Utilitarian Review 10/27/12

On HU

Me on some unexpected facts about penises.

Me on Pretty Woman and hating Richard Gere rather than Julia Roberts.

Me on pulp and genius in Joe Sacco, and on whether that’s a good reason for comics journalism.

Richard Cook and I liveblog the last Presidential debate, and are depressed.

Jacob Canfield on the lazy criticism directed at Johnny Ryan and Benjamin Marra.

Ethan on the advantages of comics journalism.

Kailyn Kent on the unconvincing gimmickry of Chris Ware’s Building Stories.

Me on Clark Kent becoming a blogger and the virtues of mainstream comics pandering.

Sarah Horrocks on Druillet’s Salaambo.

Me on the different sizes of the Stepford Wives.

Vom Marlowe on Worsted, a webcomic about knitting.

Me on how atheists can be sexist assholes too.
 
Utilitarians Everywhere

Bunch of pieces at Splice:

On undecided voters maybe not mattering.

On NPR being useless on the election.

On Marty Robbins and nice cowboys who shoot you.

On Richard Moudock, power, and rape.

 
Other Links

Craig Fischer on Building Stories.

Emma Woolley on being constantly harassed as a teen girl.

Mary Williams on the war on 12-year-old girls.
 
This Week’s Reading

Finished Henry James’ The Golden Bowl, started Ronald Firbank’s “Vainglory”, and am rereading Phillip Pullman’s Grimm Fairy Tales for a review.
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Below is a puggle, which is apparently what you call a baby echidna. Cute!

Utilitarian Review 10/13/12

HU News

I’m pleased to announce that we have two new columnist joining HU. Michael Arthur is going to be writing monthly about all things anthropomorphic and furry. Subdee is going to write monthly about whatever strikes her fancy. Both have written for HU before, but we’re looking forward to seeing them here on a regular basis. Welcome aboard!
 
On HU

Featured Archive Post: Charles Reece on pop culture and alienation in Ghost World.

A complete index of everything hated in our hatefest.

Me on how Van Halen, Ke$ha, and Ina Unt Ina are all hot for teacher.

Me on the end of our festival of hate.

Kritian Williams on the moral costs of heroism for Mad Max, Lisbeth Salandar, and Rorschach.

Jeet Heer on the underground literary tradition of hating Shakespeare.

Michael Arthur discusses race in Blacksad from a furry perspective.

Ng Suat Tong lists this quarters nominations for Best Online Comics Criticism. Nominate your own selections in comments.

Voices from the Archive: Matt Thorn on how he selected the stories for the Moto Hagio anthology A Drunken Dream.

Me on meat, money and Eli Roth’s Hostel films.

Utilitarians Everywhere

At Reason I reviewed Michael J. Klarman on the pluses and minuses of pushing for gay marriage as a strategy for the gay rights movement.

At Splice Today I talk about pols like Claire McCaskill who put party before country.

Also at Splice Today I got to write about Cut Copy’s In Ghost Colours, an album I’ve been obsessed with this week.

Other Links

Jessica Abel and Mike Madden have up a list of notable mentions from this year’s Best American Comics anthology. Our own Derik Badman is on there…as is this James Romberger contribution to our Wallace Stevens roundtable.

Lesbian parents don’t ruin your life, in case you were wondering.

Matthias Wivel on Fabrice Neaud and Galactus.

Sean Michael Robinson is blogging as he busks his way through Europe.

A recreation of sorts of the 1920s Krazy Kat ballet.

This Week’s Reading

Finished Kate Soper’s Humanism and Anti-Humanism, which was a little disappointing (too far into the weeds on Marxist theory — my patience for that stuff has pretty strict limits.) Read a short Everyman Library volume of Swinburne’s poetry. Also read Fanta’s forthcoming edition of Moto Hagio’s Heart of Thomas, which I hope to review somewhere or other. Finally have been reading Ax Cop #1.

