Comics have been in existence since the end of the 19th century, but it was after the depression that the popularity of newspaper cartoons expanded into a major industry.
The precise era of the Golden Age is disputed, though most agree that it was born with the launch of Superman in 1938. Created by Jerry Siegel and Joe Shuster, Superman is possibly the most recognizable comic book character to this day.
The success of Superman spawned a series of spin-offs and created a whole new genre of characters with secret identities, superhuman powers and colorful outfits – the superhero. Batman and Robin, Wonder Woman, Plastic Man, Green Lantern and Flash were amongst those who followed.
Captain Marvel proved to be one of the most popular superhero comics of the Golden Age, regularly outselling the adventures of Superman during the 1940s.
The sales of comic books increased markedly during World War II. They were cheap, portable and had inspirational, patriotic stories of good triumphing over evil. The tales very much reflected the events and values of the time. Pro-American characters were popular, particularly Captain America, a superhero whose entire creation was based on aiding the country’s war effort.
Sporting the stars and stripes as his costume, Captain America was pictured battling Adolf Hitler on the cover of the very first issue.
Though the superhero comics were the top sellers, other genres emerged during the Golden Age.
Horror and crime were popular, notably The Spirit, a masked detective who captured villains and dispensed justice.
Science fiction and Western-themed comics were some of the new styles of story-telling that started to appear. The teen genre was also gaining interest. A comic strip featuring a red-head named Archibald "Archie" Andrews debuted in 1941, becoming so popular the company that created it changed its name to Archie Comics in 1946.
Animal and jungle themed comics were led by Walt Disney, featuring Mickey Mouse, Donald Duck and Tarzan.
After the war, the superhero genre lost steam, marking what many consider to be the end of the Golden Age. The era itself, though, left an indelible mark on comic books with many of the characters remaining popular almost 70 years later. The first superhero, Superman is still alive and well in popular culture today.
Perhaps one of the most important impacts of the Golden Age was the cementation of the comic as a mainstream artform, with its own defined language and creative conventions.
Rani Comics, claimed the upper-hand early in the competition by acquiring the rights to feature world famous British Secret Agent James Bond 007, in its line-up.
I. The Pre-1950 Era
Pictures speak louder than words.
Classic Hindi and Urdu comic magazines for children such as Baalak and Honhar began to be published, with Baalak’s run lasting decades all the way from 1926 - 1986. Chandamama, another pivotal children’s monthly magazine kicked off in 1947, and continues to exist today in multiple avatars. Created and edited by Kodavatiganti Kutumba Rao, something of a literary colossus in the world of Telugu literature, the series of illustrated stories focussed on telling mythological and magical tales, often steeped in a sense of morality for the times.
More interestingly still, despite comics being a relatively new medium for storytelling in India, the creator chose to narrate these stories in a typically Indian third-person narrative form otherwise known as grandparents’ style of storytelling. Today, Chandamama’s existence has taken a post-internet turn for immortalization post its acquisition by a technology company, Geodesic Information Systems and has had its stories digitised since 2007 in the hopes that it would “cater to readers who demanded information and content beyond the printed publication.”However, all of these were simply magazines with the additions of stories and illustrations rather than out-and-out comic strips. A dedicated approach to this art form was yet to rear its head in the country.
II. The Late 1940s - 1950s
Syndication and translation makes international comic strips available to Indian audiences.
“The evolution of Indian comics can be broadly divided into four phases,” Alok Sharma enlightened us. It would appear that syndicated strips of international comics like The Phantom, Mandrake, Flash Gordon, Rip Kirby and more began to be translated for Indian audiences, largely published in Illustrated Weekly of India, the same magazine that was edited by well-known personalities like Khushwant Sing, A.S. Raman and Pritish Nandy to name a few. It had one of the longest runs as a publication in Indian history only becoming defunct as late as 1993 but towards the latter half of its existence, it even featured cartoons by now legends, R.K. Laxman and Mario Miranda, making it one of the most important chapters in this anthology.
