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    design history

    Explore " design history" with insightful episodes like "Representation", "Underground Comix Part 2", "Underground Comix Part 1", "[Greatest Hits] Katherine Kelly, VP of Higher Education Marketing at Handshake - Enhancing Career Opportunities Through Mobile Software" and "PCR 490: Last Show of the Year - Travel Posters, Lego Masters Australia & 4-Letter Trivia" from podcasts like ""Incomplet Design History", "Incomplet Design History", "Incomplet Design History", "How I Grew This" and "Master of One Network"" and more!

    Episodes (11)

    Representation

    Representation

    The history of graphic design has traditionally skewed toward designers from white hegemony. Where white men (and some women) tend to fill the pages, webpages, and galleries that celebrate design. As humanity evolves, we must realize the value of making space for more diverse voices in the design world. This episode elevates Black designers who have successfully fought against the forces of white supremacy and oppression to take back control of representation. Starting with Abolitionist broadsides, this episode examines how mostly white creators of broadsides, used to support the antislavery movement, were hindered by what we now call the “White Savior Complex” and that the tone of abolitionist imagery and vocabulary was marked by the perceived superiority of the white Northern audience. Next, we look to the famous “I AM A MAN” protest signs of the Civil Rights marches. These protest signs have endured and evolved into modern iterations as a piece of living history highlighting the fight for racial equality which continues to be an inspiration for art and design practices today.  The episode also takes a deep dive into the life and work of Archie Boston. Archie Boston is a graphic designer known for creating subversive, self-aware work in the advertising and design industry. The genius of his designs is that he often appropriates and retrofits racist imagery, similar to how Black vernacular has reclaimed certain racial slurs. Rounding out the discussion is a survey of current design collectives and groups of professional creatives such as the Design Justice Network. This episode discovers insightful parallels between Black representation in the Abolition era and today, clearly demonstrating that the best advocates for Black freedom and equality are Black people. Graphic design in the hands of Black activists becomes a powerful force for positive change and strengthening communities.

    TIMELINE - ARCHIE BOSTON

    1943 – b Clewiston, Florida 
    1961 – started attending Chouinard Art Institute
    1964 – interned at Carson/Roberts
    1965 – worked at Hixson And Jorgensen Advertising
    1966 – became art director at Botsford Ketchum
    1967 – started Boston & Boston Design with his brother Bradford
    1969 – left Boston & Boston and rejoined Botsford Ketchum
    1973 – started Archie Boston Design 
    1977 – received master’s degree from the University of Southern California
    1977 – started lecturing at California State University Long Beach (CSULB)
    2001 – published Fly in the Buttermilk: Memoirs of an African American in Advertising Design & Design Education
    2009 – published Lil' Colored Rascals in the Sunshine City

    TIMELINE - BLACK DESIGNERS FIGHTING AGAINST PREJUDICE AND SYSTEMIC OPPRESSION

    1830s – Abolitionist Broadsides, weaponized advocating to free slaves
    1900 – WEB Du Bois and Black Data, Infographic Activism
    1963 – March on Washington protest signs.
    1966 – Boston and Boston advertisements, “Ku Klux Klan”, “For Sale”
    1968 – I AM A MAN, Memphis Sanitation Strike
    1980s – Archie Boston Graphic Design, “I don’t want to marry your daughter”
    2016/2017 – Martin Typeface designed by Tré Seals inspired by I AM A MAN, Memphis Sanitation Strike posters
    2021 – Black lives matter protest posters

    REFERENCES

    Archie Boston Graphic Design files. (n.d.). Online Archive of California. https://oac.cdlib.org/findaid/ark:/13030/c8183dtf/

    Archie Boston papers, 1963-2018 and undated - Archives & Manuscripts at Duke University Libraries. (n.d.). David M. Rubenstein Rare Book & Manuscript Library. https://archives.lib.duke.edu/catalog/bostonarchie

    Barrett, L. (2014, February 12). “Am I not a man and a brother?” : The political power of the image. The Black Atlantic. https://sites.duke.edu/blackatlantic/2014/02/10/am-i-not-a-man-and-a-brother-the-political-power-of-the-image/

    Barry, N. (2022, January 4). Project 3, Phase 1: - Nouria Barry - Medium. Medium. https://medium.com/@nouriabarry/project-3-phase-1-e6fe0757b57b

    Black Disabled Lives Matter Riso Poster with Stickers Pack Bundle — jenwhitejohnson.com. (n.d.). https://jenwhitejohnson.com/Black-Disabled-Lives-Matter-Riso-Poster-with-Stickers-Pack-Bundle

    Boston, A. (2001). Fly in the buttermilk: Memoirs of an African American in Advertising, Design & Design Education.

    Boston, A. (2009). Lil’ colored rascals in the Sunshine city.

    Daniel, J. (2015, February 18). Four Corners – an interview with Archie Boston. Design Week. https://www.designweek.co.uk/issues/september-2013/four-corners-an-interview-with-archie-boston/

    Epplett, A. (2022). Abolitionist Broadsides and Anti-Slavery Imagery — Coalition of Master’s Scholars on Material Culture. Coalition of Master’s Scholars on Material Culture. https://cmsmc.org/publications/abolitionist-and-anti-slavery-imagery

    Frederick Douglass Project: In the Classroom: the Abolitionist Movement Packet | RBSCP. (n.d.). https://rbscp.lib.rochester.edu/2890

    Gaiter, C. (n.d.). Strikethrough: Typography Messages of Protest for Civil Rights. https://archive.bipocdesignhistory.com/. https://archive.bipocdesignhistory.com/ST-General

    Hayes, J. (2021). Africobra: Messages to the people.

    Hoffmitz Milken Center for Typography (HMCT). (2020, October 21). Archie Boston lecture [Video]. YouTube. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=oe5EVDoySwc

    Jan. 6, 1832: New England Anti-Slavery Society founded - Zinn Education Project. (2023, January 18). Zinn Education Project. https://www.zinnedproject.org/news/tdih/anti-slavery-society/

    McDonald, A. (2019, September 12). New Exhibit: “No One Can Suppress Archie Boston” - The Devil’s Tale. Duke University Libraries. https://blogs.library.duke.edu/rubenstein/2019/09/12/new-exhibit-no-one-can-suppress-archie-boston/

    Munro, S. (2021, July 27) Zoom Interview Archie Boston and the Author.

    Rapp, A. (September 1, 2008). "Archie Boston's Design Journey". AIGA. Retrieved 2022-01-28. 

    Reckdahl, K., & Rabut, A. (2020, March 12). This New Orleans artist challenges the way people see things. The New York Times. https://www.nytimes.com/2020/03/09/arts/bmike-artist-new-orleans.html

    Toppins, A. (2020, August 18). Beyond the Bauhaus: I AM A MAN. AIGA Design Educators Community. https://educators.aiga.org/beyond-the-bauhaus-i-am-a-man/

    Underground Comix Part 2

    Underground Comix Part 2

    If it seems like the underground comix scene was a raucous and raunchy boys club, that’s fairly accurate. However, there were plenty of women artists who reacted against the sexist depictions of women in comix, of which there was plenty. Their complaints about how women were being portrayed was seen to be just more censorship heaped on the male comix artists. Rather than just be quiet and go away, women like Trina Robbins, Willy Mendes, Linda Barry, Mary Fleener, and many others started drawing, bringing their own voices into the underground comix scene. Their experience in comix wasn’t all smooth sailing either. The women creating comix also insisted on absolute artistic freedom and the space to explore difficult topics, but it came at a price just like it did for the male comix artists. Undercover police, raids, and lawsuits while not necessarily the norm, seemed to be always looming. While some comix titles managed to run longer than others, the heyday of comix was all but over by the mid 1970s. However, the influence of underground comix is evident in the comics and graphic novels being published today that are willing to have serious discussions about equally serious topics.

