UNLIMITED

The Atlantic

Melville. Faulkner. Spider-Man.

With Penguin Classics’ editions of Marvel superhero comics featuring Captain America and Black Panther, an American genre goes for highbrow recognition.
Source: Penguin Random House; The Atlantic

The slow embrace of the comic-book medium by elite audiences is a history with its own particular milestones, each marking a moment of sudden approbation by previously disapproving constituencies. George McManus received a congressional dinner and warm words from Franklin D. Roosevelt in celebration of his comic strip, Mid-century-modern artists like Roy Lichtenstein adapted (okay, lifted) images and panels from comic books. Art Spiegelman received a special Pulitzer citation for his graphic novel , first published in book form in 1986. That same year, this magazine featured a story titled “”—an early entrant in a genre of journalism so pervasive, it’s sometimes known to fans by the acronym CAFKA (as in, “Comics aren’t for kids anymore”). Another Pulitzer, 2001’s fiction prize, went to Michael Chabon for which suggested, alongside books like Jonathan Lethem’s , that comics, particularly the branch of the medium dedicated to superheroics, were a useful basis for

You’re reading a preview, subscribe to read more.

More from The Atlantic

The Atlantic4 min read
How ‘the End’ Helps Us Find New Beginnings
This is an edition of the Books Briefing, our editors’ weekly guide to the best in books. Sign up for it here. You have a plethora of metaphors to pick from when describing these early days of 2025. January is a phoenix rising from the ashes; a butt
The Atlantic6 min read
Why Liberals Struggle to Cope With Epochal Change
As I witnessed the despair and incomprehension of liberals worldwide after Donald Trump’s victory in November’s U.S. presidential election, I had a sinking feeling that I had been through this before. The moment took me back to 1989, when the Berlin
The Atlantic2 min read
The Power of the Mental Workout
This is an edition of The Wonder Reader, a newsletter in which our editors recommend a set of stories to spark your curiosity and fill you with delight. Sign up here to get it every Saturday morning. Some people view reading as though it’s homework,

Related Books & Audiobooks