III. The 1960s
Comics enter the realm of the mainstream.
With the advent of Indrajal Comics (A TOI imprint of King Features which included the syndicated comic strips we mentioned earlier) edited by one of India’s ultimate pioneers in the comic book space, Anant Pai otherwise known as Uncle Pai. As the eventual creator of Amar Chitra Katha and Tinkle, needless to say his entry into the framework of comics in an Indian context is an undeniably massive milestone.
“People were crazy about Phantom in the 1960s, when these anthologies came out as comic books. I had interviewed a book seller who has been around from that time and he told me that all the books would be sold in an hour,”. Early issues of Indrajal Comics was also the first to feature indigenous Indian talent with strips penned by Anant Pai and illustrated by several first generation Indian artists. Some of the more symbolic happenings in the decade included: - Deewana Magazine, India’s hitherto emulation of the world-famous and supremely influential MAD magazine, was also founded.
Interestingly, this was one of the first to touch upon the more serious side of comic books, as oxymoronic as that may sound. Most of the content in here touched upon social satire, “using parody of Indian films particularly to poke fun at politics and occasionally, even at religion.” As such, Deewana was a revolutionary entrant into the space at the time.
- The government of India’s publishing of a comic book based on Mahatma Gandhi’s life. Immortalizing a national figure in the form of a comic was a sure fire way to demarcate that this new form of visual imagery and storytelling was here to stay.
1967 : India’s largest selling comic
book series, Amar Chitra Katha, is
born. “With more than 400 comics in 20+ languages
that have sold 100+ million copies to date, Amar
Chitra Katha is a cultural phenomenon.” Created
by none other than Anat Pai, whether or not you consider
yourself a comic book enthusiast, chances are you’re
more than a little familiar with this flagship brand of
Indian comics which went on to become (in their own
words) “synonymous with the visual reinvention of
quintessentially Indian stories from the great
epics, mythology, history, literature, oral folk
tales and many other sources.”
Several of India’s first generation writers and illustrators became known through ACK right from authors like Kamala Chandrakant, Margie Sastry, and C.R. Sharma to illustrators like Sanjeev Waeerkar, Ashok Dongre and Pratap Mullick. Joining the ranks of these acclaimed artists was none other than Ram Waeerkar, particularly renowned for having sketched and coloured the very first Indian issue of Amar Chitra Katha—Krishna. Ironically, Krishna was actually the 11th published issue from ACK, the first 10 having been based on Western Fairytales like Little Red Riding Hood and Pinocchio. Till date, Krishna remains their best selling title since. As such, ACK has remained largely dedicated to releasing stories within the Indian context ever since, right from myths to history however, they have also been known to publish comics based on international scientists and characters from world mythology like Jesus Christ and Zarathustra.
1969
One of India’s most popular comic
characters, Chacha
Chaudhury was conceptualised and
brought to life. For a frail, middle class, old
man, Pran Kumar Sharma’s creation
Chacha Chaudhury managed to capture the imaginations of
an entire nation. As many as 10 million to be precise,
if we’re taking book sales into account! Originally seen
in the Hindi magazine Lotpot, Chaudhury managed to blur
the line between adults and children, creating a unique
space wherein everybody enjoyed the intelligent
anecdotes he provided, not to mention the scuffles he
found himself in the midst of. With an unmistakable
uniform and his faithful dog rocket, Sharma’s stories
went on to be translated in over 10 different
languages.
You can read a wonderful interview with Pran Sharma, conducted by Alok Sharma for more information on how this iconic cartoon character came to life.
IV. The 1970s
Competition begins to heat up.
Inspired by the success of ACK in India, even publishing houses like Indrajal Comics, which were known to syndicate inter nation strips became compelled to come up with indigenous titles of their own. Think Ramcharitmanas, Mahabharata and war comics based in india such as the ALA Commando Series. Similarly, other endemic publishers also began to emerge across the spectrum. Some particularly successful ones included Goyal Comics, Manoj Comics and other Pulp Fiction publishers from Meerut and Delhi, while many became synonymous for their own distinctive Indian cartoon characters, that appeared within their pages exclusively.
