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Wednesday, May 31, 2006

Crisis of conscience

In The San Francisco Bay Guardian, contributing writer Annalee Newitz reveals she was brought to tears by Grant Morrison and Frank Quitely's We3, and divulges her growing obsession with comic books:

Maybe comic books are the bugaboos of yesteryear, but they still share with video games one subversive characteristic that makes them dangerous to anyone politician, moralist, or other who clings to the status quo. Comic books lend themselves well to fantasies about multiple, parallel universes. Because these are narratives that last over decades and spawn multiple spin-offs by hundreds of different authors and artists, comic books inevitably train readers to imagine how one scenario might lead to several different outcomes. And comics also invite readers to explore how one little change in the present can lead to whole new interpretations of history. There's even a word retcon, for retroactive continuity that comic book geeks use to describe what happens when a new comic book author changes a character's history to explain a new present. Like video games, where different characters and players take the game play in new directions, comic books remind us that there is no one perfect path to follow, and that the future can always be changed.

Newitz also touches upon the Mother of All Retcons, DC's Crisis on Infinite Earths, her current (specific) comics obsession.

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