Monday, December 22, 2025
ADVT 
National

Calgary professor focuses on "golden age" of Archie Comics in new book

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 14 Jan, 2015 10:27 AM

    CALGARY — Archie, Veronica, Betty and Reggie have undergone a modern makeover in the last four years, but it's the "golden age" of the popular Archie Comics that's the focus of a new book by a University of Calgary academic.

    English Prof. Bart Beaty was asked by Rutgers University Press in the United States to contribute to a series dedicated to select comic titles, which include Wonder Woman in the 1940s and the popular Watchmen graphic comic limited series.

    Beaty chose Archie Comics from the 1960s, which he considers the "golden age" of the series.

    "I actually proposed it to them, kind of defiantly, saying, 'You would never do a book on Archie,'" Beaty said.

    "When we generally talk about comics, we tend to talk about a very exclusive little band of very serious comics. No one talks about the unserious comics. I was making a point about why don't we look at the popular stuff instead of the serious stuff all the time."

    Beaty said Archie Comics has been published uninterrupted for 74 years and at one point was the best-selling comic book in the United States.

    He resisted the temptation to take a scholarly look at the modern Archie, which includes the character's death in a spinoff series that centres on grown-up renditions of Archie and his Riverdale pals.

    Other storylines aimed at adult Archie fans have included gay marriage, the death of longtime teacher Ms. Grundy, Archie's love interest Cheryl Blossom tackling breast cancer and Jughead and his friends dealing with financial struggles.

    "The current Archie publishers and artists have been trying to do more and more interesting things with him. They had an Archie zombie story and they've killed Archie off and introduced new characters. The company has tried to change the way they are thought of," said Beaty.

    What the writing and artwork did in the 1960s was help shape images of the American teenager, he suggested.

    "There's nothing really truly bad that happens — at least in the 1960s version — and I think people are comforted by that," Beaty said.

    "I think they're all one-dimensional and some of them are so one-dimensional it's almost an insult to one-dimensional characters. They are really, really fixed.

    "What's amazing is they've got 74 years out of these one-dimensional characters and they are still going strong."

    The book, called "12 Cent Archie," is to be released later this month.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    B.C. Government Approves Construction Of Contentious $8.8 Billion Site C Dam On The Peace River

    B.C. Government Approves Construction Of Contentious $8.8 Billion Site C Dam On The Peace River
    VICTORIA — The British Columbia government has approved its most expensive mega project with the construction of an $8.8 billion dam on the Peace River that Premier Christy Clark says marks a historic milestone that will be felt for a century.

    B.C. Government Approves Construction Of Contentious $8.8 Billion Site C Dam On The Peace River

    B.C. Court Convicts Alleged Hells Angel Of Extortion And Theft Over $5,000

    B.C. Court Convicts Alleged Hells Angel Of Extortion And Theft Over $5,000
    Neil MacKenzie of B.C.'s Criminal Justice Branch says the case against Robert Widdifield went to trial in the fall and a decision was handed down in Nanaimo, B.C., on Tuesday.

    B.C. Court Convicts Alleged Hells Angel Of Extortion And Theft Over $5,000

    Ontario man charged in alleged US$70m scheme after arriving at Pearson airport

    Ontario man charged in alleged US$70m scheme after arriving at Pearson airport
    HUNTSVILLE, Ont. — An Ontario man charged by American authorities four years ago in an alleged US$70 million Ponzi scheme has been arrested after arriving at Toronto's Pearson International airport.

    Ontario man charged in alleged US$70m scheme after arriving at Pearson airport

    Woman pleads guilty to spiriting away sheep from quarantined Ontario farm

    Woman pleads guilty to spiriting away sheep from quarantined Ontario farm
    PETERBOROUGH, Ont. — One of four people charged in the disappearance of 31 rare sheep east of Toronto has been convicted of transporting an animal under quarantine.

    Woman pleads guilty to spiriting away sheep from quarantined Ontario farm

    Harper urged to award Memorial Cross to mom of 'one-penny' soldier

    Harper urged to award Memorial Cross to mom of 'one-penny' soldier
    TORONTO — The mother of a Canadian soldier who was sent a one-penny government cheque after her son killed himself following a tour of duty in Afghanistan deserves a Memorial Cross, supporters say in a new petition.

    Harper urged to award Memorial Cross to mom of 'one-penny' soldier

    Lapsed funds mean good financial management, Treasury Board President says

    Lapsed funds mean good financial management, Treasury Board President says
    OTTAWA — Billions in federal funding left unspent each year is a sign of good financial management, says the minister who controls the government's purse strings.

    Lapsed funds mean good financial management, Treasury Board President says