From Wallace Stevens and James Romberger’s Madame Le Fleurie

 

Utilitarian Review 12/6/12

HU News

James Romberger’s awesome collaboration with Wallace Stevens from HU’s illustrated Wallace Stevens roundtable was selected as a notable comic of the year in this year’s Best American Comics anthology. Regular contributor Derik Badman also was selected for his comic Badman’s Cave. Congratulations to both of them!
 
On HU

Subdee on how she would love Bakuman except for that one thing.

Conseula Francis on why she hates Watchmen.

Vom Marlowe on the misguided craft of Alex Ross.

Melinda Beasi on why she hates the Kim Dong Hwa’s Color Trilogy.

Sean Michael Robinson on hating the collection, not the collector.

Matthias Wivel on the New Yorker’s legacy of mediocre cartoons.

Jones, One of the Jones Boys explains why there can’t be a worst comic ever — and points out many comics that are nonetheless quite bad.

By popular demand (more or less) we have an ongoing thread on whether Cerebus is the worst comic ever.

Me on Nana #22 and the worst comic being the one that doesn’t exist.
 
Utilitarians Everywhere

At Splice I talk about Chris Connelly and nostalgia for cassettes.

At Splice I make fun of the Economist’s vapid knee-jerk bipartisanship.

At Splice, I urge panicking Obama supporters to chill the fuck out.
 
Other Links

Martyn Pedlar on Theo Ellsworth’s The Understanding Monster.

This Week’s Reading

Lilli Carre’s Nine Ways to Disappear, which wasn’t bad, but a little disappointing; Jeffrey Brown’s Darth Vader and Son, which wasn’t great, but more enjoyable than I expected; Philip Core’s Camp: the Lie That Tells the Truth, which is amazing; Aubrey Beardsley’s “Under the Hill”, and started Kate Soper’s “Humanism and Anti-Humanism”.
 

Utilitarian Review 9/28/12

News

I thought that the hatefest would end in September…but we’ve still got a few more haters to go…so one more week. But after that all will be sweetness and light, scout’s honor. (The ever-expanding Index of Hate is here.
 
On HU

Jason Overby on Jason Lutes’ Berlin and the rage for control.

Me on Thomas Nast and the art of betrayal.

Kinukitty on Maus and getting cute about the Holocaust.

Jason Michelitch on how the devil took Matt Wagner.

Cerusee on J. Michael Straczynski’s crappy Midnight Nation.

Joe McCulloch on the perfect women of Milo Manara.

John Hennings on hiding the Geoff Johns comics from the children.

Susan Kirtley on disliking Betty and Veronica to the utmost of her abilities.

Nate Atkinson on Benjamin Marra, racism, and comics conversations.

Domingos Isabelinho on Kirby as kitsch.

Matthew Brady on Kirby as king.
 
Utilitarians Everywhere

At the Atlantic I am skeptical about Pete Seeger and Woody Guthrie. Don’t tell my parents.

The editor at Splice let me write about my favorite Nick Cave album.

At Splice I’m not sure how Obama can lose.

Also at Splice, I talk about rooting for Obama even though I know he’s a child murderer.
 
Other Links

Chris Sims on how DC’s default storyline is rape.

Allan Haverholm on the differences between comics and illustration.

Kevin Drum on Obama and drone strikes.

Conor Friedersdorf on why he’s not voting for Obama.
 
This Week’s Reading

I finished Ivy Compton Burnett’s “A House and It’s Head,” read volume 2 and 3 of Axe Cop, and started Janice Raymond’s “The Transsexual Empire”, which is evil and also not much fun to read, but which I’m slogging through for my Wonder Woman book.
 

Utilitarian Review 9/22/12

On HU

Featured Archive Post: I look at political cartoons and two and a half centuries of failure.

Michelle Smith on Season Eight sucking the life out of Buffy.

Otrebor on Loisel’s Peter Pan betraying itself.

Isaac Butler on why V for Vendetta is awful.

Shaenon Garrity on how she hates to hate even Liberty Meadows and Three Fingers.

