may12b.indd


May 2012  261 C&RL News

In display cases on the grand third floor of McCormick Library, often graced by rare, first 
edition monographs and the longhand letters of 
historical figures, some primary color drawings 
of men in tights (and some in nothing at all) 
recently spent six months entertaining and ed-
ucating the 
Northwest-
ern Univer-
sity commu-
nity. There 
is nothing 
like a comic 
b o o k  e x -
hibit with 
an “explicit 
c o n t e n t ” 
warning to 
get college 
students cu-
rious about 
library hold-
ings. With 
this show, curators Benn Joseph and Jason 
Nargis presented an overview of the history 
and scope of the comic book archive in the 
Charles Deering McCormick Library of Special 
Collections.

From a 16th-century BC Egyptian Book of the 
Dead to contemporary minimalist Web-based 
comic xkcd, the interweaving of text and im-
age has formed a powerful and unique form 
of communication and storytelling spanning 
millennia. Comics, or sequential visual stories, 
create a shared space of creation and compre-
hension, since it is the combination of the artist’s 
and the viewer’s imaginations that permits the 

realization of the narrative. These artworks are 
also saturated with information documenting 
changing expressions of visual rhetoric and 
societal norms, with the themes, styles, plot-
ting, pacing, and iconography all speaking to 
a particular cultural time and place.

C o m i c 
books are 
one of the 
m o s t  e f -
fective and 
p o p u l a r 
mass media 
of the 20th 
century, but 
the story of 
graphic, se-
quential art 
begins long 
before the 
first “funny 
pages” ap-
p e a r e d  i n 

American newspapers. McCormick Library’s 
exhibit “From the Heroic to the Depraved” 
focused predominantly on traditional comic 
books, but contextualized the origins of the 
art form through the 18th and 19th centuries 
with early examples of satirical broadsides, the 
“modern moral subjects” of William Hogarth, 
Blake prints, wordless woodcut novels, and 
more. As an easily reproducible, affordable, and 

Jason Nargis is manuscript librarian, e-mail: j-nargis@
northwestern.edu, and Benn Joseph is manuscript 
librarian at Northwestern University Archives, e-mail: 
b-joseph@northwesern.edu
© 2012 Jason Nargis and Benn Joseph

Jason Nargis and Benn Joseph

“From the Heroic to the Depraved”
Mainstream and underground comic books at Northwestern University 
Library

Detail of Northwestern comics exhibit.



C&RL News May 2012  262

accessible format, these works had significant 
social impact. The curators wished to showcase 
the quality and depth of the library’s holdings, 
but also to delineate the progression of the 
form and the evolution of visual storytelling 
over time. Even without label text, the art can 
simply stand and speak for itself; comics are just 
fun and present visually arresting and dynamic 
scenes that can perhaps serve as a gateway into 
other parts of special collections and primary 
source materials.

This collection has a unique status at the 
McCormick Library as being the only archive 
initiated by a donation from an undergraduate. 
When religion major Juan Cole offered his 1,100 
comic books to curator Russell Maylone in 1972, 
he could not have known what a snowball 
effect his gift would have. Within a year, four 
other donors had come forward, the collection 
had grown to 3,600 issues, and superstar comics 
creator and publisher Stan Lee was speaking 
at the dedication ceremony. While students 
would browse the collection as a break from 
their studies, the library also saw the comics 
as a legitimate research source. The works of 
popular culture contain a wealth of information 
about the society that created them. A scholar 
might focus, for example, on characterization 
of women, minorities, or communism over 
time. One professor recently included numer-
ous comics portraying journalists in an exhibit 
on the profession; another assigned issues of 
Fantastic Four from 1966, in which the super-
hero “Black Panther” debuts in the jungles of 
Africa, to illustrate constructions of “blackness” 
in American culture.

The exhibit represented just a portion of the 
comic book holdings of the McCormick Library. 
With the collection approaching 25,000 items, 
donations continue to pour in, and the staff is 
working to fully catalog all issues. Alumnus 
Adam Beechen recently gave Northwestern the 
majority of his contemporary mainstream collec-
tion, totaling about 3,500 issues, with complete 
runs of many major titles and graphic novels. 
Joseph Lambert, a retiring chemistry professor 
at Northwestern, recently gifted the library a 
large run of comic book adaptations of classic 
literature containing some Gold Age and Plati-

num Age (pre-1938) comics. The library holds 
extensive runs of titles mostly from the Silver 
Age (approximately 1950–1970) of mainstream 
comics as well as the so-called “Underground 
Comix” of the late 1960s and early 1970s. The x 
was included to differentiate these works from 
mainstream titles, and also to possibly hint at 
the X-rated nature of their content. 

