Fayetteville Observer: Generational shifts happening on funny pages
Skip to commentsThe Fayetteville Observer is trying to find a suitable replacement for Doug Marlette’s Kudzu, and like most paper’s they offered a poll. The results indicate there is a generational shift happening in the comic pages today. Instead rolling out the poll results, they interviewed their readers, an associate professor, and a syndication president.
According to people who study comics from a social perspective, the results aren’t surprising. Once a gateway for younger readers into the newspaper, comic strips have become niche markets, each fiercely fighting for a small but devoted audience.
“The days of a comic appealing to everyone are past,” said Jonathan Chestnut. Chestnut, an associate professor of visual arts at Fayetteville State University, is an expert on the impact of comics in social context.
“The comics today are aiming at niches, finding a spot where they can thrive,” he said. “They aren’t trying to be everything. They aren’t trying to be a new ‘Peanuts.’ They are reflecting the social norms of our culture.”
And, he notes, that culture is far different from the one that launched the golden age of comics.
“I wouldn’t say that the magic is gone from comic strips,” Chestnut said. “But look at the difference in American life. When I was growing up, we’d pull the Sunday comics out before going to church, and my dad would read them to us. It sounds so Normal Rockwell now, but that was our life.”
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