    TIMELINE

    1880s  – Comics began publication in American newspapers 
    1895   – The Yellow Kid by Richard Outcault first published
    1914   – Krazy Kat by Geroge Herriman first published 
    1920s   – Tijuana Bibles began to be published 
    1930s   – Comic book began in America 
    1931   – Alice Schenker (born Alice Olsen) born in Racine, WI 
    1933   – Jerry Siegel and Joe Shuster created Superman
    1936-1939   – The comic magazine format became popular
    1936  – Victor Moscoso born in Spain 
    1937  – Frank Stack born in Houston, TX
    1938  – Gary Arlington born in San Jose, CA 
    1938  – Trina Robbins born in Brooklyn, NY 
    1939   – “She Saw The World’s Fair” published by Wesley Morse 
    1939   – Harvey Pekar born in Cleveland, OH 
    1939  – Richard “Grass” Green born in Fort Wayne, IN
    1940-1950s   – Comic burnings became common in America 
    1940  – Gilbert Shelton born in Houston, TX 
    1940  – Manuel “Spain” Reodriguez born in Buffalo, NY 
    1941  – Vaughn Bodé born in Utica, NY 
    1941  – S. Clay Wilson (Steven Clay Wilson) born in Lincoln, Nebraska 
    1941  – Jack “Jaxon” Jackson born in Texas 
    1942   – Rand Holmes born in Nova Scotia 
    1942  – Dan O’Neil born 
    1943   – Joel Beck born in Ross, CA 
    1943  – Robert Williaams born in Los Angeles, CA 
    1944   – George Herriman dies 
    1944  – Howard Cruse is born in Birmingham, AL 
    1943  – Robert Crumb born in Philadelphia, PA 
    1944  – Rick Griffin born in California 
    1944   – Bill Griffith born 
    1944   – Kim Deitch born in Los Angeles, CA 
    1944   – Max Gaines establishes Educational Comics
    1944   – Mervyn “Skip” Williamson born in San Antonio, TX 
    1945  – Lee Mars born 
    1947   – Jerry Siegel and Joe Shuster sued in NY Supreme Court to regain their rights to Superman; they lose the case and their jobs at DC Comics
    1947   – Jay Lynch born in Orange, NJ 
    1947   – Max Gaines dies in a boat crash; son William Gaines takes over EC Comics
    1948   – Art Spiegelman born in Stockholm, Sweden 
    1948  – Barbara “Willy” Mendes born 
    1948  – Aline Kominsky-Crumb born in Long Beach, NY
    1949  – Marry Wings born Mary Geller in Chicago, IL 
    1950s   – Student Press Movement starts 
    1950   – Educational Comics becomes Entertaining Comics under William Gaines 
    1950  – Gary Panter born in Durant, OK 
    1951  – Mary Fleener born
    1952-1956   – Harvey Kurtzman is the editor of MAD Magazine 
    1953  – Roberta Gregory born in Los Angeles, CA 
    1954   – “Seduction of the Innocent” by psychiatrist Frederick Werthan published  
    1954   – Comics Code Authority established 
    1954  – Victor Moscoso starts at Cooper Union Art School in Manhattan 
    1955   – William Gaines starts humor magazine, MAD Magazine 
    1955  – Charles Burns born 
    1956   – After being cited by the CCA, EC comics diverts resources to new title MAD Magazine 
    1956  – Ralph Bakshi starts animating at Terrytoons 
    1956   – Alice and Don Schenker marry 
    1956  – Lynda Barry born in Richland Center, WI 
    1957   – Harvey Kurtzmaan’s Trump magazine published
    1957  – Peter Baagge born in New York 
    1957-1960  – Spain Rodriguez studies at Silvermine Guild School of Art in New Canaan, CT 
    1958   – Moe Moskowitz moves to Bay Are and opens bookstore 
    1958  – Robert Crumb and his brother Charles publish satire magazine “Foo” 
    1958-1962   – Frank Stack and Gilbert Shelton edit University of Texas at Austin’s newspaper, The Texas Ranger  
    1959  – Victor Moscoso moves to San Francisco, CA 
    1960s   – Underground comix movement started 
    1960   – MAD Magazine had circulation of 1.4 million 
    1960  – Rick Griffin met filmmaker John Severson at screening of Surf Fever movie 
    1960   – Harvey Kurtzman starts Help! Magazine 
    1960  – Phoebe Gloeckner born in Philadelphia, PA 
    1960  – Alison Bechdel born in Beech Creek, PA 
    1961   – Skip Williamson sells first comic to Help! Magazine 
    1961  – Daniel Clowes born in Chicaago, IL 
    1963   – In mainstream comics, Dell, DC and Marvel were the major publishers 
    1963  – Rick Griffin starts working at Surfer Magazine as a cartoonist, debuting “Murphy” 
    1963  – Rick Griffin is seriously injured as a passenger in a drunk driving accident 
    1963  – Spain Rodriguez starts work at the Western Electric Company Plant
    1963   – Jay Lynch moves to Chicago to become a cartoonist 
    1956   – America gets involved in the Vietnam War 
    1963   – March On Washington 
    1963   – President John F. Kennedy assassinated 
    1963  – Betty Friedan’s “The Feminine Mystique” is published
    1964   – Jack “Jaxon” Jackson publishes “God Nose” 
    1964  – After being promoted to director of cartoons at Terrytown, Ralph Bakshi left to run animation at Paramount Pictures 
    1962   – Frank Stack  publishes “The Adventures of Jesus” 
    1962   – Harvey Pekar and Robert Crumb meet in Cleveland, OH and become friends and collaborators 
    1965   – Birth of the Underground Press 
    1965  – Rick Griffin picks up “Murphy” comics in Surfer after a pause 
    1965   – Schenkers launch Print Mint inside of Moskowitz’s bookstore 
    1965  – Spain Rodriguez spends summer in NYC creating cartoons for The Militant paper and joined anarchist group Resurgence Youth Movement 
    1965  – Robert Williams starts working as Art Director for Ed “Big Daddy” Roth 
    1965  – Robert Crumb starts taking LSD 
    1965  – Julie Doucet born in Saint-Lambert Quebec, Canada 
    1965-1966   – Mario Savia’s Free Speech Movement impacts Berkely’s campus 
    1966  – After graduating from San Francisco Art Institute, Victor Moscoso joins faculty 
    1966   – Art Spiegelman is Topps Bubblegum’s star artist 
    1966  – Spain Rodriguez has his first cover in paper East Village Other 
    1966  – Trina Robbins moved back to NYC from LA and worked for East Village Other as advisor and illustrator 
    1966  – Rick Griffin joins Jook Savages and designs posters for their art shows in San Francisco
    1966   – Kim Deitch moves to NYC and gets “Sunshine Girl” published in The East Village Other 
    1966   – Joel Beck publishes “Lenny of Laredo”, “Marching Marvin” and “The Profit” 
    1966   – Print Mint publishes their first comix, a reprint of Beck’s “Lenny of Laredo” 
    1966  – NOW, of the National Organization for Women, was formed 
    1966   – Underground Press Syndicate established by East Village Other editor Walter Bowart 
    1966   – Weekly & monthly underground papers regularly publish Underground Comix 
    1967  – Robert Crumb leaves Cleveland, OH, his job at Americana Greetings, and wife Dana to move to San Francisco, CA 
    1967  – Gilbert Shelton’s “Wonder Wart Hog” published by Pete Millar 
    1967  – Victor Moscoso and RIck Griffin begin to collaborate on posters and Zap Comics covers 
    1967  – Rick Griffin commissioned for “Pow-Wow, a Gathering of the Tribes for a Human Be-In” held in Golden Gate Park’s polo grounds 
    1967  – Art Spiegelman comes up with the idea for Wacky Packs working for Topps Bubblegum 
    1967  – “Summer of Love” takes place in San Francisco for 9 months 
    1967   – Bijou Funnies, initially The Chicago Mirror, founded by Skip WIlliamson and Jay Lynch in Chigaco, IL 
    1967   – Art Spiegelman moves to San Francisco, CA 
    1967  – “Cavalier” Magazine serializes Robert Crumb’s “Fritz the Cat” 
    1967  – First drawings of Gilbert Shelton’s The Fabulous Furry Freak Brothers appear on a flier for short student film “The Texas Hippies March on the Capitol” 
    1967-1973   – Jay Lynch’s “‘Nard ‘n’ Pat” comic publication years 
    1968   – Rand Holmes moves to Vancouver, Canada and works for Georgia Straight a weekly underground tabloid and starts “The Adventures of Harold Hedd” 
    1968  – S. Clay Wilson moves to San Francisco and becomes friends with Robert Crumb, starts to contribute to Zap Comics 
    1968  – First issue of Zap Comix by Robert Crumb released
    1968  – “Keep on Truckin’” one page comix published in Zap Comix by Robert Crumb 
    1968  – Robert Crumb sends for his wife Dana to join him in San Francisco 
    1968  – Robert Crumb first sees S. Clay Wilson’s comix work 
    1968  – Gary Arlington opens his comic book store in the Mission District in San Francisco, CA 
    1968  – Spain Rodriguez’s cover for Feb 2nd issue of East Village Other creates legal issues over depiction of a sexual act 
    1968   – Robert Crumb publishes “Zap” 
    1968   – Skip Williamson’s “Snappy Sammy Smoot (1968-1996) makes its debut in Bijou Funnies 
    1968  – Robert William’s controversial painting “Appetite for Destruction” is used as album art for the Guns ‘N’ Roses album of the same name 
    1968  – “Yellow Dog” comix anthology started by Joel Beck and John Thompson 
    1968-1973   – Skip Williamson’s Sammy Smoot character is played by Carl Reiner on the comedy TV show “Rowan and Martin’s Laugh-In” 
    1968-1975   – Considered the boom years of Underground Comix 
    1968   – Apex Novelties ran by Don Donaahue starts publishing comix 
    1968  – US Government outlaws LSD 
    1968  – Robert Crumb starts “Snatch Comix” published by Apex Novelties 
    1969   – Neil Armstrong lands on the moon
    1969-1970  – “Odd Bodkins” by Dan O’Neil is published in the San Francisco Oracle 
    1969  – Whitney Museum Exhibition “Human Concern/Personal Torment: The Grotesque in American Art” showed some of Robert Crumb’s work 
    1969  – Roger Brand at the first comic convention panel for Underground Comix artists, declined to invite Trina Robbins 
    1969   – Rip Off Press founded by Gilbert Shelton, Jack “Jaxon” Jackson, Dave Moriarty and Fred Todd 
    1969   – Kim Deitch and Trinaa Robbins start dating 
    1969  – Bill Griffith and Jay Kinney meet and start idea for “Young Lust” 
    1969   – Vaughn Bode briefly edits “Gothic Blimp Works”; Kim Deitch begins to edit “Gothic Blimp Works” 
    1969  – Print Mint is raided by police over “Zap Comix” fourth issue (featured “Joe Blow” incest comic by Robert Crumb) 
    1969  – Schenkers arrested over violation of California Penal Code Section 311.2 (illegal distribution of pornography) due to publishing “Zap Comics” fourth issue 
    1969  – S. Clay Wilson contributes to “Jiz Comics” under pseudonym Howard Crankwood 
    1970s   – Graphic Novel format began
    1970s  –Jack “Jaxon” Jackson creates historical narrative comix like “Comanche Moon”, “Los Tejanos”
    1970  – Ed “Big Daddy” Roth’s shop closes and Robert Williams ends his tenure as Art Director 
    1970  – Chris Kirkpatrick, owner of New Yorker Book Store that sold Zap Comix, convicted 
    1970   – Bill Griffith moves to San Francisco, CA
    1970  – Trina Robbins and Kim Deitch’s daughter Casey born 
    1970  – “It Ain’t Me Babe” the first women’s liberation newspaper, was published in Berkley 
    1970   – Kitchen Sink Press ran by Denis Kitchen founded 
    1970  – “Skull” published by Rip Off Press 
    1970  – Many Underground Comix artists met and created The Cartoon Workers Union
    1970  – Robert William released collected “Coochy Cooty Men’s Comics” published by Print Mint 
    1970   – Last Gasp Eco Funnies ran by Ron Turner founded 
    1970  – “Young Lust” by Bill Griffith and Jaay Kinney published by Company & Sons 
    1970  – Robert Crumb meets with Ralph Bakshi and Steve Kraantz about making a movie out of his popular character Fritz the Cat  
    1970  – “Abortion Eve” comic produced by Joyce Farmer and Lyn Chevely 
    1970  – Spain Rodriguez releases “Zodiac Mindwarp” (East Village Other) and “Subert” (Rip Off Press) 
    1970  – Kim Deitch and Trina Robbins end their relationship
    1971  – Gilbert Shelton’s Fabulous Furry Freak Brothers first released
    1971  – Roberta Gregory attend CSU Long Beach and contributes “Feminist Funnies” to their newspaper 
    1971  – S. Clay Wilson contributes to “Bent” (Print Mint) 
    1971  – Aline Kominsky-Crumb grates with degree in fine art from University of Arizona 
    1971  – “Ms Magazine” founded by Gloria Steinem and art directed by Bea Feitler 
    1971   – Bill Griffith’s “Zippy the Pinhead” debuts in Real Pulp Comics #1 by Print Mint 
    1971  – Dan O’Neil and the Air Pirates (Bobby London, Shary Flenniken, Gary Hallgren, and Ted Richards) create “Air Pirate Funnies” published by Last Gasp 
    1971  – Lee Marr’s “Pudge” & “Girl Blimp” published 
    1971  – Roberta Gregory sells her first comic to “Wimmen’s Comix” 
    1971  – Disney filed suit in Northern District of California against the comic artists from the “Air Pirate Funnies” 
    1971   – Rip Off Press moves from Mowry’s Opera House to 17th Street 
    1971   – After moving back to NYC, Art Spiegelman once again returns to San Francisco, CA
    1972   – “The Adventures of Harold Hedd” released in first collected volume, the second volume out the following year
    1972  – “Tits ‘n’ Clits” All women comix anthology by Joyce Farmer and Lyn Chevely published first issue (Nanny Goat Productions) 
    1972  – Aline Kominsky-Crumb has comix debut in “Wimmen’s Comix” #1 with “Goldie a Neurotic Woman” 
    1972  – Robert Crumb and Aline Kominsky-Crumb meet at a San Francisco party 
    1972  – “Fritz the Cat” movie directed by Ralph Bakshi released 
    1972  – 2 all women’s comix anthologies started “Wimmen’s Comix” (Trina Robbins, Last Gasp) and “Tit’s &  Clits” (Joyce Farmer and Lyn Chevelyl, Nanny Goat Productions)
    1972  – Disney granted it’s injunction against Dan O’Neil and the other comic artists from “Air Pirate Funnies”; found guilty of copyright infringement and trade disparagement 
    1972  – “Bizzare Sex” started published by Denis Kitchen of Kitchen Sink Press 
    1972  – Print Mint hits 1 million issues of “Zap Comix” sold 
    1973   – Rand Holmes travels to San Francisco, CA to get the second volume of “The Adventures of Harold Hedd” published by Last Gasp 
    1973  – Bill Griffith’s “A Sour Look at the Comix Scene, or Out of the Inkwell and Into the Toilet” runs in The San Francisco Phoenix 
    1973  – Undercover cop buys first issue of “Tits ‘n’ Clits” at San Francisco Bookstore Fahrenheit 451; owners charged with selling pornography and Farmer and Cheverly are forced to hide from law enforcement for 2 years 
    1973  – Aline Kominsky-Crumb moves onto Robert Crumb’s farm property as his girlfriend 
    1973  – “Come Out Comix” by Mary Wings self-published 
    1973  –  Year of the Crash of Comix 
    1973  – Rick Griffin is a born again Christian 
    1973  – Gilbert Shelton’s The Fabulous Furry Freak Brother’s comics had sold 400,000 copies; eventually selling 45 million copies to date in 16 different languages 
    1972   – Haavery Pekar’s first story “Brilliant American Maniacs Series No. 1 Crazy Ed” published in “People’s Comics” with art by Robert Crumb 
    1972   – Justin Green publishes “Binky Brown Meets the Holy Virgin Mary” 
    1972   – Art Spiegelman publishes first 3 pages of Maus 
    1973  –Supreme Court’s  Miller v. California decision  rules that vendors can be jailed and retroactively fined for selling obscene materials, cannot plead ignorance to contents 
    1974   – Jay Lynch has a one week tenure as editor at Hustler Magazine
    1974  – Lynda Barry attends Evergreen State College in Olympia, WA 
    1974   – Art Spiegelman self publishes “Ace Hole” and “Midget Detective” 
    1974  – Marvel releases “Comix Book” 
    1974  – S. Clay Wilson contributes to “Pork” (Co-Op Press) 
    1974  – “The Nine Lives of Fritz the Cat” directed by Ralph Bakshi released 
    1975   – The Schenkers working partnership with Bob and Peggy Rita dissolves and Print Mint slows down production and distribution 
    1975  – “Felch Comics” by Keith Green
    1975  – Vietnam War ends, American troops withdraw from Saigon 
    1975  – Victor Moscoso starts attending Yale 
    1975  – Bill Griffith and Art Spiegelman create “Arcade” comix anthology 
    1975   –  Vaughn Bodé dies at age 33 
    1976   – Harvey Pekar self publishes “How I Quit Collecting Records and Put Out a Comic Book with the Money I Saved” with art by Robert Crumb 
    1976  – “Wet Satin” erotic satirical all-women’s comics anthology published by Kitchen Sink Press 
    1976  – Aline Kominsky-Crumb moves off of the Crumb farm commune 
    1976  – Mary Wing’s “Dyke Shorts” is self-published 
    1976  – Roberta Gregory creates “Dynamite Damsels” (Self-published) 
    1976  – Copyright Act becomes law 
    1976  – Lee Marrs “The Further Fattening Adventures of Pudge, Girl Blimp” featured the first openly bisexual character in comics 
    1967  – Larry Fuller creates “Gay Heartthrobs” 
    1976   – Harvey Pekar’s “American Splendor #1” published 
    1976  – Aline Kominsky-Crumb and Diane Noomin start “Twisted Sisters” 
    1976-1077  – Punk scene emerges
    1971  – Howard Cruse’s “Barefootz” first published 
    1977   – Kitchen Sink Press reprints Joel Becks comics under title “Joel Beck’s Comics & Stories” 
    1977  – Gary Panter moves to Los Angeles, CA 
    1977  – S. Clay Wilson releases comix with his most popular character “The Checkered Demon” (Last Gasp) 
    1977  – Gilbert Shelton’s character Fat Freddy’s cat from “The Fabulous Furry Freak Brothers” gets its own spin off comic 
    1977  – Robert Crumb divorces Dana
    1978  – Gilbert Shelton moves to San Francisco, CA from Austin, TX 
    1978  – First graphic novel “A Contract With God” by Will Eisner is published by Baronet Press 
    1978  – Dan O’Neils appeal in the case of Dismney and the Air Pirates does not rule in O’Neil’s favor 
    1978  – Gilbert Shelton makes “Shakedown Street” album cover for The Grateful Dead 
    1978  – Paul Mavrides starts to collaborate on “The Fabulous Furry Freak Brothers” 
    1979  – Gilbert Shelton and wife/agent Lora move to Europe 
    1979  – The Supreme Court declines to take Dan O’Neil’s appeal case against Disney 
    1979  – Robert William publishes “The Lowbrow Art of Robt. Williams” 
    1979  – Mary Wings creates drug awareness book “Are Your Highs Getting You Down?” with a California Arts Council Grant 
    1979  – Denis Kitchen approaches Howaard Cruse about making “Gay Comix”
    1979  – Rip Off Press ends
    1979  – Art Spiegelman starts to teach at the School of Visual Arts in NY
    1980  – First issue of “Gay Comix” (Kitchen SInk Press) released, edited by Howard Cruse 
    1980  – “Raw” comics anthology created by Art Spiegelman and Francoise Mouly 
    1980-1991   – Maus: A Survivor’s Tale by Art Spiegelman serialized 
    1981  – “Wimmen’s Comix” takes a 6 year hiatus 
    1981  – Daniel Clowes and his friends create “Psycho Comics” 
    1981  – Robert Crumb starts comix magazine “Weirdo” published by Last Gasp 
    1981  – Robert Crumb and Aline Kominsky-Crumb’s daughter Sophie is born; they move to Southern France
    1982  – Last issue of “Bizzare Sex” released 
    1982  – Gilbert and Jamie Hernandez create “Love and Rockets” published by Fantagraphics 
    1983  – “Dykes to Watch Out For” by Alison Bechdel first published 
    1984  – Mary Fleener self publishes her first comic “Hoodoo” 
    1984  – Robert Crumb passes editorship of “Weirdo” to Peter Bagge 
    1985   – Print Mint, since renamed Reprint Mint, is sold by the Schenkers 
    1985  – Mary Wings “She Came Too Late” lesbian detective novel published 
    1985  – Topps Bubbglegum starts Garbage Pail Kids cards 
    1986   – Doubleday publishes the first of it’s two collected volumes of Harvye Pekar’s “American Splendor” with the next coming out the following year 
    1986  – Jack “Jaxon” Jackson publishes “Illustrated History of Ranching in Texas” 
    1986  – Peter Bagge resigns as editor at “Weirdo”; Aline Kominsky-Crumb takes over 
    1987  – Robert Crumb and Aline Kominsky-Crumb marry 
    1988  – “Dirty Plotte” by Julie Doucet was first self-published 
    1988  – Roberta Gregory self publishes “Winging It” and “Sheila and the Unicorn” 
    1989   – Jack “Jaxon” Jackon publishes “Rip Off Pres: The Golden Era #21” 
    1989  – Daniel Clowes first issue of “Eightball” 
    1989  – Roberta Gregory moves to Seattle and begins to work at Fantagraphics Books 
    1990   – Art Spiegelman receives a Guggenheim Fellowship to work on Maus’ second volume 
    1990  – Peter Bagge first publishes “Hate” (Fantagraaphics) 
    1991   – American Splendor’s once a year regular release stops with issue fifteen 
    1991  – Rick Griffin dies after motorcycle accident 
    1991  – Roberta Gregory’s “Naughty Bits” issue one self published 
    1991  – “Dirty Plotte” published by Drawn & Quarterly 
    1991  – Julie Doucet moves to NYC for one year and makes “My New York Diary” 
    1992   – Maus: A Survivor’s Tale by Art Spiegelman wins a Pulitzer Prize 
    1992  – “Wimmen’s Comix” publishes it’s last issue 
    1993   – Don Schenkers dies
    1994  – Robert Williams first published “Juxtapoz Arts & Culture” Magazine
    1995  – “Stuck Rubber Baby” by Howard Cruse published 
    1995  – “Black Hole” by Charles Burns first published by Fantagraphics 
    1995  – “Crumb” documentary about Robert Crumb by Terry Zwigoff is released 
    1996  – Mary Fleener’s “Life of the Party” released  
    1998  – Jack “Jaxon” Jackson creates “Lost Cause” 
    1999   – Joel Beck dies 
    2001-2003  – Roberta Gregory’s popular character Bitchy Bitch from “Naughty Bits” starred in the animated cartoon “Life’s a Bitch” on Comedy Network (Canada) and Oxygen Network (US) 
    2001  – Daniel Clowes “Eightball” story “Ghost World” is made into a movie of the same name 
    2002   – Rand Holmes dies 
    2002  – Phoebe Gloeckner’s “The Diary of a Teenage Girl” published by Frog Books 
    2003   – “American Splendor” the award winning movie about Harvey Pekar’s life starring Paul Giamatti is released 
    2005  – “Black Hole” by Charles Burns released as graphic novel by Fantagraphics 
    2006  –Jack “Jaxon” Jackson dies 
    2006  – “Fun Home: A Family Tragicomic” by Alison Bechdel published 
    2010   – Harvey Pekar dies 
    2015  – “Fun Home” the Broadway Musical wins a Tony for best musical 
    2015  – “The Diary of a Teenage Girl” by Phoebe Glockner made into a movie with the same name 
    2017   – Skip Williamson and Jay Lynch die within a week and a half of each other 
    2019  – Howard Cruse dies 
    2020   – Alice Schnker dies 
    2021  – Streaming channel Tubi releases 8 episode show “The Freak Brothers” based on Gilbert Shelton’s “The Fabulous Furry Freak Brothers” 
    2021  – Spain Rodriguez dies 
    2021  – S. Clay Wilson dies 
    2022  – Aline Kominsky-Crumb dies 

