American Comic
As a foreigner in the United States, I had no opportunity growing with American Comics, unlike other American children. So I will just write down my thoughts about comics in the United States, how they appeared firstly and growed up. In the United States, comics appeared in public in newspapers. So the early pioneers of American comics were journalists, not cartoonists. Since the birth of American comics, it has a big difference from the native character of European comics in that it coexists with the mass media. This has had a great influence on the industrial development of comics and cartoon features.
In the nineteenth century, the agriculture economy of the southern farming center collapsed, and the industrialization and urbanization based on the manufacturing industry proceeded. Immigrants also sprung up. In New York City, 75% of the citizens were immigrants, 2 years old, and about 70 languages. Life in New York, where many ethnic groups lived, needed a lot of communication to improve, so a comic book with a mixture of letters and pictures in a letter-packed newspaper was able to gain a great deal of public consensus.
Joseph Fletcher, who was then the managing director of "New York World", managed the newspaper company with the idea that it was a bit out of the atmosphere. At the time, I created a new Sunday edition with a comic section devoted to the Sabbath-like Christian mind, which was the idea of New Journalism and Sunday Funnies. He gave Richard Felton Out Court a series of "Down Hogan's Alley," a story about a slum in "New York World" from 1895. His popularity in the film "Yellow Kid" Has doubled in one year.
The manga took up two-thirds of the page, and the situation described was very dramatic and dramatic, and until then, the text at the bottom of the picture was written on the banners in the pictures and on the pajamas in Yellow Kid, I was able to understand what the article was about. In addition, the use of yellow has opened the way for all colors to be used on newspaper plates and has become a widespread dissemination of cartoons to American mass media.
In the nineteenth century, the agriculture economy of the southern farming center collapsed, and the industrialization and urbanization based on the manufacturing industry proceeded. Immigrants also sprung up. In New York City, 75% of the citizens were immigrants, 2 years old, and about 70 languages. Life in New York, where many ethnic groups lived, needed a lot of communication to improve, so a comic book with a mixture of letters and pictures in a letter-packed newspaper was able to gain a great deal of public consensus.
Joseph Fletcher, who was then the managing director of "New York World", managed the newspaper company with the idea that it was a bit out of the atmosphere. At the time, I created a new Sunday edition with a comic section devoted to the Sabbath-like Christian mind, which was the idea of New Journalism and Sunday Funnies. He gave Richard Felton Out Court a series of "Down Hogan's Alley," a story about a slum in "New York World" from 1895. His popularity in the film "Yellow Kid" Has doubled in one year.
The manga took up two-thirds of the page, and the situation described was very dramatic and dramatic, and until then, the text at the bottom of the picture was written on the banners in the pictures and on the pajamas in Yellow Kid, I was able to understand what the article was about. In addition, the use of yellow has opened the way for all colors to be used on newspaper plates and has become a widespread dissemination of cartoons to American mass media.
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