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Civil Liberties

Corpses, Crimes, and Comic Books

Old Testament justice in the horror comics of the '50s

Greg Beato | From the November 2010 issue

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Rotting corpses. Plotting spouses. A jealous cactus that goes on a murderous rampage. In the early 1950s, Charlie Brown and Howdy Doody weren't the only pop culture phantasms delighting America's children. All across the country, gleefully gruesome crime and horror comics brightened newsstands with vivid tableaux of monsters, mobsters, the walking dead, and other assorted fiends.

It was a good time to be a kid, no doubt, and an even better time to be a protector of public virtue. Crusading newspaper columnist Thomas E. Murphy railed against the "depraved, degenerate bits of scatology" who created crime and horror comics. U.S. senators investigated the comics in a special hearing. Progressive psychiatrist Frederick Wertham penned a best-selling manifesto, Seduction of the Innocent, that accused comics of "mass conditioning" the nation's children to a life of illiterate, criminal, sexually abnormal delinquency. And as 

David Hadju recounts in The Ten Cent Plague, his excellent 2008 history of the mid-century backlash against crime and horror comics, many organizations, including at least one Girl Scout troop, set fire to these graphic monstrosities in psychotic celebrations of literary decency.

One major purveyor of cartoon shocks and mayhem was the iconoclastic EC Comics, which brought forth such classics as Tales From the Crypt and Crime SuspenStories. When public pressure for a crackdown mounted in 1954, EC publisher William Gaines beat the angry mobs to the punch by ripping up copies from his catalog at a New York press conference. The company's crime and horror comics, he announced, were dead. The ghosts of these series have been haunting the halls of American pop culture ever since—as reprints, movie adaptations, HBO programming, and a Saturday morning cartoon. 

But other titles from the era have led much less visible afterlives. In August the comics publisher Fantagraphics exhumed more than three dozen non-EC stories from the period for a new anthology, Four Color Fear.

While EC now stands as the ghoulish face of 1950s crime and horror comics, it accounted for just 7 percent of such comics produced in that era, according to Four Color Fear co-editor John Benson. Atlas, the genre's largest player, would eventually evolve into the company now known as Marvel Comics, and Marvel has been reprinting old Atlas titles such as Strange Tales and Menace over the past few years. But much of the material produced by the 30 or so other crime and horror publishers active during the 1950s has rarely if ever been reprinted. Benson and co-editor Greg Sadowski wanted to showcase the best of the rest.

As entertaining as EC's comics are, as notable as their noir-for-teens cynicism and glib desire to shock must have been in an era when explicit gore and violence were still mostly confined to print, I've always wondered if there was even more lurid fare out there turning Girl Scouts into book-burning vigilantes. If the stories that appear in Four Color Fear are any indication, the answer is no. 

Like the EC titles, they feature plenty of murder, mayhem, creeping swamp things, and decomposing suitors. In one memorable piece, a giant love-struck cactus manages to go on a three-person killing spree even though it's largely immobile, rooted deeply in the front yard of the suburban married woman it tragically pines for. 

But there's a consistent decorum on display as well. In one selection, "The Body Maker," a monstrous doctor is determined to build a perfect mate out of parts from women he kills. It's a story that Wertham featured prominently in Seduction of the Innocent, and in his Barnumesque hands, he made this sexualized take on the Frankenstein myth sound so horrific that De Sade himself might blanch at its explicitness. But if "The Body Maker" is beyond the pale conceptually, its actual depiction is handled with striking restraint. Wertham complained that the mad doctor cuts off one victim's legs, another's hands, and a third's hair, but what he didn't mention is how demurely these crimes are staged. There's not a drop of blood in the entire story. On two occasions, knives are poised to strike, but all the carnage takes place between panels.

As with EC, the most notable aspect of the stories in Four Color Fear isn't the gore, sex, or nudity. It's the sense of uncompromising Old Testament justice that runs through them. While Wertham and other critics characterized crime and horror comics as training manuals for psychopaths and deviants, the villains who perpetrate the evil deeds within them typically got punished in more extreme ways than the state would ever allow.

That is one more reason Wertham found them so objectionable. According to the college textbook Criminal Justice in America, the medicalization of corrections policy, which assumes that criminal behavior is caused by biological or psychological factors, reached its peak in the 1950s. Criminals were to be diagnosed, treated, and rehabilitated rather than punished. Efforts to crack down on crime and horror comics can be seen as an outgrowth of this trend. Indeed, Wertham called comics "a new kind of harm, a new kind of bacillus the present-day child is exposed to." In his mind, they were the true cause of juvenile delinquency and the crimes committed by the children he treated in his medical practice. The perpetrators themselves weren't to blame, and as Wertham insisted in the final chapter of Seduction of the Innocent, neither were their parents.

But horror comics never consider the root causes of crime. If you steal from corpses, as the protagonist of "Custodian of the Dead" does, you eventually get eaten by cemetery rats, who never bother to ask how a troubled home life or coarse popular culture may have shaped your moral development. Justice in horror comics anticipated the reactionary, uncompromising creed of Harry Callahan and Judge Judy. Punishment was swift, and no mercy was shown. That may be why the 10-year-olds reading horror comics in 1954 failed to become the monsters Wertham feared they were destined to be and instead evolved into pacifist hippies. Hyper-violent cartoon ghouls set them on a path of peace, love, and harmony. 