    REFERENCES

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    Costello, B., & Gremins, B. (2021). The Other 1980s: Reframing Comics’ Crucial Decade. Louisiana State University Press.

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    Underground Comix Part 1

    Underground Comix Part 1

    Comix, spelled with an x at the end instead of c, is a uniquely American movement and brings to mind eccentric, explicit, and subversive comics aimed at an adult audience. Having roots in the explicit Tijuana Bibles of the 1920, the lurid horror comics produced by EC, and the later wackiness of MAD Magazine, Comix creators defied censorship laws and American moral standards to create their unique artistic visions and thrived as a part of the Counterculture movement of the 1960s. In some respects, comix were a reaction against what the artists saw as the over-sanitized mainstream comics that did nothing innovative or interesting. While comix creators came from all over the US, the hotbed for comix innovation happened in San Francisco. Many cite the first issue of Robert Crumb’s anthology “Zap” as the birth of underground comix as a movement and the number of comix grew rapidly after that. The complete artistic freedom comix artists insisted on came at a price as they pushed up against censorship with their themes of sexism, racism, violence, and questionable morality. Comix artists, publishers and the shops selling comix titles faced police raids and lawsuits, some of which lasted for years. Pushing up against censorship (and good taste) comix proved that comics could be more than just superheroes saving the day.

