Remembering Tom Inge
Joseph Witek
Dept. of Creative Arts
Stetson University
Many of the deserved tributes to my
friend, mentor, and role model Tom Inge will
call him a “pioneer,” most of them meaning simply that Tom was among the
earliest academics to study popular culture generally and comics specifically.
And that he surely was. But Tom was much more literally a pioneer—one who goes
ahead, who explores and maps the previously unknown ground, and, most
especially for me personally, one who blazes the trail to show the way to those
who come afterward.
As Tom had been two decades before
me, in the 1980s I was a graduate student in English at Vanderbilt University,
where the English department, like many such in academia, was a changing place. A rising cohort of faculty were variously engaging
with the myriad strains of literary and cultural theory while a deeply
traditionalist senior faculty, many of them the heirs of Vanderbilt’s
conservative and indeed politically reactionary heritage of the literary
Fugitives and Agrarians, looked on skeptically.
Under the tutelage of one of those
younger professors, Don Ault, a literary theorist and scholar of William Blake
and of Carl Barks, I had become increasingly enthralled with the study of
comics, and eventually began to research a dissertation on the contemporary
comics (not quite yet canonized as “graphic novels”) of Jack Jackson, Art
Spiegelman, and Harvey Pekar. In those days it was just possible to find and
read close to the entire published canon of substantive critical literature on
comics in English. Much, and in fact
most, of that criticism had been generated outside of academia by literary and
cultural critics, by public intellectuals, and by comics historians and
fans. Within the academy, discussion of
comics in publishing venues recognizable to English department dissertation
committees was extremely limited, and among the small handful of brave voices
willing to broach the topic of comics in the pages of academic journals and
edited collections, by far the most vigorous and ubiquitous was that of Tom
Inge. Every bibliography, every OCLC database search, every set of footnotes to
one of the rare academic articles on comics featured the name of Tom Inge. And
Tom not only carried the message of comics to academia, he brought scholarship
to the comics-fan community as well—a researcher like me looking for a timeline
of the development of U.S. comics books would find one in that bible of the
comics collector, the annual Overstreet Comic Book Price Guide, a
timeline compiled and regularly updated by M. Thomas Inge.
Having formed the backbone of my
dissertation proposal’s bibliography, Tom Inge likewise had, unbeknownst to me,
already smoothed my path within the Vanderbilt graduate program at large. When senior faculty would ask about my
pending dissertation topic, even the most hidebound traditionalists responded
with a gleam of recognition: “Ah, comics—like Tom Inge!” (In fact, the hoariest
of those elders, a deep-dyed Southern Literature specialist, told me the story
of the very first doctoral dissertation he had ever directed—one on American
humor, written by Tom Inge.)
So when, with a preliminary draft
of my dissertation in hand, I spotted an ad in the back of an issue of PMLA
announcing a new book series on popular culture by the University Press of
Mississippi, the tipping point that enabled me to screw up my meagre grad-student
courage to send off a query letter to the press was the name of the series
editor, the single person in academia who I knew for a fact would look on a
book about comics knowledgably and sympathetically: M. Thomas Inge. A return letter from Tom was one of those
countless acts of encouragement that he gave so freely to me and to other
junior colleagues; it turned out that he did want to see my manuscript, and
before very long he made the dream of every aspiring scholar come true by
publishing Comic Books as History: The Narrative Art of Jack Jackson, Art
Spiegelman, and Harvey Pekar. And in a characteristically generous move, he
made a book by a brand-new Ph.D. the initial entry in the UP Miss Studies in
Popular Culture series, which became one of the cornerstones of the field
of comics studies, reserving his own already completed work, the seminal Comics
as Culture, for the second volume of the series.
I soon met Tom in person at a
meeting of the American Studies Association in 1990, and his genial figure, always
impeccably dressed and coiffed, was a fixture at comics conferences and popular
culture professional meetings all over North America. For decades previously Tom had carried the
flag of academic comics studies nearly alone, and he welcomed newcomers to
comics studies with open arms; his delight at watching the growth of the field
over the decades was palpable. Tom Inge
was tireless in encouraging and supporting his expanding cohort of junior
colleagues, and many of us in the field have received out of the blue a letter
enclosing a comics-related news clipping or article or bibliographical citation
with a handwritten note saying something like, “Saw this and thought you might
find it useful—Tom.”
I last saw Tom at the inaugural
conference of the Comics Studies Society at the University of Illinois,
Champaign-Urbana in 2018. After the papers
had been presented, the CSS held a reception at a local restaurant, and as the
energetic young organizers were presenting various awards, Tom and I found
ourselves in the back of the room, perhaps inevitably reflecting back on the
long and winding path to the establishment of a learned society for academic comics
studies. In his typically generous and inclusive way, Tom said with some
satisfaction, “Well, it looks like we did it.” I answered with the truth: “No,
Tom—you did it.” Tom Inge will be
deeply missed, but the good he has done as an exemplary scholar and mentor lives
on.
So it’s one last time to say what I
have had so many occasions to say before:
“Thanks, Tom.”