Roslyn A Mazer
International Journal of Comic Art blog
Articles from and news about the premier and longest-running academic journal devoted to all aspects of cartooning and comics -- the International Journal of Comic Art (ISSN 1531-6793) published and edited by John Lent.
Sunday, September 28, 2025
Sept 30 - Stop Drawing or Else: A Cartoonist’s View on Democracy’s Perilous Moment
Thursday, September 25, 2025
Book Review: Horror and Comics
reviewed by Elizabeth Brown, Assistant Teaching Professor, and Cody Parish, Program Director, University of Colorado Colorado Springs
Barbara Chamberlin, Kom Kunyosying, and Julia Round, eds. 2025. Horror and Comics. Cardiff: University of Wales Press, 2025. 296 pp. US $75.00 (Hardcover). ISBN: 978-1-8377-2255-6. https://www.uwp.co.uk/book/horror-and-comics-round-et-al/
Far more complex than its title suggests, Horror and Comics delivers an array of original essays on the global genre of horror comics. This collection, as the editors make clear in their introduction, seeks to move existing scholarly conversations beyond specific comic publishers, individual creators, finite historical periods, and bias toward popular Western comics. Instead, it includes essays organized into three parts, each composed of four chapters, that carve out space to introduce new questions around the themes and rhetoric of the medium, yet refrain from creating an exhaustive anthology of all global horror comics.
Part one presents essays that examine the fluidity of horror comics and the ways in which they both draw from, and influence comics of other genres. Distinguished by its visual essay format, Elizabeth Allyn Woock’s opening chapter analyzes the thematic evolutions found in comic adaptations of Edgar Allan Poe’s “The Black Cat.” Woock’s essay privileges readers’ multimodal knowledge of comic convention to depict its argument in an exciting example of form following function--a scholarly comic about comics! It is worth noting, however, that the use of Chiller font for the lettering makes the text inaccessible. The second section of the collection consists of essays that examine representations of Othered identities in horror comics--including women, queer folks, and black, Latinx, and rural communities--for the ways in which they are rendered monstrous and for how these marginalized characters, at times, regain agency through their monstrosity. Of note is Keiko Miyajima’s chapter on Ito Junji’s Tomie. Miyajima interrogates the ways in which Ito utilizes “aspect-to-aspect” visual presentation to position the female gaze as a disruptive force to the male gaze and reframe the abject monstrous-feminine of the Japanese bishōjo as desirable. The final part of Horror and Comics features cultural-historical readings of horror texts depicting national anxieties, with Christy Tidwell’s chapter providing a rich, nuanced critique of Slow Death Funnies, that, at once, praises the comic as a subversive example of 1970s’ American ecohorror, while simultaneously critiquing it for its “sexism, ableism and ecofascism” (p. 297).
Horror and Comics boasts rich analyses brimming with historical depth on comics from Italy, Brazil, Germany, Japan, and the United States, including comics published between the 1600s and 2021. Beyond traditional horror comics and graphic novels, the contributors consider Italian fumetti neri, or black comics; Japanese manga; documentary/nonfiction comics; and underground comix. However, the texts examined only partially meet the editors’ goal of expanding existing discussions of horror comics to a global stage: just five of the twelve chapters focus on non-English language comics, whereas analyses of more comics from the global south would enhance the volume. Materially, the use of visuals is inconsistent throughout the volume, with some chapters featuring copious reproductions and others none at all--possibly pointing to the complexities of licensing rights in a project with as ambitious a scope as this one. Moreover, the comics reproductions themselves appear inconsistent, as pages of Tomie in the original Japanese used in Miyajima’s chapter, for example, show up in poor resolution should the reader magnify the screen to try to read them. Triebel and Vanderbeke reference and reproduce 16th-Century German woodcuts, but their horizontal orientation clashes with the page format of the volume. There is also inconsistency in the editing and individual organization of the essays. The texts lack abstracts and writers’ theses occasionally lacked development or were buried within their writing, making this text less accessible to new scholars. With its varied themes and approaches to scholarship, Horror and Comics is, first and foremost, for rhetorical scholars of horror as a genre, with secondary overlap into the study of comics as a medium.
