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Introduction
- University Press of Mississippi
- Chapter
- Additional Information
vii INTRODUCTION Alan Moore’s privileged position in the history of comics is certain. It is also complex and contradictory. He is, perhaps, still best known for Watchmen (1986–87), though his prodigious output since has reduced that epoch-making series to just one of his many accomplishments in the field. Watchmen itself is a contradictory text, a superhero story about the dangers of heroism, a Cold War tale that also eerily predicts the events and aftermath of 9/11, a meditation on the philosophy of time that presents the reader with two seemingly mutually exclusive temporalities, sequential and simultaneous. It is a series that was originally published in the United States, takes place there, and comments on its status as a Cold War superpower, but is written and drawn by two Englishmen. Created for one of the “big two” corporate comics companies, whose copyrighted characters and work-for-hire contracts often allow little room for creative freedom, it is written by one of the most iconoclastic, rebellious, and freethinking figures in the medium. These tensions and ambivalences helped make Watchmen that great rarity, a text that is both widely popular and critically lauded. Its selection as one of Time magazine ’s “100 Best English-Language Novels since 1923,” merely cemented the broad consensus about the book’s quality and importance. Along with Art Spiegelman’s Pulitzer-winning Maus and Frank Miller’s Batman: The Dark Knight Returns, both also published in 1986, the book has been frequently credited with kickstarting the newfound perception that comics were “not just for kids anymore” and would henceforth be taken seriously. While comics may have taken several steps backward before reaching its current position, wherein sequential juxtaposed images are all but assumed to be a valid and interesting aesthetic medium, and even a commercial draw, Watchmen certainly played a significant role in this cultural transformation. For Moore, however, the contradictions and complexities go well beyond his most popular and fêted creation. Known as the single most important figure to shift the balance of power and influence in mainstream comics away from the artist and towards the writer, he began his career as a little-known viii introduction and most often pseudonymous “cartoonist,” responsible for both the words and images in his weekly funny-animal newspaper strip, Maxwell the Magic Cat (under the name “Jill de Ray”) and a weekly half-page feature in Sounds, a national alternative music magazine (under the name “Curt Vile”). These strips find Moore primarily as a humorist, architect of wryly dark and offkilter gags (Maxwell) and a series of giddy, trippy parodies of the mystery and science fiction genres (Roscoe Moscow and The Stars My Degradation, respectively ). The inventive, if occasionally cramped, use of page space in the two Sounds strips prefigured Moore’s innovative breakdowns in his later work, despite the fact that by then, he was no longer his own artist and was directing layouts in legendarily elaborate full scripts. In contrast to these humble beginnings, his worldwide renown was built on the brief period during which he was writing superheroes for DC Comics, from 1983 to 1989. During that time, DC published Watchmen, V for Vendetta (begun for Warrior magazine in England), Batman: The Killing Joke, almost four years worth of the monthly horror/superhero series, Swamp Thing, and a variety of smaller projects. Before coming to DC, Moore wrote superheroes for Marvel UK (Captain Britain) and Warrior (Marvelman) in England. Indeed, at one point during 1982–83, he and Alan Davis (illustrator of both strips) had a monopoly on superhero comics created in England. From this, it might seem that Moore was inevitably married to the long-underwear adventure stories that dominated the industry since the 1960s. In fact, however, Moore’s relationship to superheroes was always an ambivalent affair. While Captain Britain (and Swamp Thing) functioned within the boundaries of superhero genre tropes, if intelligently and intricately so, both Marvelman (called Miracleman in the U.S.) and Watchmen took the genre apart from the inside. Moore’s restlessness with superheroes could be seen elsewhere, as well. It came forth in a feminist essay about the poor treatment of women in mainstream superhero comics, in an “affectionate character assassination” of Marvel boss Stan Lee (both essays in Daredevils, a 1983 Marvel UK comics magazine), and in his unwillingness to be confined to that genre, despite its market dominance. In the admittedly more flexible British market, Moore wrote straight science fiction...