    TIMELINE

    1880s  – Comics began publication in American newspapers 
    1895   – The Yellow Kid by Richard Outcault first published
    1914   – Krazy Kat by Geroge Herriman first published 
    1920s   – Tijuana Bibles began to be published 
    1930s   – Comic book began in America 
    1931   – Alice Schenker (born Alice Olsen) born in Racine, WI 
    1933   – Jerry Siegel and Joe Shuster created Superman
    1936-1939   – The comic magazine format became popular
    1936  – Victor Moscoso born in Spain 
    1937  – Frank Stack born in Houston, TX
    1938  – Gary Arlington born in San Jose, CA 
    1938  – Trina Robbins born in Brooklyn, NY 
    1939   – “She Saw The World’s Fair” published by Wesley Morse 
    1939   – Harvey Pekar born in Cleveland, OH 
    1939  – Richard “Grass” Green born in Fort Wayne, IN
    1940-1950s   – Comic burnings became common in America 
    1940  – Gilbert Shelton born in Houston, TX 
    1940  – Manuel “Spain” Reodriguez born in Buffalo, NY 
    1941  – Vaughn Bodé born in Utica, NY 
    1941  – S. Clay Wilson (Steven Clay Wilson) born in Lincoln, Nebraska 
    1941  – Jack “Jaxon” Jackson born in Texas 
    1942   – Rand Holmes born in Nova Scotia 
    1942  – Dan O’Neil born 
    1943   – Joel Beck born in Ross, CA 
    1943  – Robert Williaams born in Los Angeles, CA 
    1944   – George Herriman dies 
    1944  – Howard Cruse is born in Birmingham, AL 
    1943  – Robert Crumb born in Philadelphia, PA 
    1944  – Rick Griffin born in California 
    1944   – Bill Griffith born 
    1944   – Kim Deitch born in Los Angeles, CA 
    1944   – Max Gaines establishes Educational Comics
    1944   – Mervyn “Skip” Williamson born in San Antonio, TX 
    1945  – Lee Mars born 
    1947   – Jerry Siegel and Joe Shuster sued in NY Supreme Court to regain their rights to Superman; they lose the case and their jobs at DC Comics
    1947   – Jay Lynch born in Orange, NJ 
    1947   – Max Gaines dies in a boat crash; son William Gaines takes over EC Comics
    1948   – Art Spiegelman born in Stockholm, Sweden 
    1948  – Barbara “Willy” Mendes born 
    1948  – Aline Kominsky-Crumb born in Long Beach, NY
    1949  – Marry Wings born Mary Geller in Chicago, IL 
    1950s   – Student Press Movement starts 
    1950   – Educational Comics becomes Entertaining Comics under William Gaines 
    1950  – Gary Panter born in Durant, OK 
    1951  – Mary Fleener born
    1952-1956   – Harvey Kurtzman is the editor of MAD Magazine 
    1953  – Roberta Gregory born in Los Angeles, CA 
    1954   – “Seduction of the Innocent” by psychiatrist Frederick Werthan published  
    1954   – Comics Code Authority established 
    1954  – Victor Moscoso starts at Cooper Union Art School in Manhattan 
    1955   – William Gaines starts humor magazine, MAD Magazine 
    1955  – Charles Burns born 
    1956   – After being cited by the CCA, EC comics diverts resources to new title MAD Magazine 
    1956  – Ralph Bakshi starts animating at Terrytoons 
    1956   – Alice and Don Schenker marry 
    1956  – Lynda Barry born in Richland Center, WI 
    1957   – Harvey Kurtzmaan’s Trump magazine published
    1957  – Peter Baagge born in New York 
    1957-1960  – Spain Rodriguez studies at Silvermine Guild School of Art in New Canaan, CT 
    1958   – Moe Moskowitz moves to Bay Are and opens bookstore 
    1958  – Robert Crumb and his brother Charles publish satire magazine “Foo” 
    1958-1962   – Frank Stack and Gilbert Shelton edit University of Texas at Austin’s newspaper, The Texas Ranger  
    1959  – Victor Moscoso moves to San Francisco, CA 
    1960s   – Underground comix movement started 
    1960   – MAD Magazine had circulation of 1.4 million 
    1960  – Rick Griffin met filmmaker John Severson at screening of Surf Fever movie 
    1960   – Harvey Kurtzman starts Help! Magazine 
    1960  – Phoebe Gloeckner born in Philadelphia, PA 
    1960  – Alison Bechdel born in Beech Creek, PA 
    1961   – Skip Williamson sells first comic to Help! Magazine 
    1961  – Daniel Clowes born in Chicaago, IL 
    1963   – In mainstream comics, Dell, DC and Marvel were the major publishers 
    1963  – Rick Griffin starts working at Surfer Magazine as a cartoonist, debuting “Murphy” 
    1963  – Rick Griffin is seriously injured as a passenger in a drunk driving accident 
    1963  – Spain Rodriguez starts work at the Western Electric Company Plant
    1963   – Jay Lynch moves to Chicago to become a cartoonist 
    1956   – America gets involved in the Vietnam War 
    1963   – March On Washington 
    1963   – President John F. Kennedy assassinated 
    1963  – Betty Friedan’s “The Feminine Mystique” is published
    1964   – Jack “Jaxon” Jackson publishes “God Nose” 
    1964  – After being promoted to director of cartoons at Terrytown, Ralph Bakshi left to run animation at Paramount Pictures 
    1962   – Frank Stack  publishes “The Adventures of Jesus” 
    1962   – Harvey Pekar and Robert Crumb meet in Cleveland, OH and become friends and collaborators 
    1965   – Birth of the Underground Press 
    1965  – Rick Griffin picks up “Murphy” comics in Surfer after a pause 
    1965   – Schenkers launch Print Mint inside of Moskowitz’s bookstore 
    1965  – Spain Rodriguez spends summer in NYC creating cartoons for The Militant paper and joined anarchist group Resurgence Youth Movement 
    1965  – Robert Williams starts working as Art Director for Ed “Big Daddy” Roth 
    1965  – Robert Crumb starts taking LSD 
    1965  – Julie Doucet born in Saint-Lambert Quebec, Canada 
    1965-1966   – Mario Savia’s Free Speech Movement impacts Berkely’s campus 
    1966  – After graduating from San Francisco Art Institute, Victor Moscoso joins faculty 
    1966   – Art Spiegelman is Topps Bubblegum’s star artist 
    1966  – Spain Rodriguez has his first cover in paper East Village Other 
    1966  – Trina Robbins moved back to NYC from LA and worked for East Village Other as advisor and illustrator 
    1966  – Rick Griffin joins Jook Savages and designs posters for their art shows in San Francisco
    1966   – Kim Deitch moves to NYC and gets “Sunshine Girl” published in The East Village Other 
    1966   – Joel Beck publishes “Lenny of Laredo”, “Marching Marvin” and “The Profit” 
    1966   – Print Mint publishes their first comix, a reprint of Beck’s “Lenny of Laredo” 
    1966  – NOW, of the National Organization for Women, was formed 
    1966   – Underground Press Syndicate established by East Village Other editor Walter Bowart 
    1966   – Weekly & monthly underground papers regularly publish Underground Comix 
    1967  – Robert Crumb leaves Cleveland, OH, his job at Americana Greetings, and wife Dana to move to San Francisco, CA 
    1967  – Gilbert Shelton’s “Wonder Wart Hog” published by Pete Millar 
    1967  – Victor Moscoso and RIck Griffin begin to collaborate on posters and Zap Comics covers 
    1967  – Rick Griffin commissioned for “Pow-Wow, a Gathering of the Tribes for a Human Be-In” held in Golden Gate Park’s polo grounds 
    1967  – Art Spiegelman comes up with the idea for Wacky Packs working for Topps Bubblegum 
    1967  – “Summer of Love” takes place in San Francisco for 9 months 
    1967   – Bijou Funnies, initially The Chicago Mirror, founded by Skip WIlliamson and Jay Lynch in Chigaco, IL 
    1967   – Art Spiegelman moves to San Francisco, CA 
    1967  – “Cavalier” Magazine serializes Robert Crumb’s “Fritz the Cat” 
    1967  – First drawings of Gilbert Shelton’s The Fabulous Furry Freak Brothers appear on a flier for short student film “The Texas Hippies March on the Capitol” 
    1967-1973   – Jay Lynch’s “‘Nard ‘n’ Pat” comic publication years 
    1968   – Rand Holmes moves to Vancouver, Canada and works for Georgia Straight a weekly underground tabloid and starts “The Adventures of Harold Hedd” 
    1968  – S. Clay Wilson moves to San Francisco and becomes friends with Robert Crumb, starts to contribute to Zap Comics 
    1968  – First issue of Zap Comix by Robert Crumb released
    1968  – “Keep on Truckin’” one page comix published in Zap Comix by Robert Crumb 
    1968  – Robert Crumb sends for his wife Dana to join him in San Francisco 
    1968  – Robert Crumb first sees S. Clay Wilson’s comix work 
    1968  – Gary Arlington opens his comic book store in the Mission District in San Francisco, CA 
    1968  – Spain Rodriguez’s cover for Feb 2nd issue of East Village Other creates legal issues over depiction of a sexual act 
    1968   – Robert Crumb publishes “Zap” 
    1968   – Skip Williamson’s “Snappy Sammy Smoot (1968-1996) makes its debut in Bijou Funnies 
    1968  – Robert William’s controversial painting “Appetite for Destruction” is used as album art for the Guns ‘N’ Roses album of the same name 
    1968  – “Yellow Dog” comix anthology started by Joel Beck and John Thompson 
    1968-1973   – Skip Williamson’s Sammy Smoot character is played by Carl Reiner on the comedy TV show “Rowan and Martin’s Laugh-In” 
    1968-1975   – Considered the boom years of Underground Comix 
    1968   – Apex Novelties ran by Don Donaahue starts publishing comix 
    1968  – US Government outlaws LSD 
    1968  – Robert Crumb starts “Snatch Comix” published by Apex Novelties 
    1969   – Neil Armstrong lands on the moon
    1969-1970  – “Odd Bodkins” by Dan O’Neil is published in the San Francisco Oracle 
    1969  – Whitney Museum Exhibition “Human Concern/Personal Torment: The Grotesque in American Art” showed some of Robert Crumb’s work 
    1969  – Roger Brand at the first comic convention panel for Underground Comix artists, declined to invite Trina Robbins 
    1969   – Rip Off Press founded by Gilbert Shelton, Jack “Jaxon” Jackson, Dave Moriarty and Fred Todd 
    1969   – Kim Deitch and Trinaa Robbins start dating 
    1969  – Bill Griffith and Jay Kinney meet and start idea for “Young Lust” 
    1969   – Vaughn Bode briefly edits “Gothic Blimp Works”; Kim Deitch begins to edit “Gothic Blimp Works” 
    1969  – Print Mint is raided by police over “Zap Comix” fourth issue (featured “Joe Blow” incest comic by Robert Crumb) 
    1969  – Schenkers arrested over violation of California Penal Code Section 311.2 (illegal distribution of pornography) due to publishing “Zap Comics” fourth issue 
    1969  – S. Clay Wilson contributes to “Jiz Comics” under pseudonym Howard Crankwood 
    1970s   – Graphic Novel format began
    1970s  –Jack “Jaxon” Jackson creates historical narrative comix like “Comanche Moon”, “Los Tejanos”
    1970  – Ed “Big Daddy” Roth’s shop closes and Robert Williams ends his tenure as Art Director 
    1970  – Chris Kirkpatrick, owner of New Yorker Book Store that sold Zap Comix, convicted 
    1970   – Bill Griffith moves to San Francisco, CA
    1970  – Trina Robbins and Kim Deitch’s daughter Casey born 
    1970  – “It Ain’t Me Babe” the first women’s liberation newspaper, was published in Berkley 
    1970   – Kitchen Sink Press ran by Denis Kitchen founded 
    1970  – “Skull” published by Rip Off Press 
    1970  – Many Underground Comix artists met and created The Cartoon Workers Union
    1970  – Robert William released collected “Coochy Cooty Men’s Comics” published by Print Mint 
    1970   – Last Gasp Eco Funnies ran by Ron Turner founded 
    1970  – “Young Lust” by Bill Griffith and Jaay Kinney published by Company & Sons 