Table of Contents
Introduction – Barbara Chamberlin, Kom Kunyosying, and Julia Round
PART ONE: Crossing Genres, Blurring Boundaries
Multimodal Mirroring in ‘The Black Cat’ – Elizabeth Allyn Woock
Satanic Feminism and Decadent Aesthetics in Guido Crepax’s ‘Valentina’ Comics – Miranda Corcoran
The Living, the Dead and the Living Dead: Brazilian Horror Imagery and
Genre Hybridisation in Shiko‘s Três Buracos – Tiago José Lemos I
Monteiro and Heitor Da Luz Silva
Befriending the Past: The Genre-Bending Vanessa Comics Series (1982–1990) and its Historical Context – Barbara M. Eggert
PART TWO: Identity, Agency, Humanity
‘I’m not who he thinks I am’: Identity and Victimhood in Country Horror Comics – Matthew Costello
‘What’s one more monster?’: Articulations of Latinx Monstrosity and Whiteness in Border Town – Anna Marta Marini
‘Still pretty, ain’t she?’: The Female Gaze and the Queer Monstrous Feminine in Itō Junji’s Tomie – Keiko Miyajima
Sinister Houses and Forbidden Loves: Queer Identity in DC’s Gothic Romances – Lillian Hochwender
PART THREE: Society, Anxiety, Politics
Abjection, Ambivalence and the Abyss in EC’s New Trend Line – Alex Link
The Power of a Demon and the Heart of a Human: The Darkness of Humanity in Devilman – Meriel Dhanowa
Comics and the Horrors of Reality – Dirk Vanderbeke and Doreen Triebel
‘REALITY scarier than any boogeyman’: Shock, Exploitation, and Environmentalism in Slow Death Funnies – Christy Tidwell
Afterwords – Barbara Chamberlin, Kom Kunyosying, and Julia Round
Graphic Novel Review: Erased: An Actor of Color’s Journey Through the Heyday of Hollywood
reviewed by Matthew Teutsch, Associate Professor, Piedmont University
Loo Hui Phang and Hugues Micol. Erased: An Actor of Color’s Journey Through the Heyday of Hollywood. New York: NBM Publishing, 2024. 200 pp. US $24.99 (Hardcover). ISBN: 978-1-6811-2338-7. https://nbmpub.com/products/erased
Who was Maximus Ohanzee Wildhorse, an “actor with a thousand faces”? Why, decades after his heyday in some of the biggest films of the 20th Century, from “Gone With the Wind” to “The Maltese Falcon” to “Vertigo” and beyond, do we not know about Wyld’s legacy during some of the most important moments in cinematic history and in the history of the United States and the world? Loo Hui Phang and Hugues Micol’s Erased: An Actor of Color’s Journey Through the Heyday of Hollywood seeks to rectify the fact that Wyld’s work, once the House Un-American Activities Committee (HUAC) deemed him a Communist, because he went to Kyrgyzstan in 1955 to portray Genghis Khan in a film by Aktan Okeev, vanished from the studio vaults. As a result of the HUAC investigation, film studios blacklisted Wyld, and “to safeguard the integrity of their back catalog and contribute patriotically to the Cold War effort, studios decreed radical edits,” essentially erasing Wyld from the annals of cinematic history.
In the afterword, Lelan Cheuk notes that as he read Erased, he placed Maximus “alongside Anna May Wong, Paul Robeson, Lena Horne, James Hong, and countless other talented performers relegated to a career of supporting roles drenched in racial stereotypes.” Because of his Black, Chinese, and Indigenous ancestry, Maximus could veritably play any “ethnic” role on screen, portraying enslaved individuals, Indigenous chiefs, Mexican revolutionaries, Oriental dandies, and more. Yet, with all of the promises from Louis B. Mayer to make Maximus the first Black star to be at MGM, telling him again and again that he planned to have Maximus star in a film adaptation of Othello that never materialized.
