Comic Book Nation

The Transformation of Youth Culture in America

Paperback, 360 pages

English language

Published Sept. 18, 2003 by The Johns Hopkins University Press.

ISBN:
978-0-8018-7450-5
Copied ISBN!

View on OpenLibrary

5 stars (2 reviews)

As American as jazz or rock and roll, comic books have been central in the nation's popular culture since Superman's 1938 debut in Action Comics #1. Selling in the millions each year for the past six decades, comic books have figured prominently in the childhoods of most Americans alive today. In Comic Book Nation, Bradford W. Wright offers an engaging, illuminating, and often provocative history of the comic book industry within the context of twentieth-century American society.

From Batman's Depression-era battles against corrupt local politicians and Captain America's one-man war against Nazi Germany to Iron Man's Cold War exploits in Vietnam and Spider-Man's confrontations with student protestors and drug use in the early 1970s, comic books have continually reflected the national mood, as Wright's imaginative reading of thousands of titles from the 1930s to the 1980s makes clear. In every genre―superhero, war, romance, crime, and horror comic books―Wright finds that …

2 editions

avatar for Zelanator

rated it

4 stars

Subjects

  • Comic book & cartoon art
  • Popular culture
  • Social history
  • Sociology
  • Pop Arts / Pop Culture
  • Social Science
  • USA
  • Children's Studies
  • Comics & Cartoons
  • Popular Culture - General
  • History / United States / General
  • General