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Canadian comics/version 1

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Inspite of U.S. dominance of Comic Book sales in Canada and the overwelming number of U.S. comic strips printed in Canadian newspapers there is such a thing as Canadian Comics. Why there hasn't been a article on the subject before now is weird.

Canadian comic strip

  • Even though a majority comic strips printed in Canadian newspapers are made in the States, there are some homemade Canadian comic strips: Backbench (comic strip) and For Better or Worse, to name two. From time to time a Canadian daily would print an American strip commenting on "out sourcing" of U.S. jobs. This is ironic because over 90% of strips printed in Canadian dailies are American.


Canadian comic books

  • Canadian World War II "Black and Whites" this came about because there was a ban on the distribution of U.S. comics during WWII "The first Canadian national superheroesNelvana, Johnny Canuck, and Canada Jack – emerged during the Second World War, when a foreign-exchange crisis led to a ban being placed on the importation of U.S. comics, including popular titles such as Superman (co-created by Canadian native Joe Shuster) and Batman. In part an outgrowth of our national political-cartooning tradition, the early Canadian comic book superheroes threw themselves into the battle against the Axis Powers, both abroad and on the home front. This period, which witnessed an explosion of English-Canadian comic book publishing, is now described as the Canadian Golden Age of Comics. In Quebec, no similar heroes appeared in the comic book field, which was dominated, instead, by religious comics.
  • With the end of most original Canadian comics publishing in 1947, Canada's superheroes disappeared, and the country entered a phase of foreign domination that lasted until the early seventies. In English Canada, kids grew up with a mélange of U.S. comics. In French Canada, the era was dominated by religious comics like Hérauts and by European comic art and Quebecois translations of American comics. In the early seventies, however, new alternative and underground comics (or comix) publishers emerged in Canada, and some creators began to dream of a second generation of national superheroes. The search for Captain Canada or a similar superhero had begun.
  • One measure of the U.S. domination of the comics medium during the fifties and sixties is that when Canadian superheroes finally did return during the 1969-1974 period, the first characters were buffoons. It was as if Canadian comics artists and writers recognized the absence of Canadian heroes, but could not quite – after a twenty-year diet of foreign comics – bring themselves to take such figures seriously. Nevertheless, following a spate of outrageous Captain Canadas and other intriguing satirical national superheroes, it was evident that there were creators who were bent on depicting national-superhero figures in a more serious fashion. Contributing to this resurgence of interest were the publication of Patrick Loubert and Michael Hirsh's The Great Canadian Comic Books, a book-length study of the Bell Features comics, and the touring of a related exhibition mounted by the National Gallery, "Comic Art Traditions in Canada, 1941-45," which together served to introduce English-Canadian comics creators and fans to their lost heritage. A similar process was also underway in Quebec with the publication in 1973 of the first historical survey of Quebec comics in a special issue of the literary journal La Barre du Jour." - taken from the aforementioned Canadian Comics website, as an excellent summary of the history of the Canadian superhero comic.


Canadian editorial cartoon

  • The one area that Canadians dominate in Canadian comics published in this country is in the field of editorial or political cartoons.
  • During the nineteenth century, political cartoonists developed symbols, like John Bull (the United Kingdom), Brother Jonathan or Uncle Sam (the United States), and Miss Canada, to personify various nations.
  • With the coming of editorial cartoonists like Duncan Mascpherson in the late 1950s Canadian political cartoons had matured. Len Norris and Aislin followed. Up to the 1950s most mainstream newpaper editorial cartoons were bland.
  • Now every Canadian city has at least one very popular and cleaver commentor of the news with a daily drawing.

Canada was also represented by another popular cartoon symbol: Johnny or Jack Canuck. Initially Johnny resembled an earlier national symbol – the habitant figure utilized to personify French Canada. Later, as Canada expanded westward, he became more Western in his appearance, sporting knee-high leather boots and a stetson.

Canadian editorial cartoonist

  • Aislin
  • Thomas Boldt (TAB)
  • Michael deAdder
  • Brian Gable
  • Duncan Mascpherson
  • Graeme MacKay
  • Bruce MacKinnon
  • Len Norris
  • Roy Petersen
  • Adrian Raeside




The Shuster Awards were created in 2005 by the Canadian Comic Book Creator Awards Association with the intention of honouring Canada's writers, artists, cartoonists, publishers and retailers. The annual awards are named in honour of Canadian-born co-creator of Superman, Joe Shuster (1914-1992), and are currently awarded at the Paradise Comics Toronto Comicon.

The National Newspaper Awards of Canada include a category for Editorial cartoons.

The Bédélys Prize have been awarded to French language comics at the Promo 9e Art Foundation since 2000.

The Doug Wright Awards were also inaugarated at the Toronto Comics Art Festival in 2005, with the intention of honouring excellence in alternative or artistic comics.

Artists

Some notable Canadian comic creators include: