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The Way It Was!
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After two years of blogging it's a cause for some celebration to have got this far, but it's also a reminder that I'm going to have to increase the frequency of updated if I'm going to have any chance of handing in my PhD on time!
Another reason for it being important is that it also marks the start of the third "phase" of The Marvel Age, with the arrival of Jim Shooter as editor-in-chief. Part of the aforementioned PhD involves using a Culture Of Production approach to define "The Marvel Age" as a distinct period of Marvel comics, and superhero comics in general, started with the first issue of "The Fantastic Four" in 1961 and ending with the last month of comics with Jim Shooter as editor-in-chief in 1987. Within this there are three seperate phases - "Creation", with Stan Lee as editor-in-chief, "Chaos", beginning in 1972 and running through five seperate editors-in-chief until 1978 when Jim Shooter takes over and we enter "Consolidation". There's all sorts of arguments as to why this is A Thing and why it matters which I'll not bore you with here, but suffice to say we're about to enter into a very different version of Marvel Comics, both from the preceding few years of "chaos" and indeed from its origins in the 1960s.
Sadly, the actual comic that marks this changeover isn't very special at all. It's a re-telling of most of the history of The Fantastic Four so far, which includes a single panel retelling of Doom's first appearance in Fantastic Four #5 and then about half a page later on covering the time the Thing nearly killed him in Fantastic Four #40.


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posted 17/10/2019 by Mark Hibbett
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