Comic books today are a revered and often fanatically collected medium, but that wasn't always the case. In fact, almost from the beginning, the popular four-color magazines gave parents, teachers, and church leaders fits.
The most common lament: Comic books put dangerous ideas in children's heads and turned them away from more respectable forms of literature. By the mid-1950s, the outcry had become so vociferous that the industry created its own self-censoring body, the Comics Magazine Association of America, and with it a lengthy list of what comic books could and could not contain, known as the Comics Code Authority (CCA).
Writers were hobbled by the restrictions of the CCAit even banned the words horror and terror-so their stories became trite, repetitious, and boring. The situation changed dramatically in the early 1970s when the CCA finally loosened its chokehold, freeing comics to tackle the issues of the day, including drug addiction, racial disparity, political corruption, and poverty.
In the decades that followed, comic books experienced a remarkable transformation. Superheroes still dominated sales, but talented writers such as Alan Moore, Neil Gaiman, Brian K. Vaughan, Ed Brubaker, Garth Ennis, Brian Azzarello, Alison Bechdel, Colleen Doran, and many others eagerly took comic books to an exciting new level in terms of story and storytelling.
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Writing for a Warming World - Imagining the overwhelming, the ubiquitous, the world-shattering.
Climate change is one of those topics that can throw novelistsâand everyone elseâinto a fearful and cowering silence. When the earth is losing its familiar shapes and consolations, changing drastically and in unpredictable ways beneath our feet, how can we summon our creative resources to engage in the imaginative world-building required to write a novel that takes on these threats in compelling ways? And how to avoid writing fiction that addresses irreversible climate change without letting our prose get too preachy, overly prescriptive, saturated with despair?
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