College Office of Academic Affairs by the course instructor
URI: http://hdl.handle.net/10267/1359
Appears in Collections:Course Syllabi

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