    1970  – Robert Crumb meets with Ralph Bakshi and Steve Kraantz about making a movie out of his popular character Fritz the Cat  
    1970  – “Abortion Eve” comic produced by Joyce Farmer and Lyn Chevely 
    1970  – Spain Rodriguez releases “Zodiac Mindwarp” (East Village Other) and “Subert” (Rip Off Press) 
    1970  – Kim Deitch and Trina Robbins end their relationship
    1971  – Gilbert Shelton’s Fabulous Furry Freak Brothers first released
    1971  – Roberta Gregory attend CSU Long Beach and contributes “Feminist Funnies” to their newspaper 
    1971  – S. Clay Wilson contributes to “Bent” (Print Mint) 
    1971  – Aline Kominsky-Crumb grates with degree in fine art from University of Arizona 
    1971  – “Ms Magazine” founded by Gloria Steinem and art directed by Bea Feitler 
    1971   – Bill Griffith’s “Zippy the Pinhead” debuts in Real Pulp Comics #1 by Print Mint 
    1971  – Dan O’Neil and the Air Pirates (Bobby London, Shary Flenniken, Gary Hallgren, and Ted Richards) create “Air Pirate Funnies” published by Last Gasp 
    1971  – Lee Marr’s “Pudge” & “Girl Blimp” published 
    1971  – Roberta Gregory sells her first comic to “Wimmen’s Comix” 
    1971  – Disney filed suit in Northern District of California against the comic artists from the “Air Pirate Funnies” 
    1971   – Rip Off Press moves from Mowry’s Opera House to 17th Street 
    1971   – After moving back to NYC, Art Spiegelman once again returns to San Francisco, CA
    1972   – “The Adventures of Harold Hedd” released in first collected volume, the second volume out the following year
    1972  – “Tits ‘n’ Clits” All women comix anthology by Joyce Farmer and Lyn Chevely published first issue (Nanny Goat Productions) 
    1972  – Aline Kominsky-Crumb has comix debut in “Wimmen’s Comix” #1 with “Goldie a Neurotic Woman” 
    1972  – Robert Crumb and Aline Kominsky-Crumb meet at a San Francisco party 
    1972  – “Fritz the Cat” movie directed by Ralph Bakshi released 
    1972  – 2 all women’s comix anthologies started “Wimmen’s Comix” (Trina Robbins, Last Gasp) and “Tit’s &  Clits” (Joyce Farmer and Lyn Chevelyl, Nanny Goat Productions)
    1972  – Disney granted it’s injunction against Dan O’Neil and the other comic artists from “Air Pirate Funnies”; found guilty of copyright infringement and trade disparagement 
    1972  – “Bizzare Sex” started published by Denis Kitchen of Kitchen Sink Press 
    1972  – Print Mint hits 1 million issues of “Zap Comix” sold 
    1973   – Rand Holmes travels to San Francisco, CA to get the second volume of “The Adventures of Harold Hedd” published by Last Gasp 
    1973  – Bill Griffith’s “A Sour Look at the Comix Scene, or Out of the Inkwell and Into the Toilet” runs in The San Francisco Phoenix 
    1973  – Undercover cop buys first issue of “Tits ‘n’ Clits” at San Francisco Bookstore Fahrenheit 451; owners charged with selling pornography and Farmer and Cheverly are forced to hide from law enforcement for 2 years 
    1973  – Aline Kominsky-Crumb moves onto Robert Crumb’s farm property as his girlfriend 
    1973  – “Come Out Comix” by Mary Wings self-published 
    1973  –  Year of the Crash of Comix 
    1973  – Rick Griffin is a born again Christian 
    1973  – Gilbert Shelton’s The Fabulous Furry Freak Brother’s comics had sold 400,000 copies; eventually selling 45 million copies to date in 16 different languages 
    1972   – Haavery Pekar’s first story “Brilliant American Maniacs Series No. 1 Crazy Ed” published in “People’s Comics” with art by Robert Crumb 
    1972   – Justin Green publishes “Binky Brown Meets the Holy Virgin Mary” 
    1972   – Art Spiegelman publishes first 3 pages of Maus 
    1973  –Supreme Court’s  Miller v. California decision  rules that vendors can be jailed and retroactively fined for selling obscene materials, cannot plead ignorance to contents 
    1974   – Jay Lynch has a one week tenure as editor at Hustler Magazine
    1974  – Lynda Barry attends Evergreen State College in Olympia, WA 
    1974   – Art Spiegelman self publishes “Ace Hole” and “Midget Detective” 
    1974  – Marvel releases “Comix Book” 
    1974  – S. Clay Wilson contributes to “Pork” (Co-Op Press) 
    1974  – “The Nine Lives of Fritz the Cat” directed by Ralph Bakshi released 
    1975   – The Schenkers working partnership with Bob and Peggy Rita dissolves and Print Mint slows down production and distribution 
    1975  – “Felch Comics” by Keith Green
    1975  – Vietnam War ends, American troops withdraw from Saigon 
    1975  – Victor Moscoso starts attending Yale 
    1975  – Bill Griffith and Art Spiegelman create “Arcade” comix anthology 
    1975   –  Vaughn Bodé dies at age 33 
    1976   – Harvey Pekar self publishes “How I Quit Collecting Records and Put Out a Comic Book with the Money I Saved” with art by Robert Crumb 
    1976  – “Wet Satin” erotic satirical all-women’s comics anthology published by Kitchen Sink Press 
    1976  – Aline Kominsky-Crumb moves off of the Crumb farm commune 
    1976  – Mary Wing’s “Dyke Shorts” is self-published 
    1976  – Roberta Gregory creates “Dynamite Damsels” (Self-published) 
    1976  – Copyright Act becomes law 
    1976  – Lee Marrs “The Further Fattening Adventures of Pudge, Girl Blimp” featured the first openly bisexual character in comics 
    1967  – Larry Fuller creates “Gay Heartthrobs” 
    1976   – Harvey Pekar’s “American Splendor #1” published 
    1976  – Aline Kominsky-Crumb and Diane Noomin start “Twisted Sisters” 
    1976-1077  – Punk scene emerges
    1971  – Howard Cruse’s “Barefootz” first published 
    1977   – Kitchen Sink Press reprints Joel Becks comics under title “Joel Beck’s Comics & Stories” 
    1977  – Gary Panter moves to Los Angeles, CA 
    1977  – S. Clay Wilson releases comix with his most popular character “The Checkered Demon” (Last Gasp) 
    1977  – Gilbert Shelton’s character Fat Freddy’s cat from “The Fabulous Furry Freak Brothers” gets its own spin off comic 
    1977  – Robert Crumb divorces Dana
    1978  – Gilbert Shelton moves to San Francisco, CA from Austin, TX 
    1978  – First graphic novel “A Contract With God” by Will Eisner is published by Baronet Press 
    1978  – Dan O’Neils appeal in the case of Dismney and the Air Pirates does not rule in O’Neil’s favor 
    1978  – Gilbert Shelton makes “Shakedown Street” album cover for The Grateful Dead 
    1978  – Paul Mavrides starts to collaborate on “The Fabulous Furry Freak Brothers” 
    1979  – Gilbert Shelton and wife/agent Lora move to Europe 
    1979  – The Supreme Court declines to take Dan O’Neil’s appeal case against Disney 
    1979  – Robert William publishes “The Lowbrow Art of Robt. Williams” 
    1979  – Mary Wings creates drug awareness book “Are Your Highs Getting You Down?” with a California Arts Council Grant 
    1979  – Denis Kitchen approaches Howaard Cruse about making “Gay Comix”
    1979  – Rip Off Press ends
    1979  – Art Spiegelman starts to teach at the School of Visual Arts in NY
    1980  – First issue of “Gay Comix” (Kitchen SInk Press) released, edited by Howard Cruse 
    1980  – “Raw” comics anthology created by Art Spiegelman and Francoise Mouly 
    1980-1991   – Maus: A Survivor’s Tale by Art Spiegelman serialized 
    1981  – “Wimmen’s Comix” takes a 6 year hiatus 
    1981  – Daniel Clowes and his friends create “Psycho Comics” 
    1981  – Robert Crumb starts comix magazine “Weirdo” published by Last Gasp 
    1981  – Robert Crumb and Aline Kominsky-Crumb’s daughter Sophie is born; they move to Southern France
    1982  – Last issue of “Bizzare Sex” released 
    1982  – Gilbert and Jamie Hernandez create “Love and Rockets” published by Fantagraphics 
    1983  – “Dykes to Watch Out For” by Alison Bechdel first published 
    1984  – Mary Fleener self publishes her first comic “Hoodoo” 
    1984  – Robert Crumb passes editorship of “Weirdo” to Peter Bagge 
    1985   – Print Mint, since renamed Reprint Mint, is sold by the Schenkers 
    1985  – Mary Wings “She Came Too Late” lesbian detective novel published 
    1985  – Topps Bubbglegum starts Garbage Pail Kids cards 
    1986   – Doubleday publishes the first of it’s two collected volumes of Harvye Pekar’s “American Splendor” with the next coming out the following year 
    1986  – Jack “Jaxon” Jackson publishes “Illustrated History of Ranching in Texas” 
    1986  – Peter Bagge resigns as editor at “Weirdo”; Aline Kominsky-Crumb takes over 
    1987  – Robert Crumb and Aline Kominsky-Crumb marry 
    1988  – “Dirty Plotte” by Julie Doucet was first self-published 
    1988  – Roberta Gregory self publishes “Winging It” and “Sheila and the Unicorn” 
    1989   – Jack “Jaxon” Jackon publishes “Rip Off Pres: The Golden Era #21” 
    1989  – Daniel Clowes first issue of “Eightball” 
    1989  – Roberta Gregory moves to Seattle and begins to work at Fantagraphics Books 
    1990   – Art Spiegelman receives a Guggenheim Fellowship to work on Maus’ second volume 
    1990  – Peter Bagge first publishes “Hate” (Fantagraaphics) 
    1991   – American Splendor’s once a year regular release stops with issue fifteen 
    1991  – Rick Griffin dies after motorcycle accident 
    1991  – Roberta Gregory’s “Naughty Bits” issue one self published 
    1991  – “Dirty Plotte” published by Drawn & Quarterly 
    1991  – Julie Doucet moves to NYC for one year and makes “My New York Diary” 
    1992   – Maus: A Survivor’s Tale by Art Spiegelman wins a Pulitzer Prize 
    1992  – “Wimmen’s Comix” publishes it’s last issue 
    1993   – Don Schenkers dies
    1994  – Robert Williams first published “Juxtapoz Arts & Culture” Magazine
    1995  – “Stuck Rubber Baby” by Howard Cruse published 
    1995  – “Black Hole” by Charles Burns first published by Fantagraphics 
    1995  – “Crumb” documentary about Robert Crumb by Terry Zwigoff is released 
    1996  – Mary Fleener’s “Life of the Party” released  
    1998  – Jack “Jaxon” Jackson creates “Lost Cause” 
    1999   – Joel Beck dies 
    2001-2003  – Roberta Gregory’s popular character Bitchy Bitch from “Naughty Bits” starred in the animated cartoon “Life’s a Bitch” on Comedy Network (Canada) and Oxygen Network (US) 
    2001  – Daniel Clowes “Eightball” story “Ghost World” is made into a movie of the same name 
    2002   – Rand Holmes dies 
    2002  – Phoebe Gloeckner’s “The Diary of a Teenage Girl” published by Frog Books 
    2003   – “American Splendor” the award winning movie about Harvey Pekar’s life starring Paul Giamatti is released 
    2005  – “Black Hole” by Charles Burns released as graphic novel by Fantagraphics 
    2006  –Jack “Jaxon” Jackson dies 
    2006  – “Fun Home: A Family Tragicomic” by Alison Bechdel published 
    2010   – Harvey Pekar dies 
    2015  – “Fun Home” the Broadway Musical wins a Tony for best musical 
    2015  – “The Diary of a Teenage Girl” by Phoebe Glockner made into a movie with the same name 
    2017   – Skip Williamson and Jay Lynch die within a week and a half of each other 
    2019  – Howard Cruse dies 
    2020   – Alice Schnker dies 
    2021  – Streaming channel Tubi releases 8 episode show “The Freak Brothers” based on Gilbert Shelton’s “The Fabulous Furry Freak Brothers” 
    2021  – Spain Rodriguez dies 
    2021  – S. Clay Wilson dies 
    2022  – Aline Kominsky-Crumb dies 

