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In essays on the subject of centricity, I've most often used the image of a geometrical circle, which, as I explained here,  owes someth...

Wednesday, June 26, 2024

CURIOSITIES #36: ["KERRY'S LITTLE LECTURE"], KERRY DRAKE #10 (1948)

 


This one-page item appeared on the inside front cover of a comic book devoted to reprinting the Sunday pages of KERRY DRAKE, a patent DICK TRACY imitation. One interesting aspect is that though the lecture appears in a comic book, the complaining citizen is actually irate about violent crime stories in the newspapers, which for her set a bad example for the young. Prior to this, I hadn't seen much documentation of calls for comic-strip censorship, and indeed Wertham's SEDUCTION largely gives the newspaper comics a pass. According to Jay Maeder's history of the DICK TRACY strip, Chester Gould constantly dealt with complaints about violence for the entire history of TRACY. I imagine KERRY DRAKE might have caught some of the same criticism, though from what I've seen DRAKE was much tamer than TRACY. This proposition is strengthened by the fact that this lecture is signed by DRAKE's creator Alfred Andriola. Of course, some other artist might have ghosted the one-pager in his style. But if Andriola had been the victim of real citizen complaints, then there's no reason he would have refrained from using the interior of a reprint comic book as a "bully pulpit" to argue his case-- especially since he could not do so in the various newspapers that circulated his comic strip.

As an added amusement, the comic-strip continuity reprinted in issue #10 concerns illegal drugs, a topic which would be forbidden for comic books following the Comics Code. There never was an official Code for newspaper comics, but I imagine the existence of the Code might have had a chilling effect on, say, the depiction of various topics in the strips during the late fifties and the following decade.

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