Our title holdings are unusually complete 
because the contributors were true collectors, 
though there are still some missing issues. Once 
the collection is completely cataloged, it will 
be easier to identify gaps and make acquisi-
tion decisions. Our comics archive is almost 
exclusively donation-based, so any purchases 
will have to fill a glaring hole. The catalog will 
also improve casual discovery and reading of 
titles, which we encourage since this is a “use” 
collection. Many of the comics in our collection, 
including Amazing Spider-Man #1, have been 
read many times.

With so many comics, and incomplete re-
cords, it was difficult to choose what to include 
in the exhibit. We began by reviewing the paper 
card catalog that existed for a good portion 
of the collection, and created lists of items to 
consider based on their age and genre. The un-
derground titles had originally been a separate 
archive, so the several hundred issues making 
up this highly complete collection were easier to 
peruse. Limited exhibit space, and a huge scope, 
made for challenging and stimulating decisions.

Mention comic books to an average person 
and they are probably not going to think of 
a 15th-century illuminated Bible, but that is 
precisely where the “From the Heroic to the 
Depraved” exhibit begins. This Biblia paupe-
rum (Paupers’ Bible) is a reproduction of the 
Codex Palatinus Latinus 871 from the Vatican 
Library, and displays multiple bible scenes with 
vibrant color and action. The Paupers’ Bible 
was a picture bible genre developed in the 
late Middle Ages, using sequential images and 
even speech scrolls (a precursor to our speech 
bubbles). Usually written in a vernacular lan-
guage rather than in Latin, they were, despite 
the name, actually quite expensive. In these 
books the image was no longer subservient to 
the text, but occupied the center of the page and 



May 2012  263 C&RL News

bore an equal role in the telling of the tale. This 
is just one example of how the combination 
of images and written words has a long and 
powerful history of reaching, entertaining, 
and influencing audiences of all ages. While 
many years separate this Bible from Batman, 
the essential machinations of the art form are 
the same, and in the exhibit we briefly chart 
this continuity through the centuries.

Mainstream comics are commonly associ-
ated with the superhero genre, generally con-
sidered to have begun in 1938 with the debut 
of Jerry Siegel and Joe Shuster’s Superman, in 
Action Comics #1. Numerous superheroes with 
similar powers soon followed: Captain Marvel, 
The Flash, Spider-Man, The Human Torch, and 
others. There is very little in our collection that is 
pre-1938, though we do have a few Mutt & Jeff 
compilations, as well as a number of “Big Little 
Books” from the 1930s, some of which chronicle 
the first appearances of Dick Tracy, a creation 
of Northwestern alumnus Chester Gould.

Comics often reflect wider elements of cul-
ture, such as when the United States entered 
World War II and superheroes were written 
into battles against Axis powers. In one of the 
library’s issues of Human Torch Comics, the 
hero fights General Rommel in the Battle of 
El Alamein. Changes in society’s moral climate 
are also reflected in comics, evidenced in the 
horror and true crime genres. The violence 
and gore of these stories were quite popular 
immediately following World War II, perhaps 
as a carryover of the horror of war, but by the 
mid-1950s, a censorship backlash essentially 
eliminated them.

In selecting the exhibit’s mainstream mate-
rial, we included as broad a cross-section as 
possible, while also highlighting some major 
events in comics history represented in our 
collection. It was important to strike a balance 
between items with a general “wow” factor and 
more substantive issues that fewer people were 
likely to have heard of. Some decisions were 
easy: we had Amazing Spider-Man #1, which 
of course had to be part of the exhibit. Other 
selections required more nuance: while we did 
not have Woman in Red (the first female super-
hero), we did have an issue of Miss Fury (the 

first superhero created by a female cartoonist). 
Lacking either of the two issues of Lobo (the first 
African American character to headline his own 
comic, published by Dell in 1965), we included 
the January 1972 issue of Green Lantern, where 
DC Comics debuts their first African American 
superhero in a mainstream headlining role (i.e., 
the word black was not in the publication’s 
title). The background research needed to make 
these decisions was one of the most enjoyable 
portions of the project.

