There is a new book being published that discusses the graphics used by different illustrators to portray the end of the world. One of those artists featured is Basil Wolverton. Wolverton is the one who created teh nightmare inducing graphics for the children Bible Story books for WCG.
More info is here:
The End Will Be Graphic Apocalyptic in Comic Books and Graphic Novels
The End Will Be Graphic
Apocalyptic in Comic Books and Graphic Novels
Edited by Dan W. Clanton, Jr
This
collection is based on the premise that apocalyptic imagery and themes
pervade not only cultural products that employ specifically biblical
imagery, but are also found in media that do not purport to impart
biblical or even religious messages. Comic books and graphic novels are
the focus here because, it is suggested, they are the medium that comes
the closest to the imaginative malleability found in the history of
biblical interpretation.
In Part One, the focus is on
Indie/Creator-Owned works. Emily Laycock demonstrates the overwhelming
influence of Herbert W. Armstrong and his apocalyptic Worldwide Church
of God on Basil Wolverton’s work, especially his biblical art. Aaron
Kashtan then introduces us to Kevin Huizenga’s short story, “Jeepers
Jacobs,” in which the title character—a theologian whose main area of
research is the Christian doctrine of Hell—tries to convert an
acquaintance with odd and fatal results. In her chapter, Diana Green
examines Alan Moore’s Promethea, a character whose purpose is to
initiate an Apocalypse but whose journey is much more complicated.
Finally, A. David Lewis engages humorous and profane examples of
apocalyptic imagery in the recent Indie comics Battle Pope and The Chronicles of Wormwood.
Part Two examines more mainstream works and begins with Terry Ray Clark’s adroit examination of how Kingdom Come
utilizes both the functions and forms of ancient apocalyptic
literature. Greg Stevenson then analyses a variety of texts—including X-Men: The Age of Apocalypse and issues #666 of Superman and Batman—to
discern the way(s) in which the mythological language of apocalyptic
and the mythology of superheroes interact. And finally, Greg Garrett
provides a broad and thoughtful rumination on the two most widely read
mainstream comics that deal with the End of Days: Kingdom Come and Watchmen.
This is a volume in the series Apocalypse and Popular Culture (see Howard, Network Apocalypse, Gribben and Sweetnam, Left Behind and the Evangelical Imagination, Walliss and Quinby, Reel Revelations, Partridge).
Dan W. Clanton, Jr, is Assistant Professor of Religion at Doane College, Crete, Nebraska.
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