In this Book

Comics of the Anthropocene: Graphic Narrative at the End of Nature

Book
José Alaniz
2025
summary
Since the first Earth Day in 1970, how have US comics artists depicted the human-caused destruction of the natural world? How do these representations manifest in different genres of comics like superheroes, biography, underground comix, and journalism? What resources unique to the comics medium do they bring to their tasks? How do these works resonate with the ethical and environmental issues raised by global conversations about the anthropogenic sixth mass extinction and climate change? How have comics mourned the loss of nature over the last five decades? Are comics “ecological objects,” in philosopher Timothy Morton’s parlance?

Weaving together insights from comics studies, environmental humanities, critical animal studies, and affect studies to answer these questions, Comics of the Anthropocene: Graphic Narrative at the End of Nature explores the representation of animals, pollution, mass extinctions, and climate change in the Anthropocene Era, our current geological age of human-induced environmental transformation around the globe.

Artists and works examined in Comics of the Anthropocene include R. Crumb, Don McGregor et al.’s Black Panther, Jack Kirby’s Kamandi: The Last Boy on Earth, the comics of the Pacific Northwest, and Stephen Murphy and Michael Zulli’s landmark alternative series The Puma Blues. This book breaks new ground in confronting our most daunting modern crisis through a discussion of how graphic narrative has uniquely addressed the ecology issue.

Table of Contents

Cover, Half Title Page, Title Page, Copyright, Dedication, Contents

Acknowledgments

Introduction: “We Are the Asteroid”: Comics and the “End of Nature”

Part I

1. Art, Affect, and the Anthropocene

2. Nature, Comics, and the Mega-Image

3. Comics as Ecological Objects

Part II

4. How Many Trees Had to Be Cut Down for This Chapter?: R. Crumb as Ironic Eco-Elegist

5. “Winner Take All!”: Children, Animals, and Mourning in Kirby’s Kamandi

6. Wakanda Speaks: Animals and Animacy in “Panther’s Rage”

7. “Death Drive” to Los Alamos: Puma Blues as Eco-Male-ancholia

Conclusion: The Pacific Northwest in Words and Pictures

Notes

Bibliography

Index

About the Author

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