Explainers: The Complete Village Voice Strips (1956-1966) | 
enlarge | Author: Jules Feiffer Publisher: Fantagraphics Books Category: Book
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Avg. Customer Rating: 3 reviews Sales Rank: 41686
Media: Hardcover Edition: 1st Fantagraphic Books Ed Number Of Items: 1 Pages: 528 Shipping Weight (lbs): 2.8 Dimensions (in): 9.5 x 5.5 x 1.9
ISBN: 156097835X Dewey Decimal Number: 741.56973 EAN: 9781560978350 ASIN: 156097835X
Publication Date: May 28, 2008
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Product Description The first of four volumes collecting Feiffer's landmark Village Voice strips.
"My aim was to take the Robert Benchley hero and launch him into the Age of Freud." —Jules Feiffer In 1956, a relatively unknown cartoonist by the name of Jules Feiffer started contributing a strip to the only alternative weekly published in the US, a small radical newspaper called The Village Voice. It was originally titled Sick Sick Sick, but Feiffer changed the name to, simply, Feiffer, because he got tired of explaining that the title referred to the society he was commenting on, not the nature of his humor, which, he insisted, was not sick. Politically, the '50s was dominated by the insipid Presidency of Dwight D. Eisenhower; the backwash of Joe McCarthy; and the Cold War, which was in full swing. Culturally, the Beats were revolutionizing literature, Marlon Brando was changing the face of acting, and Elvis Presley was altering the public's perception of pop music. The post-war suburban bliss of the country was being challenged by sociologists and economists in books like The Lonely Crowd, The Other America, and The Afflulent Society. The civil rights movement was gaining momentum. Camelot was just around the corner, and would be shattered by the assassinations of JFK, RFK, and MLK. The Vietnam War would polarize the country. It was into this scrambled political-cultural climate that Jules Feiffer flung himself full throttle for the next ten years. His strip tackled just about every issue, private and public, that affected the sentient American: relationships, sexuality, love, family, parents, children, psychoanalysis, neuroses, presidents, politicians, media, race, class, labor, religion, foreign policy, war, and one or two other existential questions. It was the first time that the American public had been subjected to a weekly dose of comics that so uncompromisingly and wittily confronted individuals' private fears and society's public transgressions. Explainers is the first of four volumes collecting Feiffer's entire run of weekly strips from The Village Voice. This edition contains approximately 500 strips originally published between 1956 and 1966 in a brick-like landscape hardcover format.
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Still Fresh Decades Later October 26, 2008 Even though these cartoons are 40-50 years old, they still resonate with life in our times. While he deals with what were then burning topics such as nuclear war and "juvenile delinquency" (are these problems really behind us today?) he also has something to say about "the mediocrity of television", male-female relationships, educating our children, big business, the arts and culture and much more. He even has a discussion between a cat and mouse which reflects a dialogue between a Marxist and Liberal about how the working class should be viewed....although this might have seemed dated just a few months ago, with the recent financial crisis, people have again begun talking about these things in the way Feiffer described it back then. I highly recommend this collection.
Feiffer is back September 19, 2008 4 out of 4 found this review helpful
You cannot understand the 50's or the early 60's without grappling with Jules Feiffer's strips from the Voice. Exactly what were those Beats and later hippies raling about? Learn the nuances. Read Feiffer. Laugh outloud.
"EXPLAINERS" give us the complete Voice strips from 1956-1966..and gives us back Feiffer's own voice and insight. Each strip has a page to itself, and the strips are presented in chronological order. We get a sense of cultural mores and issues as they developed over ten years..and we see how Feiffer developed.
For Feiffer fans and for anyone who wants to pretend to understand the USA at the time, this is a required read.
Intellectual angst July 26, 2008 11 out of 11 found this review helpful
I think Fantagraphics should be congratulated for publishing all of Feiffer's Village Voice strips. This first book of 568 pages (with three more editions to come) covers his first VV strip in October 1956 to December 1966 with one week to a page.
Gary Groth's short essay, at the front of the book, puts Feiffer into the context of the times and it seems the times were just right for his wry observations of life in the US: postwar affluence, the Organization Man consumer culture, the military/industrial complex and popular media. The other subject that Feiffer devotes many strips to are male-female relationships, frequently expressed from the male point-of-view with his two regulars: Bernard (timid, insecure) and Hue (confident, scores all the time). You'll see throughout the strips though that he's an equal opportunity satirist because he attacks everyone equally.
Feiffer's drawing style in the first few weeks with the Voice seem to me rather uncertain and varied with sometimes a thick line style, defined panels with plenty of black and speech bubbles or entire black shapes with white figures but by late fifty-seven he had settled down to his unique rendering of figures with captions frequently text-wrapped round them. His faces always seem to display the emotions reflected in the words.
The book is a rather handsome production, landscape to accommodate the strips with each one month/week/year dated and surprisingly a three page index (Nixon appears five times, Johnson fourteen and East Meadow, Long Island once) I would only fault the use of Roman numerals for the first eighteen pages with Groth's essay. Who uses these in the digital age!
Feiffer won the 1986 Pulitzer Prize for cartooning and with this book of ten years of Village Voice strips its easy to see why. I've enjoyed reading a few each day and I'm getting life explained...sort of.
***FOR AN INSIDE LOOK click 'customer images' under the cover.
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