Craig Fischer on Stitches and the ethics of autobiography.

Ben Saunders on the incoherence of V for Vendetta.

Tom Crippen imagines Neil Gaiman redoing Edward Gorey: a bleak vision.

Jacob Canfield on the inanity of Tank Girl.

And follow our anniversary of hate with our Index of hate.
 
Utilitarians Everywhere

At Splice I discuss Obama, Romney, and the American dream.

At Splice I talk about why using the Southern strategy on a black President doesn’t work so well.
 
Other Links

Joe Nocera on the idiocy of teacher reform.

Elizabeth Greenwood on Breaking Amish.

David Brothers on Grant Morrison.

Stephen Franklin on why the Chicago teachers won.

Darryl Ayo on Benjamin Marra and race.
 
This Week’s Reading

I finished Jane Austen’s Persuasion and Michael Klarman’s “From the Closet to the Altar.” Read Reinhold Niebuhr’s “Moral Man, Immoral Society,” which is really surprisingly Marxist — maybe the neo-cons skip that one? Also started (hopefully for review) Phillip Pullman “Fair Tales From the Brothers Grimm.” Also started Ivy Compton-Burnett’s “A House and Its Head.”

Oh…and I read three pages of Game of Thrones before giving up. I dunno…it’s possible my misspent adolescent devouring fantasy books has cured me of sword and sorcery forever….
 

Utilitarian Review 9/14/12

The Wire: Now a Victorian Novel Near You

Longtime blog readers probably remember Joy DeLyria and Sean Michael Robinson’s post reimagining the Wire as a Victorian novel. Well, it’s now a book available on Amazon. Congrats to them both! (And you can read my interview with them at the Atlantic here.)

On its release, Laura Miller at Salon published an interesting piece about the Wire’s relationship to Victorian literature. I’ve reproduced my brief comment below:

Hey Laura. I like a lot of your insights in this review…but the odd thing is, most of them are also insights expressed in the book you’re reviewing. Sean and Joy spend a lot of time talking about how the Wire is *not* like Dickens, and they reference many of your points. That is, they talk about how the Wire wasn’t popular, how it’s pacing if very different form Dickens, how it treats character differently, etc. It even talks about how the visuals affect the storytelling…and suggests that, for example, illustrations at the time for readers were much more important than they are now in our reprinting/rereading.

Again, I don’t think you’re wrong. But it does seem to me that anyone who is interested in the issues raised by this essay would probably also like the book, which explores most of them in greater depth.

TCJ Gets Into Hatefest

Tim Hodler at tcj.com has some interesting thoughts about Suat’s EC comics takedown. (Part of Tim’s contractual obligations as TCJ editor include periodically expressing disdain for HU comments threads, so I was pleased to see him get the chance to do his duty. All in the spirit of hatefest, of course! UPDATE: Tim actually removed the comment about the comments from the post, which is why you won’t see it if you go over there.)

It’s interesting that Tim says he would have “happily published” Suat’s article today if it had been submitted to him. I don’t have any reason to doubt him…but at the same time, it does rather highlight the fact that Suat’s piece would I think be at least somewhat out of place at tcj.com as it seems to have developed under Tim’s tenure (and Dan Nadel’s.) I certainly haven’t read everything published at TCJ over their run, but…has there been any contrarian reassesment of any canonical or semi-canonical figures since they’ve taken the reins? My impression (not changed by Tim’s defense of EC) is that the magazine under their editorship is fairly comfortable with the comics canon, and sees its mission more as appreciation and advocacy of the greats, rather than as pushing alternate narratives.

On HU

…and finally we’ve got this week’s posts.

Our hatefest is still in full swing, and you can check out our index of posts here.

Featured Archive Post: Tom Crippen provides an archive of the work of Robert Binks.

Derik Baman on Dragonlance and the evil ochre jelly of nostalgia.

Steven Grant, on searching for bad comics and finding interesting ones.

Kim Thompson on Spirou and Fantasio, caricature, and racism (or the lack thereof.)

