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Re: Super Green Beret 1

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topic icon Author Topic: Re: Super Green Beret 1  (Read 198 times)

The Australian Panther

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Re: Super Green Beret 1
« on: August 02, 2019, 09:00:02 AM »

This may be technically speaking, ' A good comic' but it was a serious miscalculation. There is a reason that most comic companies stayed away from Vietnam comics at the time. Marvel stayed with WW2 with Sgt Fury and Kanigher's DC war books rarely had Vietnam stories. There just was not a market for them. Vietnam was an unpopular and messy war. For the age group that bought comics, Conscription was a very real possibility and the war was not seen as a real threat in any way to the US (or its allies like Australia) and there was considerable opposition to it.
The creators of Viet War comics at this time were Veterans of WW2 and Korea and couldn't see that hero stories of that type didn't go over well at all.
It was only later, in the 80's and 90s that a few comics came out that dealt with Vietnam Realistically.

Link to the book: Super Green Beret 1
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positronic1

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Re: Super Green Beret 1
« Reply #1 on: August 02, 2019, 09:44:34 AM »

There were two distinct periods as far as as comic books went, pre- and post-1968. In 1968, beginning with the Tet Offensive, the U.S. dramatically increased its involvement in Vietnam, calling up many more troops than had been committed before that. Prior to that, to most Americans, the war in Vietnam was a distant thing, not uppermost in their consciousness. During that time, the older generation of comics pros with an anti-Communist stance held over from the 1950s would flirt with Vietnam stories, treating them no differently than other stories about other wars. Marvel even sent Iron Man, Captain America, and Thor to Vietnam in various one-off stories. There can be no doubt about Stan Lee's arch anti-Communist approach in the early 1960s Iron Man and Hulk stories, featuring as they did Tony Stark, a military industrialist with government contracts, and Bruce Banner, a civilian scientist working on U.S. military projects, although Vietnam only featured in a few stories, with the bulk of them concentrated on the threat from Russia. Chinese Communism seemed more of a nebulous danger, but then again, there was The Mandarin in Iron Man (yet another variation on Fu Manchu, as was the Yellow Claw before him). DC published a war series about Captain Hunter's Hellcats, but it didn't go over well.

After 1968 when things started getting serious, Americans as a whole became polarized over the issue of the U.S.'s involvement in Vietnam, coining the phrase "Hawks and Doves", with conservatives sticking to "My country, do or die" and protecting the world from the global threat of Communism, while a large number of people questioned the morality of American citizens fighting and dying so far from home in an undeclared war in which we had never been attacked. By that point, most comic book publishers had decided to stay out of it.
« Last Edit: August 02, 2019, 10:35:02 AM by positronic1 »
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