    REFERENCES

    About. Robert Williams Official Site. (2022). Retrieved December 27, 2022, from https://www.robtwilliamsstudio.com/about

    Beat Staff. (2016, May 11). Interview: Roberta Gregory on Mother Mountain, wimmen's comix, & bitchy bitch. Comics Beat. Retrieved December 26, 2022, from https://www.comicsbeat.com/interview-roberta-gregory-on-mother-mountain-wimmens-comix-bitchy-bitch/

    Bernsau, T. (2021, January 20). Car Toons for car guys. MotorTrend. Retrieved December 29, 2022, from https://www.motortrend.com/features/0908rc-the-car-toons-of-pete-millar/

    Chakraborty, P. (2021). "Sex and the Aesthetics of the Vulgar: Reading the Creative Paradox in the Works of Robert Crumb." Sanglap: Journal of Literary and Cultural Inquiry, 07(02), 120–148. https://doi.org/10.35684/jlci.2021.7206

    Chute, H. (2006, season-04). Decoding Comics. Modern Fiction Studies, 52(4), 1014–1027. https://www.jstor.org/stable/26286682

    Chute, H. (2019). Why Comics?: From Underground to Everywhere (Reprint). Harper Perennial.

    Costello, B., & Gremins, B. (2021). The Other 1980s: Reframing Comics’ Crucial Decade. Louisiana State University Press.

    Dalzell, T. (2020, February 20). Remembering Alice Schenker, whose Print Mint on Telegraph Avenue sparked the 1960s poster revolution. Berkeleyside. Retrieved December 26, 2022, from https://www.berkeleyside.org/2020/02/20/remembering-alice-schenker-whose-print-mint-on-telegraph-avenue-sparked-the-1960s-poster-revolution

    Danky, J. P., & Kitchen, D. (2009). Underground classics: The transformation of comics into Comix. Abrams.

    Dauber, J. (2022). American Comics: A History. W. W. Norton & Company.

    Doherty , B.  (2023). Dirty pictures: How an underground network of nerds, feminists, misfits, geniuses, bikers,... Potheads, printers, intellectuals, and art school. Harry N. Abraams.

