Winsor McCay - Comic Strips

Comic Strips

  • A Tale of the Jungle Imps by Felix Fiddle, 1903.
  • Little Sammy Sneeze, 1904–6.
  • Dream of the Rarebit Fiend (1904–13)
  • The Story of Hungry Henrietta (1905)
  • A Pilgrim's Progress (1905–10)
  • Little Nemo in Slumberland (1905–14, 1924–27; 1911–14 under the title In the Land of Wonderful Dreams)
  • Poor Jake (1909–11)

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Famous quotes containing the words comic strips, comic and/or strips:

    Commercial jazz, soap opera, pulp fiction, comic strips, the movies set the images, mannerisms, standards, and aims of the urban masses. In one way or another, everyone is equal before these cultural machines; like technology itself, the mass media are nearly universal in their incidence and appeal. They are a kind of common denominator, a kind of scheme for pre-scheduled, mass emotions.
    C. Wright Mills (1916–62)

    Whereas the comic confronts simply logical contradictions, the tragic confronts a moral predicament. Not minor matters of true and false but crucial questions of right and wrong, good and evil face the tragic character in a tragic situation.
    —Marie Collins Swabey. Comic Laughter, ch. 7, Yale University Press (1961)

    Women hate everything which strips off the tinsel of sentiment, and they are right, or it would rob them of their weapons.
    George Gordon Noel Byron (1788–1824)