Contributing Editor Greg Beato writes from San Francisco. Follow him on Twitter @GregBeato.

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NEXT: Strange Love

Greg Beato is a contributing editor at Reason.

Civil LibertiesCultureStaff ReviewsComicsPrint MediaHistoryCensorshipFree Speech
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  1. Suki   15 years ago

    Good morning reason!

    1. anarch   15 years ago

      How did I know that would be the first comment?

  2. Charles Manson, b. 1934   15 years ago

    the 10-year-olds reading horror comics in 1954 failed to become the monsters Wertham feared they were destined to be and instead evolved into pacifist hippies. Hyper-violent cartoon ghouls set them on a path of peace, love, and harmony.

    Damn. Missed it.

    1. Carl Pham   15 years ago

      Oh I dunno. "Pacific hippies" is certainly a type of monster.

  3. Fist of Etiquette   15 years ago

    Yet another lackluster Friday Funnies. And that Obama is terrible.

  4. Suki   15 years ago

    Alt-txt: "She could not file charges because she no longer had a leg to stand on."

    1. Harvard   15 years ago

      And from henceforth she was known as "peg".

  5. Chlorophyllite   15 years ago

    "mass conditioning the nation's children to a life of illiterate..." And I thought it was public schooling.

  6. Drax the Destroyer   15 years ago

    "And as David Hadju recounts in The Ten Cent Plague, his excellent 2008 history of the mid-century backlash against crime and horror comics, many organizations, including at least one Girl Scout troop, set fire to these graphic monstrosities in psychotic celebrations of literary decency."

    Shit...I literally just finished this book a couple of weeks ago and was thinking "Reason should write about the insane people who tried to destroy these very American businesses while the cold war cycled up because this was so much worse than the prospect of nuclear winter."

    What fascinates me about this subject is that if one of these busybodies from the 50s were to open up a modern comic like Deadpool, The Walking Dead, Preacher, Wanted, The Ultimates, etc. they would vomit so much pea-soup in pure terror, they could feed an an entire Pacific U.S. tent city for a week. I mean, what has changed? Obviously a lot. For one, comics got more expensive so for the most part, only adults buy them in sufficient quantities hence the need for sex(Preacher), blasphemy(Preacher), violence (Preacher, The Walking Dead, Deadpool), the undead (The Walking Dead...Preacher), and female characters who enjoy sex (Every single modern comic) to become comic staples. Two, most of the prudes are dead (The one's that are still alive rail against Harry Potter and the like, completely impotent against Humanity's desire for mediocre entertainment that will blind us from the inadequacy of life in general). Three, comics were given a modicum of respect in the 80s thanks to titles like Watchmen and The Dark Knight Returns.

    What disturbs me about those piece of shit assholes who had nothing better to do but to demonize comics (Housewives? There was no cable then...), is that they were able to threaten the possibility of one day exacting federal force in order to curb free speech, commerce, etc. This threat, coupled with state and local governments banning "unsavory" comics, helped destroy a flourishing genre in a successful industry. Comics have never been the same since, and only in the last 20 years or so have the real successors to the lost horror and crime genres sprouted like so much fungus in the dark of night.

    In the end, all these fuckers were able to do was to make millionaires out of the few nerds who could hold on to and hide their issues of classic comics. Parents burnt and threw away these things by the truckload thanks to the nonsense the busybodies spouted, but if you could save a solitary issue of ancient Superman, Batman, or any of the horror catalogues, you could leave your kids and grandkids a couple million bones today.

  7. So Tired   15 years ago

    [connecting to facebook.com...]

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  8. steve   15 years ago

    Phone books and comic books... slow day for articles

    1. generic Brand   15 years ago

      And both written by Greg Beato... Coincidence? I think not!

  9. Kody Chamberlain   15 years ago

    Great piece Greg! As a comics professional currently writing and drawing crime and horror comics, the ghost of Wertham remains.

  10. rhea   15 years ago

    Ebook is becoming a large trend. And soon, there'll be no more hardbound books in the shelves. Hope this won't happen.

    We help Americans move to Asia for jobs and prosperity. Learn more at http://www.pathtoasia.com

    1. Mongo   15 years ago

      Good one, spambot!

  11. Tex Lovera   15 years ago

    Hyper-violent cartoon ghouls set them on a path of peace, love, and harmony.

    Who then turned the Justice League into the gayest cartoon/comic ever, the Super Friends.

    Who are now pilloried by Smiegel and AdultSwim.

  12. Bill   15 years ago

    One of my early memories is how sad I felt when the Comics Code came in, and EC and other publishers stopped publishing their interesting comic books. Rot in hell, Wertham!

  13. Robert   15 years ago

    The cutest take I've seen on all this was in Gough & Millar's (and if you've seen the Shanghai movies, you know how cute that pair is) TV show Smallville. In it, a character named Dr. Frederick Walden, author of Deciphering the Mysteries of the Ancients (pronounce it with a mouthful of something), declared Clark Kent to be a menace to society who must be destroyed.

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