So;
When I think about comics, I think about the fans a lot. One thing that I've been pondering is how the readers decide what's "real" in their comics. As a kid there's a tendency to accept everything that happens in a comic as "real." That is; whatever happens in the comic is official continuity. But as a reader gets older they become increasingly aware that there's a writer and artist behind the book, and that a story is influenced by stuff like "sales" and "trends." And with that knowledge you begin to see patterns; books padded for graphic novel compilations, capitalizing on trends, accquiescing to social mores other forces. The books themselves become a 50/50 combination of the stories themselves, and the expectations of the reader.
For a lot of hardcore fans there seems to be a lot of second-guessing; the mix isn't 50/50, but weighed a LOT more towards the real world side of the equation. Who's writing what, which books are "hot," technical bits.... the stories themselves become almost secondary. And with that comes a much stronger idea of the "right" way a given book should be done.
So I've been wondering how older, more experienced fans determine the "real/not real" cutoff point. If they're even aware of the process. Most folks HAVE a cutoff, but they may not be aware of how their subconscious determines it.
Don C.
When I think about comics, I think about the fans a lot. One thing that I've been pondering is how the readers decide what's "real" in their comics. As a kid there's a tendency to accept everything that happens in a comic as "real." That is; whatever happens in the comic is official continuity. But as a reader gets older they become increasingly aware that there's a writer and artist behind the book, and that a story is influenced by stuff like "sales" and "trends." And with that knowledge you begin to see patterns; books padded for graphic novel compilations, capitalizing on trends, accquiescing to social mores other forces. The books themselves become a 50/50 combination of the stories themselves, and the expectations of the reader.
For a lot of hardcore fans there seems to be a lot of second-guessing; the mix isn't 50/50, but weighed a LOT more towards the real world side of the equation. Who's writing what, which books are "hot," technical bits.... the stories themselves become almost secondary. And with that comes a much stronger idea of the "right" way a given book should be done.
So I've been wondering how older, more experienced fans determine the "real/not real" cutoff point. If they're even aware of the process. Most folks HAVE a cutoff, but they may not be aware of how their subconscious determines it.
Don C.
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