“In comics at their best, words and pictures are like partners in a dance, and each one takes turns leading”*…

Frank Bellew, “The ‘Fourth’ and the Pig.” Nick Nax for All Creation, July 1856 (source)

In his new book, Lost Literacies: Experiments in the 19th Century US Comic Strip, literary historian Alex Beringer demonstrates how the birth of the genre of printed comic long preceded the Sunday Funny Pages. He elaborates in conversation with Tim Brinkhof, who introduces the colloquy…

Most people consider the introduction of the Funny Pages in the late nineteenth century as the birthday of the “modern” American comic strip. Alex Beringer is not most people.

A literary historian and professor of English at the University of Montevallo, Beringer dates the history of comics earlier, to roughly the mid-1800s, a period of prolific and uninhibited experimentation. He came to this understanding by piecing together the medium’s fractured archaeological record, diving through myriad online resources and archives. In the middle of the nineteenth century, New York-based artists followed the lead of their French and Swiss colleagues, particularly Rodolphe Töpffer, the “Father of the Comic Strip,” exchanging single-image political cartoons and caricatures for multi-panel sequences that, many believe, for the first time enabled them to play around with characterization, worldbuilding, and—well—storytelling.

Coming decades before the standardization of speech bubbles and panel borders, these early American comics seem to have little in common with their modern, more streamlined counterparts; they featured sudden and purposefully jarring jump cuts reminiscent of the yet-to-be-invented film montage or musical notes instead of text. One comic artist tells a story through shadows behind the curtains of a window; another, with hieroglyphs the reader must decipher with the help of a legend.

“The audience for this first wave of US comic strips was strikingly sophisticated in its reception of this material,” Beringer writes in Lost Literacies: Experiments in the Nineteenth-Century US Comic Strip, which chronicles this oft-forgotten renaissance. Out from the Ohio State University Press, the book is one of hundreds of titles included in JSTOR’s Path to Open program, making scholarly books accessible online to wide audiences (read chapter four here, free of charge).

“The sense of flux—the idea that the visual language could turn on a dime—was often precisely the appeal,” Beringer observes in his chronicle of this oft-forgotten renaissance.

Foretelling the philosopher Martin Heidegger’s assertion that drawing is in itself a “form of knowing,” early comic strip artists and their consumers treated the medium as a philosophical exercise; Beringer quotes the observation by media scholars Hilary Chute and Patrick Jagoda that comics “enable an intense focus on how complexly woven stories unfold across time and space and, particularly, how these involve the reader…to generate meaning through interacting with, or themselves shaping, spatiotemporal form.”

While some early American artists blatantly plagiarized illustrations and formats that originated in France and Switzerland, others used them as a springboard, giving European drawings a decidedly American twist. For example, where Töpffer’s character Monsieur Vieux Bois (“Mr. Oldbuck”) satirized the European bourgeoisie, comics featuring his Yankee doppelganger, Jeremiah Oldpot (artist unknown), a New York tin merchant who leaves his family to prospect gold in California, often hinge on what Beringer defines as the contradiction between his “romantic view of himself as a rugged frontiersman and his attachment to consumer goods.”

Beringer discusses this and other critical facets of this period in comics history…

Read on for their fascinating exchange: “Lost Literacies Strips Down the Dawn of Comics,” from @jstordaily.bsky.social.

* Scott McCloud, in his wonderful Understanding Comics: The Invisible Art

###

As we tell and show, we might ponder where all of this has led, recalling that it was on this date in 2007 that the then-latest entry in a comic-born franchise dropped: TMNT, the first animated entry in the Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles film series, was released. The film (which was entirely computer animated), is set after the final defeat of their arch-enemy, the Shredder; the four Turtles — Leonardo, Raphael, Donatello, and Michelangelo (voiced respectively by James Arnold TaylorNolan NorthMitchell Whitfield, and Mikey Kelley) — having grown apart, reunite and overcome their faults to save the world from evil ancient creatures. It also features the voices of Chris EvansSarah Michelle GellarMakoKevin SmithPatrick Stewart, and Ziyi Zhang, with narration by Laurence Fishburne

