Expand Cut Tags

No cut tags
poliphilo: (Default)
[personal profile] poliphilo
If you love comics you'll know- and spit upon the memory of- Dr Frederic Wertham's book The Seduction of the Innocent.  If you don't love comics I probably need to explain. Wertham was an American psychiatrist. His book came out in 1954. It's thesis- broadly stated- is that the youth of America were having their tender minds frazzled by the images of sex and violence in comic books. The book was a minor best seller which led (a) to a Congressional Enquiry and (b) to the publishers adopting a code of self-censorship that took a lot of the juice out of their product.

Judy has been reading The Adventures of Kavalier and Clay- which has its fictional characters get embroiled with the Wertham episode- and we've been talking about it. She assumed that- as an Englishman of a certain age- I wouldn't have heard of Wertham, but actually- and oddly- an encounter with Wertham's thesis was one of the formative incidents of my childhood. I didn't read comic books- they were hard to come by over here- but we did get the Reader's Digest- and of all the things I must have read in that useful, informative, bourgeois publication the one I particularly remember is an article in support of Wertham.This was probably the first time I was ever exposed to a current affairs story that shocked me. According to the Digest, suburban children my age were running amok and murdering people- and all because they were reading something other than Enid Blyton.  The hook was a lurid story about how some child had fired an air-rifle (purchased by mail from a comic book advert) out of his bedroom window at random and managed to kill a spectator in a local sports stadium. I was horrified. And haunted. What must it feel like to be only eight and have blood on your hands?  I also remember the picture that went with the article. It showed a young boy lying on his stomach with a comic book in front of him and a look on his face that suggested he was dreaming up evil mischief. It's entirely possible he was also toying with a switchblade.

My early exposure to Wertham had two consequences. One- short term-  was I never developed a taste for comics. The second- long term-  is I've learned to treat  folk panics about youth culture with scepticism and contempt.  So computer games are rotting the minds of our children? Yeah, sure;   that's exactly what stupid people were saying about comic books back in the 50s.

Date: 2009-08-05 09:07 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] wokenbyart.livejournal.com
In the 60's an uncle of my dad's - so fairly elderly at that stage - went from his home in Canada, across the border to the USA and there he bought me a whole load of Marvel and horror/supernatural comics. So when he visited us in the UK he surprised me with those. They were great! Up until then, I'd been reading the usual English comics to do with teenage girls and their dates and their pimples... and of course beezer, dandy, et al. But... nothing made me want to murder anyone, even from the Marvel stuff!

Thankfully I didn't clap eyes on a copy of Readers Digest til I was old enough to know better... what a load of old twaddle most of it is! (Though it pays well, I gather, for the enterprising writer...)

Date: 2009-08-06 08:14 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] poliphilo.livejournal.com
My grandad used to take the Readers Digest- and pass his old copies to us. I liked the jokes.

What I mainly hate about their set-up is the way once they've succeeded in selling you something they never remove their claws.

Profile

poliphilo: (Default)
poliphilo

December 2025

S M T W T F S
  12 34 5 6
7 8 9 10 11 12 13
14 15 16 17 18 19 20
21 22 23 24 25 26 27
28293031   

Most Popular Tags

Style Credit

Page generated Dec. 28th, 2025 09:37 pm
Powered by Dreamwidth Studios