Posts Tagged ‘comic books’

How Comics and Baby Boomers Influenced the World: A Comparative Study (Pt:4)

Friday, June 19th, 2009
Baby Boomer Comic Books: Championing Women and People of Color

Baby Boomer Comic Books: Championing Women and People of Color


Psychological Articles by Boomeryearbook.com

The sixties had been a trial by fire experience for baby boomers and comic books. In both cases, a defiance of established norms had resulted in significant change. Baby boomers understood that as generational force, they had the power to effect real change in society. The comics industry, as a popular medium recognized that their stories were a source of influence for the young generation that was now coming of age. As baby boomers and comics flexed their respective “muscles of influence”, the seventies would illustrate the results of social change.

Even a child of the seventies will have trouble attempting to describe the decade. Simply put, it was different than any other previous decade. Not necessarily bad, not necessarily good (terms which are relative to whomever you are speaking too); just different. In reality, the cultural mindset of the seventies was a direct result of the actions that baby boomers had taken in the previous decade. The seventies are a period in which baby boomers were entering the workforce en masse and their recognition that they held the keys to transform a society wasn’t wasted.

Whereas a wave of conservatism had swept the country in the fifties, the seventies would see a similar wave of liberalism. Needless to say, older generations were aghast at the changes that were taking place. And the changes were reflective everywhere, including the mediums that baby boomers sought entertainment in.

From music to television to comic books; the ideas and behavior that so personifies the seventies were promoted. Comic books continued to advance such ideas as racial equality in not so subtle stories about the struggles of being a minority. For the first time, heroes of color such as the Black Panther and Black Lightening made their appearances in their own comic books, as comics became more culturally diverse. These early images of minorities in strong positions would help to serve as inspiration and role models for many minorities struggling with racial adversity.

Along with heroes of color, comics also took note of issues of gender equality issues as well. Baby boomers of the seventies, especially the ladies, began to assert that women had an equal place in the world with their male counterparts. From sports to the work place, women were demanding and gaining better treatment. Title IX, for example, introduced legislation in 1972 that provided equal opportunity for women to participate in school athletics.

Comics, at this point, would portray women in strong secondary roles in contrast with major characters – Lois Lane to Superman, Carol Farris to Green Lantern and others. Women were shown as capable professional individuals and not sex objects or placed in stereotypical situations. Like minority superheroes, women heroes began to emerge from supporting roles to star in their own books as well, such as Wonder Woman and Ms. Marvel. Young women would embrace these concepts whole heartedly.

The seventies can be seen as a transition period. Women and minorities would soon assume greater roles in society at large, but those gains were as a result of the ideas that were being set forth in the mediums of the seventies, including comic books. Baby boomers and comics in this time period openly experimented with the ideas that would begin to shape the decades to come.

This Psychological Article on How Comics and Baby Boomers Influenced the World: A Comparative Study (Pt:4) is part of Boomer Yearbook’s continuing series of fun articles to alleviate elderly problems and keep our hearts and brains young. We believe knowledge is power. We’d love to hear what you think.

Boomer Yearbook is a Social Network and Psychological Articles for Baby Boomers. Connect with old and new friends, or expand your mind and ward off senior moments and elderly problems with dream analysis and online optical illusions and brain games provided by clinical psychologist Dr. Karen Turner. Join other Baby Boomers to stay informed, receive weekly Newsfeeds, and let your opinions be heard. Baby boomers changed the world. We’re not done yet!

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How Comics and Baby Boomers Influenced the World: A Comparative Study (Pt:3)

Thursday, June 18th, 2009
Baby Boomers Comics and Culture Changing the World

Baby Boomers Comics and Culture Changing the World

Psychological Articles by Boomeryearbook.com

The sixties offered both comics and baby boomers a time of growth through adversity. For both parties, the previous decade had been one in which growth beyond the constraints of a conservative social standard was discouraged. Now, as the first signs of defiance to accepted norms began to take place, a clash was inevitable. Change, in general, does not come easy and this would certainly be the case for America. Nevertheless, as vehicles of transformation, and comic books were ideally positioned to bring this about.

Comics would play a significant role with young baby boomers, especially those that were beginning college by the mid-sixties. College campuses around the country were becoming a hot bed for social unrest. Baby boomers were not happy and the ideas that were at the point of their dissatisfaction could find a purchase in the comics that many of them were reading.

Many comics, especially those that were the product of the creative duo of Stan Lee and Jack Kirby, had brought a vein of realism to the superhero genre. Lee and Kirby, having laid the foundation for this new brand of hero with Spiderman and the Fantastic Four, now set out to incorporate social issues in their stories. There was no better social issue that was brimming to be broached than that of racial inequality. America, during this time, was dealing with the pains of racial strife, and the civil rights movement was striving to gain momentum.

Yet many white baby boomers were as yet untouched and unaware of the growing discontent by their neighbors of color or of their plight. And then Lee and Kirby introduced the X-Men to the world. The X-Men were a group of young mutants, children born with super powers that set them apart from normal people. They had the same dreams and aspirations as any one else, but because they were born with powers (i.e. they were different) they were shunned, marginalized and hated by the majority of people. The racial overtones were obvious. More importantly, the injustice of such bigotry was made abundantly clear and young white baby boomers understood the message.