A good example would be Diamond Comics (founded in 1978) that became known for Fauladi Singh—a space cased superhero with a typically Indian moustache while Lambu Motu and Rajan Iqbal were other exceedingly popular characters. Chacha Chaudhury also went on to be featured as a guest in Diamond Comics series, and according to a press release from the company, Indian kids in the age group 10–13 years ranked Chacha Chaudhary as their most recognizable comic book character. The publishing house also went on to be one of the longest lasting indigenous comic publishing houses in the country.
Comic Strip Magazines like LoT Pot and Madhu Muskan also entered the market and made a killing with their sales what with seriously successful creations such as Chacha Chaudhury and Motu patlu striking a chord with wide audiences across the subcontinent. Madhu Muskan was owned by The Gowarsons Group, who also held the Indian rights to Archies and Asterix, amongst innumerable other titles.
V. 1980s
The golden era of original Indian comics.
“The comic book industry was at its peak in the late
1980s and early 1990s and during this period,
popular comics easily sold more than 500,000 copies
over the course of its shelf life of several
weeks.” - Alok
Sharma
The latter part of the ‘80s
saw the entrance of several unforgettable and original
characters, magazines, and publishing houses.
1980 - Tinkle
Magazine was founded. It goes without
saying that the 1980s were a special era indeed for the
Indian comic book industry but perhaps first and
foremost, it was the founding and first appearance of
Tinkle Magazine in 1981 that really shook things up.
Though published in English, it wasn’t long before its
stories were syndicated in a multitude of Indian
languages right from Malayalam to Assamese. Over 600
issues have been published thus far and many of its
characters such as Shikari Shambu, Ramu & Shamu, and
Suppandi have achieved nation wide recognition. Suppandi
was also created by legendary artist Ram Waaerkar. More
recent characters include Kaalia the crow, a
particularly witty and sharp crow who comes to the aid
of every small animal in the forest and Pyarelal, a kind
villager who lives in Hastipur with his wife Lajo and is
always ready to find a solution to any problem that
presents itself to him. Interestingly, a huge volume of
these characters find the pioneers of India’s comic book
space right from Anant Pai to Margie Sastry as their
original creators.
Other landmark moments included:
1980 - Chacha Chaudhury’s entry into the world of Diamond Comics.
1986 - The advent of Raj Comics, the longest lasting Indian publishing house for comics along with Diamond Comics. Through the late ‘80s, Raj comics was responsible for launching a lineup of fan favourite superhero characters, a genre that hadn’t been too deeply explored in India, with indelible figures like Super Commando Dhruv (creator: Anupam Sinha) who had a similar story line to swarms of western superheroes of vowing to fight crime due to witnessing an early injustice in his childhood; Parmanu, who had to fight against the law enforcement that betrayed him in a twisted tale of revenge and redemption; Doga (creator: Tarun Kumar Wahi) India’s only vigilante/ antihero character; and Bheriya (creator: Dheeraj Verma) the cursed wolf-human hybrid who starts a new life in the jungles of Assam and is dedicated to protecting his native forest with a passion, to name a few. Most importantly however, was the creation and launch of Nagraj through Raj Comics, a superhero with the powers of a snake that changed the scenario forever, especially in the superhero genre.
Late 1980s - Well known Indian
cartoonist, Ajit Nina’s Detective
Moochwala and his pet dog pooch also
became something of a cult favourite all the way until
1991 when the magazine the strip was being published in
(Target, an Indian youth magazine) underwent a
renaissance of sorts and reimagined themselves with a
more text-heavy avatar. Still, for the few years of its
existence, the fictional detectives stories of solving
crimes with high-tech equipment and more than a little
chutzpah became a favourite of Indian audiences all
over.
