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Javaman

(63,107 posts)
Fri Jul 8, 2022, 07:14 AM Jul 2022

The origin of Superheroes: Spirit

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Spirit_(comics_character)


The Spirit is a fictional masked crimefighter created by cartoonist Will Eisner. He first appeared June 2, 1940,[1] as the main feature of a 16-page, tabloid-sized, newsprint comic book insert distributed in the Sunday edition of Register and Tribune Syndicate newspapers; it was ultimately carried by 20 Sunday newspapers, with a combined circulation of five million copies during the 1940s. "The Spirit Section", as the insert was popularly known, continued until October 5, 1952.[1] It generally included two other four-page strips (initially Mr. Mystic and Lady Luck), plus filler material. Eisner, the overall editor, wrote and drew most Spirit entries, with the uncredited assistance of his studio of assistants and collaborators, though with Eisner's singular vision a unifying factor.[2]

The Spirit chronicles the adventures of a masked vigilante who fights crime with the blessing of the city's police commissioner Dolan, an old friend. Despite the Spirit's origin as detective/criminologist Denny Colt, his real identity was rarely referred to after his first appearance, and for all intents and purposes he was simply "The Spirit". The stories are presented in a wide variety of styles, from straightforward crime drama and noir to lighthearted adventure, from mystery and horror to comedy and love stories, often with hybrid elements that twisted genre and reader expectations.

From the 1960s to 1980s, a handful of new Eisner Spirit stories appeared in Harvey Comics and elsewhere, and Warren Publishing and Kitchen Sink Press variously reprinted the newspaper feature in black-and-white comics magazines and in color comic books. In the 1990s and 2000s, Kitchen Sink Press and DC Comics also published new Spirit stories by other writers and artists.

In 2011, IGN ranked the Spirit as 21st in the Top 100 Comic Book Heroes of all time.

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The origin of Superheroes: Spirit (Original Post) Javaman Jul 2022 OP
A GREAT STRIP, BUT. . . Jimvanhise Jul 2022 #1

Jimvanhise

(367 posts)
1. A GREAT STRIP, BUT. . .
Fri Jul 8, 2022, 09:54 AM
Jul 2022

It was a great strip and Will Eisner was a great artist, but in the 1970s and 1980s when reprints first appeared, modern audiences got to see the strip's humorous supporting character, Ebony White, a black boy drawn in the manner of cartoonish blacks as they were often portrayed in comics in the 1940s. Eisner was embarrassed by this and his only excuse was that this was the accepted standard in the 1940s. There are 1940s movies which feature black stereotypes and old Tarzan movies feature black natives as violent savages. It was commonplace. There is a Donald Duck cartoon (which is not available on Disney Plus but is on Youtube) called "Tea For 200" about Donald Duck's picnic invaded by ants, black ants, and they are all portrayed like 1940s movie African natives. Every original Spirit strip was reprinted in some 30 hardcover volumes by DC Comics in the 1990s. It's the kind of thing where one looks at the character and goes, "Oh, dear. . . "

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