As these themes continue to play out in the comic medium, baby boomers took heart and took action. As the civil rights movement grew and became a force, both black and white baby boomers were joined together in a common cause of justice. In conjunction with the anti war movement as the Vietnam War progressed, baby boomers rejection and staunch opposition of their parents social and political policies forced – albeit slowly and painfully – change. By the end of the decade, significant strides had been made in civil rights – both in legislation and in the minds of the public of what was acceptable. By the end of the decade, a military pull out of Vietnam was inevitable.

Baby boomers had proven that they, as a generation, were a social force to be reckoned with. Their ideas were influenced by the comics they read and the convictions in their hearts. Baby boomers understood that it was their determination for change that had brought about the social transformation that they were witnessing. As a new decade ushered in, baby boomers and comics would assert their new found dominance in American culture.

The Psychological Article on How Comics and Baby Boomers Influenced the World: A Comparative Study (Pt:3) is part of Boomer Yearbook’s continuing series of fun articles to alleviate elderly problems and keep our hearts and brains young. We believe knowledge is power. We’d love to hear what you think.

Boomer Yearbook is a Social Network and Psychological Articles for Baby Boomers. Connect with old and new friends, or expand your mind and ward off senior moments and elderly problems with dream analysis and online optical illusions and brain games provided by clinical psychologist Dr. Karen Turner. Join other Baby Boomers to stay informed, receive weekly Newsfeeds, and let your opinions be heard. Baby boomers changed the world. We’re not done yet!

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How Comics and Baby Boomers Influenced the World: A Comparative Study (Pt:2)

Thursday, June 18th, 2009
Psychological Article: Baby Boomers Comic Books

Psychological Article: Baby Boomers Comic Books


Psychological Article by Boomeryearbook.com

It’s no secret that baby boomers have considered themselves, as a whole, as a force of social change. Often referred to as the “counter-culture”, baby boomers have long been associated with a rejection (supposedly) of the more traditional values of their parents. This realization and determination to redefine society took place, coincidently, within the same period that comic books were evolving from the restrictive confines of a decade of forced conservatism. Indeed, the turbulent sixties brought a number of societal challenges that had an effect on mass medium, baby boomers, and the nation as a whole.

In one sense, baby boomers do indeed justly deserve the banner of “rejecters of traditional values.” The sixties brought with it more war and a growing attention to racial (and to a lesser extent, gender) inequality. Whereas the parents of baby boomers generally took these issues in stride, baby boomers were coming of age and rejected the status quo. For boomers, war in and of it self, was not justifiable; racial and gender inequality was not right. These were the signs that perhaps something needed to be done, perhaps something needed to change.

Influencing these thoughts were the comic books that many baby boomers – now teenagers and young adults – were reading. The fifties were a troubling time for comics, as charges of promoting homosexuality and brutality forced comics to cave in on itself and produce a standard fare that was more suitable to the conservative palate that was prevalent. The winds of change, however, were stirring with this wholly American medium as well.

Just as the forties introduced the concept of superheroes as a focal point of hope for a better day, so too did the late fifties and early sixties revive this concept. This was the silver age of comics, and old characters such as the Flash and Green Lantern were reintroduced to a new audience, but bringing with it those same themes of hope and expectation. They would provide a focus of inspiration for young baby boomers that had not had the experience that their parents had with these characters. Inspiration, as we know, is the well spring of ideas and motivation for action and change – two points that baby boomers would embrace in coming years.

In conjunction with the reemergence of the superhero (and the idealism for truth and justice that they generally espouse), there was a new trend to also portray superheroes in a more realistic style. Comic pioneers Stan Lee and Jack Kirby introduced the world to the Fantastic Four and Spiderman. These characters, unlike previous portrayals of superheroes; had fears, identifiable problems (like trouble paying bills) and general, everyday issues. They maintained their model of inspiration, but had to work at it. For baby boomers, these new characters epitomized the spirit of American perseverance – much like older heroes had done for their parents.

The stage was now set for baby boomers, comics and a nation to come face to face with the need for change. For baby boomers, the ideas that they were encountering in comics (and certainly other mediums) began fermenting into a need for action. For comics, the canvas of creativity and purposeful story telling was emerging. For the country, these forces would combine to produce an upheaval that would eventually result in monumental changes to the social norms.

The Psychological Article How Comics and Baby Boomers Influenced the World: A Comparative Study (Pt:2)
is part of Boomer Yearbook’s continuing series of fun articles to alleviate elderly problems and keep our hearts and brains young. We believe knowledge is power. We’d love to hear what you think.

Boomer Yearbook is a Social Network and Psychological Articles for Baby Boomers. Connect with old and new friends, or expand your mind and ward off senior moments and elderly problems with dream analysis and online optical illusions and brain games provided by clinical psychologist Dr. Karen Turner. Join other Baby Boomers to stay informed, receive weekly Newsfeeds, and let your opinions be heard. Baby boomers changed the world. We’re not done yet!

signup