A Crisis of Innocence

Browse Items (461 total)

Crime Comics and the Constitution - Stanford.pdf
Discussing the possibility of an all out ban on crime comics. Writer(s) call for more investigation into the potential dangers of crime and horror comic books.

Crime Does Not Pay _48 - Page 49.jpg
A quiz testing readers' knowledge of crime detection terminology.

Horror Comic Book Cleanup crop pg. 1.jpg
Discusses the Senate Juvenile Delinquency Subcommitee's worries about post-war crime comic books.

Criminal Code 2014 Part V 163-172.pdf
Sections 163-172 of the Criminal Code of Canada, which covers the creation, publication, and distribution of crime comics, as well as materials which may present sexual or violent subjects to children.

Criticize B.C. Plan crop.jpg
Claims that the burning of comic books could actually make children more inclined to read the very books that are being burned.

DavidWigransky.jpg
An photograph of David Pace Wigransky who, at the age of fourteen, published a response to the work of Dr. Wertham in the July 24th issue of the Saturday Review of Literature (1948). Wigransky defended comic books, pointing to the many flaws in…

davidlettertotheeditor.pdf
14-year-old David P. Wigransky responds to Dr. Fredric Wertham's article "The Comics. . . Very Funny!" and John M. Brown's "The Case Against the Comics."

Eerie Comics 01  .01 Avon    MarbleRiver #32 (1947) - Page 1.pdf
This story is about a man who is given a vial of liquid that allows him to have whatever he wants in the world. The catch is that when the vial is emptied the man will die. The man's young daughter eventually sneaks in and finds the vial, and smashes…

Discusses a reporter's investigation of comic books in local drugstores and why they are unsuitable for young readers. Kravsow describes some of stories distributed in crime and horror comics.

Witchcraft  JVJ  fixed #4 - Page 1.pdf
A child fantasizes about burning things, and grows up to be a pyromaniac.
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