TMNT ranked number one at the box office on its opening weekend, beating 300 (the top film of the previous two weeks), The Last MimzyShooterPrideThe Hills Have Eyes 2, and Reign Over Me, grossing $25.45 million over the weekend of March 23–25, 2007. That said, the film grossed (only) $95.8 million million worldwide, including $54 million domestically during its 91-day run in the 3,120 North American theaters… as the Rotten Tomatoes consensus read: “TMNT’s art direction is splendid, but the plot is non-existent and the dialogue lacks the irony and goofy wit of the earlier Ninja Turtles movies.”

source

#art #comicStrips #Comics #culturalHistory #culture #films #history #literature #movies #Technology #TeenageMutantNinjaTurtles #TMNT

🚶‍♀️ Se perdeu a visita guiada da passada sexta-feira, tem uma nova oportunidade no Sábado, 21 de Março! Desta vez, será Rui Lopes, curador do ciclo "Lisboa, Capital da Intriga Internacional", quem a irá conduzir. Passará por locais de rodagem recorrentes em vários filmes do ciclo por onde passaram espiões e cineastas. 🚶🏽‍♂️

📍 Ponto de encontro: Lg Sto Estêvão, 16h30

ℹ️ https://ihc.fcsh.unl.pt/events/visita-guiada-intriga-internacional-02/

#Histodons #CulturalHistory #EstadoNovo #Eurospy #SpyFilms #Cinema #Espionagem #HistóriaCultural

From an early 20th-century home medical guide which I discovered in a hotel library a few years ago — note the shifting attribution from masturbation to syphilitic causes

#HistoryOfMedicine #MedicalHistory #HistoryOfTheBody #Sexuality #MoralPanic #CulturalHistory

🚶‍♂️ O ciclo "Lisboa, Capital da Intriga Internacional" também decorre fora de portas: amanhã à tarde, João Rosmaninho vai conduzir uma visita guiada onde serão explorados os locais de rodagem recorrentes em vários filmes do ciclo por onde passaram espiões (reais e fictícios) e cineastas de várias nacionalidades.🚶🏿‍♀️

📍 Ponto de encontro: Cinemateca Portuguesa, 16h30

ℹ️ https://ihc.fcsh.unl.pt/events/visita-guiada-intriga-internacional-01/

#Histodons #CulturalHistory #EstadoNovo #Eurospy #SpyFilms #Cinema #Espionagem #HistóriaCultural #SciComm

Do you wish to return to easier times?
Then check out our 3 new books on #nostalgia !
1) #CulturalHistory "Happy Days" by Benjamin L. Alpers examines how #popularculture in the 1970s reimagined their past - from 1950s teens to neo-slave narratives, the US #bicentennial or #filmnoir

#CulturalStudies

"It Ain't Me, Babe"
Wimmen's Comix # 1, July 1970

One letter to the editor (editrix?) accused the all-woman independent comic of being a front for the FBI, trying to undermine the feminist movement. (it wasn't)

#comics #1970s #indiecomics #feminism #culturalhistory #WonderWoman #oliveoyl

🇪🇸 Depois de França e Alemanha, chegou a vez da #Espanha, com mais uma mesa-redonda do ciclo "Lisboa, Capital da Intriga Internacional", organizada com o Instituto Cervantes: "Lisboa, Madrid, Europa" procurará enquadrar o contexto de produção dos filmes que integram o ciclo a partir da história política, económica e legal do #Franquismo.

ℹ️ https://ihc.fcsh.unl.pt/events/lisboa-madrid-europa/

#Histodons #Spain #España #Eurospy #CulturalHistory #HistóriaCultural #Cinema #FilmsAndPower #HistóriaPolítica #PoliticalHistory

🇩🇪 A terceira mesa-redonda do ciclo "Lisboa, Capital da Intriga Internacional", leva-nos até à Alemanha, com acolhimento do Goethe-Institut.