Underground comix developed amid the 
counterculture turmoil of the late 1960s. Liber-
alized attitudes towards sex, drugs, music, and 
government informed the stories and characters 
of these stories, often presented with a prevail-
ing sense of satire, sarcasm, or even paranoia. 
As it did for many elements of this new culture, 
the San Francisco Bay Area served as the cradle 
for the comix movement. There, leftist politics 
met private printing know-how (an effect of 
the music poster printing industry) allowing 
artists to professionally print small runs of their 
work. While they were absolutely a form of 
protest against the status quo and censorship, 
comix was also a brutally honest form of self-
expression in an age when many were search-
ing for a voice of their own. While the majority 
of comix contained highly sexualized fantasy 
images of women, leading to well-founded 
claims of misogyny, there was also a dedicated 
group of female artists and publishers promot-
ing women’s liberation through comix.

Comix found inspiration in many places, 
including the unauthorized, hand-drawn, por-
nographic renditions of popular comic book 
characters and celebrities known as “Tijuana 
Bibles.” In the 1920s through the 1940s these 
short, paneled stories circulated widely and 
influenced many of comix’ future stars. Hor-
ror and true crime titles in post-World War II 
America, mostly from EC (Entertaining Comics), 
were also central to the development of comix. 
The graphic violence, gore, and unflinching 
presentations of drug-use and other crimes 
prompted the U.S. Senate to hold hearings in 
1954 investigating comics, after which the in-
dustry conservatively self-regulated through the 
Comics Code Authority. This code effectively 



C&RL News May 2012  264

banned the “perverse” elements that would 
arise again in the late 1960s in works by comix 
artists such as R. Crumb, Gilbert Shelton, S. Clay 
Wilson, and Spain Rodriguez. 

In representing underground comix in the 
exhibit, we again strove for a balance between 
displaying the “classics,” and highlighting the di-
versity of our holdings. Early and genre-defining 
titles such as 
Zap Comics, 
F a b u l o u s 
Furry Freak 
Brothers, Bi-
jou Funnies, 
and Feds ‘N’ 
Heads had 
to be pres-
ent, but we 
also devoted 
a section to 
women’s lib-
eration with 
It Ain’t Me 
Babe, Wim-
min’s Com-
ics, Girl Fight Comics, and more. The “perversi-
ty” of some of the material created a challenging 
curatorial situation in which we were cognizant 
of the centrality of sex, violence, and gore to 
the art form, and felt obligated to display that, 
but also did not want to have an unnecessarily 
grotesque exhibit. We showed representative 
examples of censorship-challenging art, but did 
not belabor the points, selecting less inappro-
priate pages when possible. The comix in the 
show were augmented by extensive holdings of 
other underground publications from the 1960s 
and 1970s, including newspapers, ’zines, and 
political pamphlets.

The exhibit also briefly follows the changing 
landscape of comix after a 1973 U.S. Supreme 
Court ruling allowed local governments to de-
termine what they considered obscene. With re-
tail outlets disappearing and revenue drying up, 
many titles and publishing houses folded. By 
the late 1970s and early 1980s there was a trend 
toward collaborative underground anthologies 
and more graphic design oriented work. The 
magazine RAW was a comic anthology with an 

art and design focus, and included the serial 
publication of Art Spiegelman’s Maus before it 
was combined into the Pulitzer Prize-winning 
graphic novel. In the mid 1980s a convergence 
between underground and mainstream comics 
started to manifest. 

Alan Moore’s Watchmen is an excellent ex-
ample of the superhero genre imbued with dark, 

psychologi-
cal realism, 
a post-mod-
ern rhetori-
c a l  s t r u c -
t u r e ,  a n d 
cinematic, 
p o i n t - o f -
view imag-
ery. Graphic 
novels have 
become rec-
ognized as 
a legitimate 
and unique 
form of high 
art, while 

also sometimes appealing to low brow elements 
of slapstick, sex, and violence.

Comic books are central to the manner 
in which our culture makes sense of the 
contemporary world. We have become a 
highly image-oriented society, with ads, 
videos, and ubiquitous screens bombarding 
our senses—words and images inextricably 
intertwined. We are fluent in a vast language 
of iconography and visual allusion, often 
without realizing it, and our minds embrace 
fragmented narrative, moral ambiguity, visual 
foreshadowing, and the disjointed passage of 
time. The art form of sequential graphic art is 
responsible for teaching us much of this skill-
set. How we fill the space between the word 
and the image illuminates how we perceive 
the world and reveals a lot about ourselves. 
Comics are not just stories that we read and 
view; they effectively form a world that we 
inhabit as participant authors and artists. From 
the heroic to the depraved, from Superman 
to the holocaust, comics are an integral part 
of today’s cultural imagination. 

Underground comix section of the exhibit.