While Erased resurrects Maximus from the depths of oblivion, it also serves as a commentary on the role that celluloid images have on our culture, and the ways that cinema allows us to escape reality, but also informs our reality. After Cary Grant “discovers” Maximus in a gym, we see Maximus in a theater watching a western with Father Magnani. Micol’s first panel shows a white cowboy chasing two Indigenous warriors as he shoots at them. In the foreground, we see a boy’s fist raised in the air as he yells, “Yippee! Whip’em good, redskins!” Father Magnani tells the boy to settle down and reminds him, “it’s just a movie.” Maximus pushes back, telling the priest that what they see on the screen is not just a movie, and that when he watches the action, he “want[s] to be a cowboy, not an Indian.” This feeling is what Franz Fanon and James Baldwin write about in relation to seeing oneself on screen as the “savage” or the “uncivilized,” and thus rooting for the white hero. Baldwin writes, “It comes as a great shock to see Gary Cooper killing off the Indians, and although you are rooting for Gary Cooper, that the Indians are you.”
Father Magnani tells Maximus that images and narrative have power and that, “[t]he cinema is but an adaptable tool.... It can be made to serve any ideology.” Still looking at the screen, Maximus replies, “Me, I just want the Indians to win.” Maximus takes Father Magnani’s advice, and he imbues his acting, specifically after the initiation of the Hays Code in 1934, with subtle gestures and signs that subvert the code. As well, he incorporated gestures and wardrobe choices to convey “secret messages,” such as references to African roots, Toussaint L’Ouverture’s initials in a movement, a raised fist in defiance, and more.
While the dialogue and textual narrative convey the illusion of cinema and Hollywood, Micol’s surrealist illustrations, which bring to mind the work of Bryan Talbot’s work in Armed with Madness: The Surreal Leonora Carrington, work with Phang’s text to create an uneasy feeling of reality. Erased opens with seven out of the first eight pages being full-sized illustrations without panels. The opening page depicts a masked figure walking in the desert amidst images of various characters that Maximus plays throughout his career. These characters are ensconced as parts of a cactus, as bearing the weight of the scene, and as traversing the landscape as the narrator begins, “Hollywood is fiction, and like all fictions, it is myriad, changing, sincere, deceitful and unbridled engine of predatory fluidity.” It changes and morphs, relaying ideologies, as Father Magnani puts it. The next page continues to follow the masked figure as an eagle snatches the individual up in its claws, depositing the person into a seemingly bottomless cavern that reveals itself, on the third page, to be a woman’s head. Thus, the malleable, masked thespian becomes part and parcel of the audience member’s consciousness. The narrator reiterates, “Hollywood is a fiction. It feeds on stories. Manufactures heroes. Celebrates them. Torches them.” These “heroes” all become part of us as audience members, and the masked person, as they fall into the black hole of the woman’s hair, gets lost to the march of time, becoming one of the torched heroes.
When Maximus faces HUAC about his involvement with Okeev’s “Genghis Khan,” they torch him, turning him from a celebrated hero to a mere shadow haunting the edge of the frame. Micol’s depiction of this moment harkens back to the opening, placing the masked individual on a pyre, surrounded by burning film reels as the flames lick at the flesh while the head of a bald eagle stares at the audience in the lower right corner from behind the lynching. The image symbolically depicts Maximus’ erasure from the annals of cinematic history, burned alive by the very film reels that he made popular. The studios sought to protect themselves from HUAC, and “Maximus Wyld became an evil infecting Hollywood--one it was urgent to eradicate.”
Erased, at its core, does more than just resurrect Maximus Wyld’s career. Through the narrative and illustrations, it highlights the myths we tell and the ways that those myths, depicted on larger-than-life screens, impact our very beings. It dives into the illusion, even with actresses, such as Margarita Carmen Cansino (Rita Hayworth) and Julian Jean Turner (Lana Turner), that Hollywood creates, the shifting of identity and story. It dives into the history of racism in the United States, the censorship of media, the attacks on LGBTQ individuals, and more. While recovering Maximus’ story, Erased provides an all-encompassing history of Hollywood, early Black cinema, the United States, and the world from the 1930s through McCarthyism.