Jason Thompson on why Craig Thompson’s Habibi, Natsume Ono, and Osama Tezuka are all overrated.

Jason Overby presents every Johnny Ryan parody ever.

Ng Suat tong on why EC Comics aren’t so great (and R. Fiore debates him.)

Steven Grant on the crappification of comics, and why it’s still a good industry to work in for many folks.

Mahendra Singh destroys Western Civilization.

Richard Cook on how the X-Men Onslaught crossover cured him of superhero comics.

Utilitarians Everywhere
At the Atlantic I reviewed the documentary “After Porn Ends”, about what porn stars do after they leave the industry.

At the Center for Digital Ethics, of all places, I discuss the ethics of allowing anonymous comments online.

At the Chicago Reader I report on the Seminary Co-op bookstore moving its digs.

Also at the Reader I urge folks to buy Lilli Carre’s upcoming book.

And finally at the Reader I tell people to go to the upcoming Afterimage show, which looks at connections between Imagists and current Chicago artists like Paul Nudd, Edra Soto, Lilli Carre, and more.

At Splice Today I talk about rewatching Raiders of the Lost Ark with my son and discovering that it is terrible.

At Splice I argue that the Chicago teachers should have struck a long time ago.

At Splice I review Immolation’s Dawn of Possession and compare death metal to Gerard Manley Hopkins.

At Splice I talk about how the campaign has shown us what Romney is made of.
Other Links

James Romberger interviews Gary Panter.

Robert Stanley Martin with a brutal review of Drive.

Thomas Frank on Obama squandering his first term.

This Week’s Reading

I finished Thomas Hardy’s Wessex Poems, which were sort of disappointing; read Ralph Ellison’s amazing book of essays Shadow and Act, read a few Gerard Manley Hopkins poems, started rereading Jane Austen’s Persuasion, and started From the Closet to the Altar by Michael Klarman for a review.

Utilitarian Review 9/8/12

On HU

Featured Archive Post: Caroline Small interviews Nina Paley on copyright and free culture.

Me on some of the great musical guests on the Batman TV show.

We’re having our 5th year anniversary, and celebrating with a month long roundtable in which people write about the worst comic ever (or the one they dislike the most, or that they think is most overrated.) I started the celebration off with an explanation of Why I have chosen hate.

Bert Stabler on how twee ate Chris Ware.

Me responding to Heidi McDonald by arguing that negative criticism isn’t really all that popular. (I may need to eat my words, though; this week’s hatefest has gotten a huge number of hits by our standards.)

Matt Brady with 8000 words on the crappiness of Blackest Night.

Kate Dacey on Gandhi: good man, terrible manga.

Jones, One of the Jones Boys and I discuss whether you should hate the comic reader or just the comic.

Alex Buchet on Spirou and Fantasio’s racism for kids.

Matt Senece defends the outsider art genius of Geoff Johns.

Johnny Ryan on every autobiographical comic ever.

And you can keep track of our entire hatefest with our constantly updated Index of Hate.
 
Utilitarians Everywhere

At the Chicago Reader I review Yuval Taylor and Jake Austen’s new book “Darkest America” on black blackface minstrelsy.

At Splice I review Wu Tsang’s film about an LA trans bar.

At Splice I explain that political spouses are career politicians.
 
Other Links

Erica Friedman on Yuri coming of age.

And Erica again with an introduction to the study of Yuri.

Brian Hayes on what’s wrong with HU’s anniversary of hate.

Wonder Woman’s sneaky dance plot.

Glenn Greenwald on Democrats parading Osama Bin Laden’s corpse.
 
This Week’s Reading

I finished Henry James’ “The Portrait of a Lady” (Italians aren’t to be trusted — who knew?), read Stanley Hauerwas’ “The Peaceable Kingdom” about Christian ethis, read Julia Kristeva’s essay “Stabat Mater” which I’d sort of hoped would be better, and just just started rereading Thomas Hardy’s “Wessex Poems.”
 

The great black blackface performer Bert Williams.