    Ebert, R. (2005, November 20). Crumb Movie Review & Film Summary (1995): Roger Ebert. Crumb movie review & film summary (1995) | Roger Ebert. Retrieved December 22, 2022, from https://www.rogerebert.com/reviews/great-movie-crumb-1994

    Elam, E. (2013, February 15). Gilbert Shelton in Conversation. T_he Comics Journal ._ Retrieved December 26, 2022, from https://www.tcj.com/gilbert-shelton-in-conversation/

    Estren, M. J. (2012). A History of Underground Comics. Ronin Publishing, Inc.

    Frank, P. (2018, June 19). Mary Wings just wanted an orgasm when she created the First Lesbian Comic Book. HuffPost. Retrieved December 26, 2022, from https://www.huffpost.com/entry/mary-wings-created-first-lesbian-comic-book\_n\_5b23d937e4b0d4fc01fdd783

    Freeman, J. (2017, November 3). Exclusive: Gilbert Shelton reveals some Fabulous furry freak brothers secrets, new collection extracts_! downthetubes.net._ Retrieved December 21, 2022, from https://downthetubes.net/exclusive-gilbert-shelton-reveals-some-fabulous-furry-freak-brothers-secrets-new-collection-extracts/

    Gabilliet, J., Beaty, B., & Nguyen, N. (2013). Of Comics and Men: A Cultural History of American Comic Books(Illustrated). University Press of Mississippi.

    Garcia, E. (2017). The Hernandez Brothers: Love, Rockets, and Alternative Comics (Latinx and Latin American Profiles)(1st ed.). University of Pittsburgh Press.

    Gary Panter. Lambiek Comiclopedia . (2022, July 22). Retrieved December 16, 2022, from https://www.lambiek.net/artists/p/panter.htm

    Gomez, B. (2017, March 29). She changed comics: Roberta Gregory interview. Comic Book Legal Defense Fund. Retrieved December 26, 2022, from https://cbldf.org/2017/03/she-changed-comics-roberta-gregory-interview/

    Gregory, R. (2009). My Creative History. Roberta Gregory . Retrieved December 26, 2022, from http://www.robertagregory.com/Robertagregory/Robertas\_History.html

    Griffith, B. (2002). A Bill Griffith Bibliography: (Out of Print & Hard to Find) Covers & Contents . A Bill Griffith bibliography. Retrieved December 5, 2022, from https://www.zippythepinhead.com/pages/biblio.html

    Griffith, B. (2003). Still asking the unanswerable question, 'are we having fun yet?'. Still Asking the Unanswerable Question, ‘Are We Having Fun Yet?’ Retrieved December 26, 2022, from https://imagetextjournal.com/still-asking-the-unanswerable-question-are-we-having-fun-yet/

    Groth, G. (2011, February 9). An interview with Victor Moscoso. The Comics Journal. Retrieved December 12, 2022, from https://www.tcj.com/an-interview-with-victor-moscoso/

    Hatfield, C., & Beaty, B. (2020). Comics studies: A guidebook. Rutgers University Press.

    Hatfield, C. (2005, August 2). Alternative Comics: An Emerging Literature (Illustrated). University Press of Mississippi.

    Jean-Paul, J., & Cruse, H. (2021). Stuck Rubber Baby. CASTERMAN.

    Jennings, J., Duffy, D., Woods, A. A., Wimberly, R., Greene, S., Richardson, A., Love, J., Love, R., & Knight, K. (2020, March 31). Black Comix Returns. Magnetic Press.

    Julie Doucet. _Lambiek Comiclopedia. (_2022, June 20). Retrieved December 26, 2022, from https://www.lambiek.net/artists/d/doucet.htm

    Kaplan, A. (2010). From Krakow to Krypton: Jews and Comic Books. Jewish Publication Society.

    Knuddle, K. (2022, October 4). Jay Lynch. Lambiek Comiclopedia. Retrieved December 27, 2022, from https://www.lambiek.net/artists/l/lynch.htm

    Knuddle, K. (2022, September 27). Robert Williams. Lambiek Comiclopedia. Retrieved December 27, 2022, from https://www.lambiek.net/artists/w/williams\_r.htm

    Knuddle, K. (2022, September 27). Skip Williamson. Lambiek Comiclopedia . Retrieved December 3, 2022, from https://www.lambiek.net/artists/w/williamson\_skip.htm

    Lambiek. (2022, January 20). Joel Beck. Lambiek Comiclopedia. Retrieved December 19, 2022, from https://www.lambiek.net/artists/b/beck\_joel.htm

    Mary Fleener. Lambiek Comiclopedia. (2021, February 13). Retrieved December 26, 2022, from https://www.lambiek.net/artists/f/fleener\_mary.htm

    Mietkiewicz, H. (2011, June 11). Holmes, Rand (1942-2002). THE JOE SHUSTER AWARDS Canadian Comics Awards, News & Links. Retrieved December 26, 2022, from https://joeshusterawards.com/hof/hof-rand-holmes-1942-2002/

    Milligan, M. (2021, October 19). Tubi grooves into Adult Toons with debut original 'The Freak Brothers'. Animation Magazine. Retrieved December 26, 2022, from https://www.animationmagazine.net/2021/10/tubi-grooves-into-adult-toons-with-debut-original-the-freak-brothers/

    Fox, M. S. (2013). Zap Comix. Underground Comix Joint. Retrieved December 29, 2022, from https://comixjoint.com/zapcomix.html

    Of the Golden Age comics houses, EC was the greatest; Weird! Incredible! Mad! (2020, September 23). The Economist. https://link.gale.com/apps/doc/A681897193/OVIC?u=edmo56673&sid=bookmark-OVIC&xid=cd9e73a6

    Olsza, M. (2020). Feminist (and/as) alternative media practices in women's underground comix in the 1970s 1. Polish Journal for American Studies, 14, 21-37,139. Retrieved from https://libproxy.uco.edu/login?url=https://www.proquest.com/scholarly-journals/feminist-as-alternative-media-practices-womens/docview/2473439187/se-2

    Pagano, K. (2012, August 18). Mary Fleener lives art on the edge. North Coast Current. Retrieved December 26, 2022, from https://www.northcoastcurrent.com/north-coast-beat/2012/08/mary-fleener-lives-art-on-the-edge/

    Panter, G. (2007). Biography . Gary Panter. Retrieved December 26, 2022, from http://www.garypanter.com/site/index.php/about/biography/

    Pencil, S. (2020). Rated Savx: The Savage Pencil Skratchbook. Strange Attractor Press.

    Pilcher, T., & Kannenberg Jr., G. (2008). Erotic comics : a graphic history from Tijuana bibles to underground comix. The Ilex Press Limited.

    Prescott, G. (2017, March 21). About: Life of the Party: An Interview with Mary Fleener. Art & Illustration by Mary Fleener. Retrieved December 26, 2022, from http://www.maryfleener.com/about/

    Rand Holmes. Lambiek Comiclopedia. (2021, January 16). Retrieved December 26, 2022, from https://www.lambiek.net/artists/h/holmes\_rand.htm

    Roberta Gregory. Lambiek Comiclopedia. (2021, January 1). Retrieved December 26, 2022, from https://www.lambiek.net/artists/g/gregory.htm

    Robbins, T. (1999). From girls to grrrlz : a history of [women’s] comics from teens to zines. Chronicle Books.

    Rosenkranz, P. (2008, May 20). Rebel Visions: The Underground Comix Revolution 1963 - 1975 (Reprint). Fantagraphics Books.

    Sabin, R. (2001). Comics, Comix & Graphic Novels (Revised ed.). Phaidon Press.

    Seigal, B. (1997, January 8). Life of the party : Cartoonist Mary Fleener draws on a zest for life and an appreciation for the world's everyday zaniness. Los Angeles Times. Retrieved December 26, 2022, from https://www.latimes.com/archives/la-xpm-1997-01-08-ls-16304-story.html

    Seves, P. R. (2018). Eric Stanton & the History of the Bizarre Underground (1st ed.). Schiffer.

    Smith, H. (2021, February 10). S. Clay Wilson, who helped launch the underground comix movement, dies at 79. The Washington Post Online.

    Szasz, F. M. (2013, September 15). Atomic Comics: Cartoonists Confront the Nuclear World (1st ed.). University of Nevada Press.

    Underground and Independent Comics, Comix, and Graphic Novels. (2011). Reference Reviews; Harlow, 25(6), 52–53.

    Wanzo, R. (2018, June 1). The Normative Broken: Melinda Gebbie, Feminist Comix, and Child Sexuality Temporalities. American Literature, 90(2), 347–375. https://doi.org/10.1215/00029831-4564334

    Wiggins, R. (2010, March 3). Me and Gilbert Shelton: A Memoir [web log]. Retrieved December 14, 2022, from http://theragblog.blogspot.com/2010/03/ramsey-wiggins-me-and-gilbert-shelton.html.

    Williams, P. (2020, January 17). Dreaming the Graphic Novel: The Novelization of Comics (None). Rutgers University Press.

    [Greatest Hits] Katherine Kelly, VP of Higher Education Marketing at Handshake - Enhancing Career Opportunities Through Mobile Software

    [Greatest Hits] Katherine Kelly, VP of Higher Education Marketing at Handshake - Enhancing Career Opportunities Through Mobile Software
    In this episode of How I Grew This, Mada is joined by Katherine Kelly, VP of Higher Education Marketing at Handshake, to discuss how Handshake leverages mobile growth opportunities in higher education and the job market. Katherine started her career working in higher education and moved over to tech. She was an associate producer at ESPN, an Instructor of Design History, and a Research Assistant at The Victoria and Albert Museum. Katherine was also an Editor, Writer, and Host of her web series, ‘Just the Tips’.