Equally popular in Target magazine was the
brother-cartoonist duo, Neelabh and Jayanto
Banerjee’s creation
of Gardabh Das, a truly comical
singing donkey who was always depicted to be wearing a
kurt a and pyjamas, not to mention being constantly at
loggerheads with his landlord and others for disturbing
the peace with his terrible singing.
VI. The 1990s
Cut-throat competition and the advent of India’s first graphic novels.
The golden era both rose to its zenith, only to fall within the same decade. By now, there were as many as 20 publishing houses for comic books spanning several genres right from superheroes to thrillers, horror comics and the original mythological, legend-based content that made comic books so popular here in the first place. In fact, as Sharma himself put it, “Many consider the period between 1986-1996 the Golden Decade of Indian Comic Books.” Some of the most important moment from the decade included:
1991 - The tragic folding up of
Indrajal Comics who were unable to keep up with the
burgeoning competition in a field they once dominated
almost entirely on its own.
1992 - A Raj Comics issue titled Nagraj air Bughaku sold more than 6 lac copies within 3 months of its launch, becoming the best selling Indian Comic ever. Manoj Comics, another one of India’s leading comic book houses, also published more than 365 comics within a year in the ‘90s, thereby implying that there was a time in the era readers actually had one new comic book to read every single day.
1994 - Indie comic book
creator Orijit
Sen published River Of
Stories, what many refer to as India’s
first Graphic Novel. Loosely based on the politically
charged Narmada River Valley Projects, he was the first
of so many ‘comics with a conscience’, using the
seemingly child-like medium to tell a deeper story and
we were so inspired by his work, we even featured it
in about Indian
graphic novels people should invest in. He cleverly
weaved traditional elements into it using characters
like Malgu, the village gayan – or singer – to reinforce
the age-old tradition of oral storytelling in rural
India. Malgu also acts as an omnipresent moral compass
throughout the novel, where the story culminates in a
farcical confrontation between Malgu and a diabolical
politician – a climax few bother to aspire to, let alone
achieve. You can download the graphic
novel here.
However, unbeknown to most, the
tradition of Graphic Novels had already been prevailing
in India by the time River Of Stories had been
published. In fact, Bharat Negi’s ‘Kissa Ek Karod Ka’
could also be rightfully labelled as one of India’s
graphic novels. As a political satirist and cartoonist
himself, Negi created this highly politicised work based
on the Harshad Mehta scam of 1992.
1997 - The Indian market was finally seen as a viable or lucrative enough option to warrant international interest. With comic sales higher than they had ever been thanks to the golden era of Indian comics, Gotham Comics, a US-based company was established in 1997 to establish a leadership position in the Indian comic magazine and children’s book market. They brought with them the publishing rights of DC, Marvel, Dark Horse and Mad Magazine for the Indian subcontinent and there has been no looking back since.
VII. The 2000s
A brand new era, fuelled by new technology.
Unfortunately, thanks to mammoth foreign companies and the advent of video games, home video, internet and other major technological leaps affecting our interests and lifestyles, this also meant that there was a major decline in the sales of comic books by the late ‘90s and most Indian comic book companies were forced out of the game. The last ones standing? For the large part, only Raj Comics and Diamond Comics, who continue to exist today, attempting to remain dynamic in their pursuits, with the times. Still, as the landscape changed, new opportunities arose. Some of them included: 2002 - San Jose, California-based Slave Labour Graphics published a minor cult comic based on contemporary Indian culture titled ‘Bombaby The Screen Goddess.’ No, the irony of the publishing house’s name is not lost on anyone, but created by Antony Mazzotta, based upon an avatar of the hindu goddess Mumbadevi, it ended up being featured in Time Magazine and garnering a lot of international attention towards the state of the Indian comic book industry.
2004-2005 - Grant Morrison (an international force to be reckoned with in the comic book world) released Vimanarama comic while Marvel launched its Spider Man: India Project, which went on to become the first major release by a comic book company in India and eventually published by Gotham Comics in india. However, the real impression they both made was by introducing Indian artists to the mainstream.