Amanhã, 10 de Março, Fernando Clara, Vera San Payo de Lemos e Jürgen Bock falam sobre "Encontros clandestinos na capital da espionagem: As relações luso-alemãs em Lisboa entre as décadas de 1940 e 1970".

ℹ️ https://ihc.fcsh.unl.pt/events/encontros-clandestinos-capital/

#Histodons #CulturalHistory #EstadoNovo #Eurospy #SpyFilms #Germany #Alemanha #Cinema #Espionagem #HistóriaCultural

I've recently read "Vertigo: The Rise and Fall of Weimar Germany" by Harald Jähner.

Specialists with a good knowledge of the political history of interwar Germany will probably agree with the criticisms of leading historian Richard Evans in his 29/11/ 24 TLS review, in which he notes the failure of the book to address important aspects of the republic's politics such as the nature of the constitution.

Evans goes on to criticise "Vertigo" as being overly focused on Berlin and its culture of modernity and its neglect of rural and small town Germany.

For a cultural history, though, this emphasis on Berlin is justified, because that metropolis was offering novel aspirations, norms, and ways of living for the country as a whole, even if the reaction to that agenda in much of rural Germany was one of suspicion, resentment, and finally hatred. One rural commentator Jähner quotes noted with bitterness the exodus of women to the city, "the mass grave of the German people", attracted as they were by "greed, by pleasure seeking, by hollow noise in every area of life, by noisy oriental Jewish nonsense in state politics, department stores and theatres."

I would guess that the these seductive possibilities were made known throughout the German speaking world by the mostly Berlin based media of cinema and the illustrated press. Even if the overwhelming majority of Germans neither actively participated in the new forms of art and entertainment flowering in Berlin nor experimented with new metropolitan practices and presentations in sex and gender, the very existence of this new culture could not do other than transform cultures beyond the metropolis, even if only by introducing within them a self-conscious note of antiurban antimodernity.

Jähner, a journalist, has a good feel for both aspects of everyday life that might pass unnoticed by too many historians, such as the yoyo craze of 1932, and also for the disparate and sometimes internally contradictory emotions, moods, and feelings underlying the republic's culture.

Although "Vertigo" is neither comprehensive nor unquestionable in its treatment of Weimar Germany , it is a rich and thoroughly readable resource for non-Germanists like me, and notable for its determination to treat the culture of the republic as worthy of examination and perhaps celebration in its own right, as opposed to being merely an interlude leading to the advent of the Third Reich.

#Books #History #Germany #WeimarRepublic #Vertigo #20thCentury #InterwarHistory #Modernity #HaraldJähner #CulturalHistory

The international edition of our study on the Ahu–Moai systems of Rapa Nui is now available. It presents a network‑based structural model that reconstructs the functional organization of the island’s monumental architecture and its systemic interdependencies.

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.18427519

#AhuMoai #Moai #EasterIsland #Archaeology #CulturalHistory #CulturalHeritage #NetworkAnalysis #SMSA

Structure and Function of the Ahu–Moai Systems (International Edition)

This document is the authorised international edition of the study Struktur und Funktion der Ahu–Moai‑Systeme (DOI: 10.5281/zenodo.18369131).   It presents the complete English version of a network‑based structural model that reconstructs the functional architecture of the Ahu–Moai system on Rapa Nui. Developed through Systemic Pattern‑Structural Analysis (SMSA), the study integrates architectural, spatial, mechanical, and organisational indicators into a coherent functional interpretation of the island‑wide node–vector network. The international edition is technically equivalent to the German version but does not constitute the version of record. It provides a fully translated and editorially harmonised presentation of all analytical components, including:•    the functional architecture of the Ahu–Moai system•    the node–vector framework and systemic reconstruction logic•    transport mechanics and infrastructural organisation•    the structural synthesis of coastal, social, and navigational functions•    the glossary of system‑specific terminology•    all maps, figures, and systemic visualisations Version 1.0.0 int represents the stable release of the international edition.The document is intended for researchers, system theorists, archaeologists, and readers interested in functional modelling of historical infrastructures.

Zenodo