    PCR 490: Last Show of the Year - Travel Posters, Lego Masters Australia & 4-Letter Trivia

    PCR 490: Last Show of the Year - Travel Posters, Lego Masters Australia & 4-Letter Trivia

    Andrew

    Lauren

    Patrick

    Twitch - Live Every Monday at 7pm

    Watch us live on Twitch every Monday at 7pm CT: https://www.twitch.tv/mof1podcast

    Harriet Tubman & the $20 Bill

    Harriet Tubman & the $20 Bill

    This episode considers the 2016 proposal to place the likeness of Harriet Tubman on the U.S. $20 bill. The first use of paper money dates back to 1000 CE and has been cited as the first instance of widespread access to printed images. Money is an invented concept, it has value because societies collectively agree that it does, but historically images, symbols, and seals have been used to help authenticate money within the culture that it serves. Images of gods, monarchs and historical figures imbue the money with the magic of the gods or the authority of the government to assert its value. The US has a long history of printed money, dating back even before gaining independence. The images that a culture uses to assert the value of the country reflects what that country values. why then does the US continue to feature former presidents, and slave owners, white men of privilege, versus women and minorities? Harriet Tubman was a true hero in this country, who worked under the auspices of the underground railroad, and not only gained her own freedom, but also helped to free over 300 enslaved persons in her lifetime. In 2016, the proposal was made to put her image on the $20 bill. Making a change to the design of the US $20 bill, replacing Andrew Jackson’s likeness with that of Harriet Tubman would not right the wrongs of the past, but it would be a step towards honoring the contributions of Black women in this country, as well as a step forward in c_orrecting the absence of positive representations._

    TIMELINE

    440 BC – The Greeks first use coin money, adopted the practice from the Lydians

    1000 – The first paper money was issued in China

    1690 – the first paper money was printed in the U.S. by the Massachusetts Bay colony, though U.S.A. is not yet a country

    1775 – Second Continental Congress issues paper money to help fund the American Revolution

    1821 – Harriet Tubman was born into slavery on a Maryland plantation

    1844 – Harriet Tubman’s forced marriage to John Tubman

    1831 – First recorded use of the phrase Underground Railroad

    1913 – Harriet Tubman dies, buried in Auburn, New York with military honors

    2016 – Proposal to replace Andrew Jackson with Harriet Tubman on the U.S. $20 bill, placed on hold during Trump presidency 

    2021– President Biden announces plans to revisit Harriet Tubman $20 bill

    2022 – plans are made to strike quarters  with historical female figures from U.S. History

    REFERENCES

    99% Invisible. (2021, June 11). Episode 54 The Colour of Money. Retrieved June 14, 2022, from https://99percentinvisible.org/episode/episode-54-the-colour-of-money/

    Andrews, E. (July 19 2017, updated: September 3, 2019). How many U.S. Presidents owned enslaved People? History.com 

    https://www.history.com/news/how-many-u-s-presidents-owned-slaves

    Ann, M. S. (2021). Harriet Tubman. Harriet Tubman, 1–N.PAG. 

    Biography.com Editors. (2014, April 2). Harriet Tubman. The Biography.Com Website. Retrieved June 14, 2022, from https://www.biography.com/activist/harriet-tubman

    Blakemore, E. (April 30, 2018, updated: August 29, 2018). Why Andrew Jackson’s Legacy Is So Controversial. History.com

    https://www.history.com/news/andrew-jackson-presidency-controversial-legacy

    Bradford, S. (1886). Harriet, the Moses of Her People. New York, Geo. R. Lockwood & Son.

    Due North Productions (Producer), & Robertson, L. (Director). (2016). Daughters of the New Republic: Harriet Tubman and Sarah Bradford. [Video/DVD] Due North Productions. https://video.alexanderstreet.com/watch/daughters-of-the-new-republic-harriet-tubman-and-sarah-bradford

    Fleming, C. (2018). How To be Less Stupid About Race. Beacon Press. Boston Massachusetts. 

    Gleim, S. (April 1, 2021). What do the Symbols on the U.S. $1 bill Mean? Howstuworks.com. https://money.howstuffworks.com/symbols-dollar-bill.htm

    Grundhauser, E. (April 22, 2016) The ornate Charm of American Currency from the 1700s. Atlasobscura.com

    https://www.atlasobscura.com/articles/the-ornate-charm-of-american-currency-from-the-1700s

    Hannah-Jones, N. (2021). The 1619 Project. New York. One World

    History.com Editors. (2022, January 25). Underground Railroad. HISTORY. Retrieved June 14, 2022, from https://www.history.com/topics/black-history/underground-railroad

    History.com Editors. (2021, November 16). Quakers. HISTORY. Retrieved June 14, 2022, from https://www.history.com/topics/immigration/history-of-quakerism

    Klein, C. (July 8, 2020, updated: October 16, 2020). Alexander Hamilton’s Complicated relationship to Slavery. History.com. https://www.history.com/news/alexander-hamilton-slavery-facts

    Laliberte, M.  (July 26, 2021). What Those Symbols on the Dollar Bill actually mean. Reader’s Digest.com https://www.rd.com/list/dollar-bill-symbols/

    Landis, M. (September 9, 2015). A Proposal To Change The Words We Use When Talking About The Civil War. Smithsonian Magazine.com. https://www.smithsonianmag.com/history/proposal-change-vocabulary-we-use-when-talking-about-civil-war-180956547/

    Musgrave, P. (2021, February 9). Take the Presidents Off the U.S. Dollar. Foreign Policy. Retrieved June 14, 2022, from https://foreignpolicy.com/2021/02/09/america-currency-outdated-tubman-jackson/

    Pruitt, S.  (September 21, 2012, updated: June 23, 2020). 5 Things you may not know about Abraham Lincoln, Slavery and Emancipation. History.com

    https://www.history.com/news/5-things-you-may-not-know-about-lincoln-slavery-and-emancipation

    Smith, R. (2012, April 4). Redesigning Dollar Bills, and the American Brand - NYTimes.com. The New York Times. Retrieved June 14, 2022, from https://www.nytimes.com/roomfordebate/2012/04/04/bringing-dollars-and-cents-into-this-century/redesigning-dollar-bills-and-the-american-brand

    Weatherford, J. (1997). The History of Money. New York, Three Rivers Press.

    Katherine Kelly, VP of Higher Education Marketing at Handshake - Enhancing Career Opportunities Through Mobile Software

    Katherine Kelly, VP of Higher Education Marketing at Handshake - Enhancing Career Opportunities Through Mobile Software
    In this episode of How I Grew This, Mada is joined by Katherine Kelly, VP of Higher Education Marketing at Handshake, to discuss how Handshake leverages mobile growth opportunities in higher education and the job market. Katherine started her career working in higher education and moved over to tech. She was an associate producer at ESPN, an Instructor of Design History, and a Research Assistant at The Victoria and Albert Museum. Katherine was also an Editor, Writer, and Host of her web series, ‘Just the Tips’.

    The wonder and weight of history in your life.

    The wonder and weight of history in your life.
    If you're curious enough, you can look backward in time and you’ll see a ribbon of lessons, treasures, good decisions, and bad decisions. While we can’t go back and change history, we also can’t move forward without the weight of it either. Ronn Daniel, is an accomplished Author, Historian, and Interim Director for Kent State’s Interior Design Program. As a design historian, he investigates the relationships between interior space, cultural ideas, and technological change. In this episode, Ronn takes us into his brain to explore the wonder and weight of history in our lives. This conversation will change how you see the world and the role you have in building the future. Connect with Ronn Daniel: https://www.kent.edu/caed/news/ronn-daniel-associate-professor For more Imagine a Place, please visit: https://ofs.com/imagine-a-place Follow Doug on LinkedIn. Click here to get your copy of Doug's children's book—Design Your World. Follow Imagine a Place on LinkedIn.

    Best of MTC: Steven Heller

    Best of MTC: Steven Heller

    On this episode of Meet the Creatives, I meet Steven Heller. We talk about his incredible career, Design History, how to get a job as Designer and more! 

    www.MeettheCreatives.org 

    🎙️ Connect with Rob Johnston and Explore Meet the Creatives!

    🌐 Dive into the world of creativity and inspiration with Meet the Creatives and its founder, Rob Johnston! Here's how you can stay connected:

    🔗 Click the links above to discover a wealth of creative insights, interviews, and more.

    Why are we Designing?

    Why are we Designing?

    Note: This episode was recorded on 5/15/20 before #blackouttuesday. As Marcy Harriell puts it, “This week was created to #AmplifyMelanatedVoices. We are instead being muted by a swath of black squares, and while it might read as solidarity, the only thing we see in our feed is ads.” There is no need not to have voices be heard or stories be told, so for that reason, we want to start posting these episodes so that we can move forward telling the stories from the people that we want to tell stories from. Here is the first of two podcasts that were recorded before the protests.

    Tempor Footnotes Podcast
    Episode 13: Why are we Designing?


    We would like to introduce a brilliant designer and a good friend of ours, Jennifer Blanco. She is a graphic designer and creative director from Houston, Texas.  She has a BFA from the School of Visual Arts in New York, where she lived for many years and worked with various design teams—notably for Louise Fili, and in-house for the Museum of Modern Art. Jenn has also taught graphic design and has served as Vice President on the Board of Directors of AIGA Houston. For ten years, she has run the design and branding consultancy Field of Study with her partner and best friend, John Earles.  Together, they also operate Workhorse Printmakers, where they create custom letterpress print on antique presses. 

    Please join us in welcoming Jenn Blanco to the podcast, we hope you enjoy this episode: https://www.tempormag.com/footnotespodcast/episode-13-why-are-we-designing.

    ABOUT TEMPOR FOOTNOTES: Tempor Footnotes Podcast is a production of Studio WAC and Tempor Magazine. Our producer is Scott Cartwright, and Jenny Lynn Weitz is our art director. Simon Mathewson of Nul Tiel Records composed the music for this episode. You can follow us on Instagram @tempormag and Twitter @tempormag. If you’d like to support the show, consider making an online donation at https://secure.squarespace.com/checkout/donate?donatePageId=5acc23ca8a922dc7730476c9

    012: Being Excited About the History of Your Profession and Breaking Trends with Michael Ellsworth

    012: Being Excited About the History of Your Profession and Breaking Trends with Michael Ellsworth
    Michael Ellsworth Co-Founder and Principal of Civilization in Seattle joins Gary Rozanc to discuss how a universal foundations taught by artists poorly fits into a design program. He also discusses the benefits of knowing the history of the profession and how it will make you a better designer. The conversation also covers the rut of interactive design trends such as hero images and symmetrical layouts. Michael also shares his observation about the unfortunate sameness of students portfolios.
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