2006 - Indian comics received the ultimate injection of vitality int he form of a collaboration between Virgin Comics (now Liquid Comics) and Gotham Comics of India. They put their forces together to create endless, epic series based on Indian mythology and ancient history; some of their most popular titles including Sadhu, Devi, Snake Woman and Ramayana 3392 AD.
Says Alok on the advent of Virgin Comics into the Indian market, “they inspired numerous other publishers to try their hands at comic book publishing but none of them could sustain the competition thanks to the lacklustre derivative.” Unfortunately, graphic novel creators were still struggling a fair amount, especially the independent ones who couldn’t necessarily turn to the comic book publishing houses available for their work. Artists/Writers like Sarnath Banerjee and Naseer Ahmed all tried their hands at sequential art but the market was never favourable to them. Interestingly, one of the more (moderately) successful attempts came from a woman—Amruta Patil’s dark and intense graphic novel Kari, which centred around an alienated young woman, working in an ad agency in Mumbai, forever mourning the separation from her soulmate Ruth post a suicide attempt together.
2008 - And then came Campfire graphic Novels. Quickly becoming one of the biggest players in the market they not only launched Graphic Novels on some of the best-known world classics such as Tom Sawyer, The Hound Of The Baskervilles and The Wright Brothers to name a few, but they also became a hub for young, independent artists, struggling to find a space for themselves within the content of Indian comics and graphic novels.
IX. The 2010s
Back on the upswing.
And so that brings us to the most current era, one we’re still living and one in which comic books and graphic novels can no longer be deigned as a medium of dwindling potential. As society and attitudes progress, so have story lines and experimentation with visual imagery and over the last 4 years we’ve seen the kind of genre and convention-defying work that we might never have expected from the subcontinent even a decade ago. Add to that a major upsurge in comic book sales again and we can only hope that perhaps the golden days are returning. Chronicled below are some of the more iconic moments that deserve mention:
2010 - Sumit Kumar’s ‘An Itch You Can’t Scratch’ came out at the first ever Indian comic con and quickly became a fan favourite. Humorous and somewhat autobiographical, the book was recently sold out, a first achievement of its kind in the graphic novel space in India.
2011 - Vivek Goel’s Holy Cow Entertainment entered the comic book market with their first offering—a ten-part comic book series based on the Hindu epic, Ramayana, titled Ravanayan—and today, the publication has a rooster of flagship characters. Mumbai-based Goel was the artist behind the series which he developed in tandem with Delhi-based writer, Vijayendra Mohanty.
2012 - Also featured in our ‘comics with a conscience’ graphic novel series on Homegrown, Sudershan (Chimpanzee) was released this year. Created by Rajesh Devraj and Meren Imchen, the dense, dark and detailed imagery draws readers into an incredibly immersive graphic anthropomorphic tale, which offers both a fresh take on animal centric Bollywood films of the 1950s as well as delves into the complexities of the fickleness of fame and the delusions of grandeur, even while capturing the increasingly seedy underbelly of a city. One of the most interesting aspects about it was the the bilingual approach of the text (Hinglish) and it is now even available on the iPad.
2013 - And finally, as something truly worthy of icing-on-the-cake status, the publishing of Abhishek Singh’s ‘Krishna - A Journey Within’ by internationally renowned Image Comics (making him the 1st Indian artist to ever be published by Image) seems appropriate as our final landmark as we reach the end of our traced-out timeline. Possibly one of the most visually captivating books to come out of the country, it’s particularly refreshing to see such a stylistic approach to the deity-stories we’ve become so used to spotting. Standing out is easy enough when the topic you’re approaching is all new, but it’s a whole different ball game when you manage to do so even when hundreds before you have attempted it in their own ways.
Government of Manipur has launched Electronic format of comic textbooks. The Department of Education (schools) has initiated the electronic format comic textbooks for Class III, IV and V as steps and measures to make up the gaps for the academic situation, especially for the schools.
While comics continue to be popular, and interest in graphic novels growing daily, an expert in the field says Tamil Nadu has always had a rich history of comic book culture which is seeing a revival.