[150 years ago this week, the New York Daily Graphic debuted the first comic strip to appear in an American newspaper. So in honor of that anniversary, this week I’ll blog about that strip and four other examples of how the medium has evolved, leading up to a special weekend post highlighting other ComicsStudiers!]
On three telling
aspects of a longstanding, troublemaking
presence on the funny pages.
1)
Autobiographical origins: Cartoonist Hank
Ketcham’s four year old son Dennis was such a youthful troublemaker that
Hank’s wife Alice was known to exclaim, “Your son is a menace!” Shortly
thereafter, on March
12th, 1951, Hank debuted
a comic strip entitled Dennis the
Menace, featuring the Mitchell family: father Henry/Hank, mother Alice, and
son Dennis. I don’t mean to suggest that every comic strip is based on the life
and identity of the cartoonist, necessarily—but I’m willing to bet that quite
often, even when he or she changes certain elements, there’s at least an
autobiographical core (ie, Dik
Browne didn’t live in Viking times, but I’d be surprised if there isn’t a
good deal of Hagar the Horrible
in Dik nonetheless). In any case, Dennis’s mischievous exploits are portrayed
with such precision and begrudging love that it’s no surprise to learn that
there was a real-life kid behind the freckles and overalls.
2)
Multicultural misstep: Every comic strip that’s
around for decades must evolve over that time (although they don’t always—I’m
looking at you, Garfield), and not
all of those changes are going to work out, particularly when they engage with
complex cultural issues in periods of social shifts. In the late 1960s, Ketham
introduced Jackson, an African-American neighbor of Dennis’ drawn very overtly
in the stereotypical
(and by this time quite outdated) “pickaninny” style. I’m not sure I can
any more concisely sum up the problems with this character, both in image and
in how Ketcham used him for humor, than does this May
1970 strip. There’s not really ever a good time to introduce such a racist
character, but the late 1960s was a particularly bad time, and as might be
expected protests
erupted at newspaper offices in Detroit, Little Rock, and St. Louis, among
others. Ketcham agreed to shelve Jackson, although the quotes of his in that
last hyperlinked story indicate that he never quite understood why such a
racist depiction wouldn’t be the best way to add a new culture into his strip’s
world.
3)
Still serialized: Ketcham retired in 1994 and
passed away in 2001, but Dennis
continues to this day: drawn by his former assistants Marcus
Hamilton and Ron
Ferdinand, and serialized in at least 1000 newspapers in nearly 50
countries. That the strip is still going strong more than 70 years after its
debut certainly reflects the universal appeal of a mischievous but lovable
young boy and of family and neighborhood life. But at the same time, I would
argue that the longstanding presence of so many decades-old strips—my hometown
paper, the Charlottesville (VA) Daily
Progress, features a
significant percentage of the same strips I grew up reading a few decades
ago—reflects a genre that is somewhat slower to adapt than the culture and
society around it. Am I suggesting that Dennis, Hagar, Dagwood and Blondie,
Garfield, and their venerable peers aren’t always the most engaged with life in
2025 America? Yes, yes I am—and while that’s not necessarily a bad thing
(timelessness isn’t necessarily less desirable than timeliness), it needs at
least to be balanced by newer and more 21st century strips.
Next strip
tomorrow,
Ben
PS. What
do you think? Comic strips you’d highlight?
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