Ultimately, though, Erased itself is nothing more than an illusion, because Maximus Wyld never existed. As I read Erased, I kept wanting to look up and find more information about Maximus. I put the book down and searched for Maximus online, to no avail. I thought to myself, “Is Erased the only evidence of Maximus? Is it the only document of his life and work?” The answer to both questions, in the factual sense, is “No.” Maximus never “actually” existed, but now, through Phang and Micol’s work, he does exist as part of cinematic history, as a sign to the erased individuals of Hollywood’s “golden” age. While Cheuk and I both felt, during our initial reads, that Erased told the story of someone who lived and starred in these films, we came to the realization that Erased is fictional, but we each, as well, recognize the ways that Maximus’ story tells that while progress has been made, “there’s still a long way to go,” as Cheuk writes, “before actors of color are the heroes and antiheroes in our collective racial imagination.”
Exhibition Review: The 15th National Comic Art Exhibition of China
reviewed by Xu Ying, assistant editor, International Journal of Comic Art
The 15th National Comic Art Exhibition of China. Beijing, China: Capital Library, April 16-20, 2025.
This exhibition was sponsored by China Artists’ Association and Tongxiang Municipal People’s Government and was co-organized by the Art Center of China Federation of Literary and Art Circles, Cartoon Art Committee of China Artists Association, Publicity Department of Tongxiang Municipal Party Committee, the Bureau of Culture and Broadcast, Television, Film, Tourism and Sport of Tongxiang Municipal, and the Tongxiang Municipal Federation of Literary and Art Circles.
Fig. 1. Capital Library in Beijing.
Fig. 2. The Opening Ceremony Stage.
This national exhibition organizers received a total of 3,681 works from all over China, a new record for the number of cartoon works in an exhibition. The China Artists’ Association organized experts from various parts of China for serious initial evaluation and re-evaluation of works. The judges narrowed the number of works to 190, with a wide range of themes, rich contents, and diverse creative methods and forms of expression, all in line with the rules, characteristics, and distinct spirit of comic art creation. The works reflect the overall level and prosperous appearance of comic art creation in China today.
Fig. 3. “Do Boldly What Is Righteous.” Chen Tao.
Fig. 4. “Occupy a Seat.” Yang Xiaopei.
Fig. 5. “Admire the Eyes.” Zeng Yi.
Fig. 6. “@Gene.” Yu Shouyang.
Fig. 7. “Pry to Move the Earth.” Fu Xiaoning.
Fig. 8. “The First Day of School.” Chen Gang.
Fig. 9. “Mother’s Love.” Chen Hongyan.
Fig. 10. “One Hundred Years of Solitude.” He Ying.
Fig. 11. “The Worry of the Ragman.” Gao Riying.
Fig. 12. “The Future Society.” Ning Deping.
Fig. 13. “Vast Prison.” Zhou Lin.
Fig. 14. “You’re Also Stuck.” Qi Jiaona.
Fig. 15. “Standard Answer.” Bao Meizhen.
The origin of Tongxiang’s association with comic art emanated from Feng Zikai, the first artist to use the word “manhua” in a publication in China in 1925. His artistic spirit influenced generations, with “comic art culture” becoming the name card and cultural brand of Tongxiang. Since 2002, the Municipal Government of Tongxiang, co-operating with China Artists’ Association, has held 14 cartoon exhibitions, about one every two years. Before 2025, it was called “Zikai Cup” Cartoon Exhibition; it changed to the National Comic Art Exhibition.
At this year’s exhibition, the director of the Publicity Department of Tongxiang Municipal Party Committee, Mo Zhonghai, gave a welcoming speech, assuring that Tongxiang will continue to do its best as one of the organizers and will make this comic art exhibition a grand event, that showcases comic art achievements and promotes cultural exchange. Liu Manhua, director of the Cartoon Art Committee, said that the 2025 exhibition represents the highest standard of contemporaneity, thoughtfulness, and artistry of Chinese comic art: “It is a record of time, a record of the changes of Chinese society, a record of the developing history of Chinese comic art, and is also a review of the creative level of Chinese cartoonists.” Sun Yuanwei, who presented an award speech, based on his own experience of comic art creation, expressed respect for the predecessors of comic art. Many cartoonists from different cities attended the opening ceremony. This exhibition will continue displaying in other cities later on.