Green recounted "a strong energy" that
Binky Brown drew from his readership, the first significant response he got from his work. The story has had a wide influence on underground and
alternative comics, where its self-mocking and confessional approach has inspired numerous cartoonists to expose intimate and embarrassing details of their lives. Under the influence of
Binky Brown, in 1972
Aline Kominsky published her first strip, the autobiographical "Goldie: A Neurotic Woman" in ''
Wimmen's Comix . Other contemporary underground cartoonists were soon to incorporate confessional autobiography into their work. Robert Crumb followed the same year with "The Confessions of R. Crumb" and continued with numerous other such strips. Art Spiegelman, who had seen Binky Brown
in mid-creation in 1971, went as far as to state that "without Binky Brown
there would be no Maus''"—Spiegelman's most prominent work. The same year as
Binky Browns publication, Green asked Spiegelman to contribute a three-page strip to the first issue of
Funny , which Green edited and was published by
Apex Novelties. Spiegelman delivered the three-page "Maus" in which Nazi cats persecute Jewish mice, inspired by his father's experiences in the
Auschwitz concentration camp; years later he revisited the theme in the graphic novel of the same name. Comics critic Jared Gardner asserts that, while underground was associated with countercultural iconoclasm, the movement's most enduring legacy was to be autobiography.
Binky Brown went out of print for two decades after selling its initial print runs, during which time enthusiasts traded copies or photocopies. Green made his living painting signs, and contributed occasional cartoon strips to various publications. Green used the Binky Brown persona over the years in short strips and prose pieces that appeared in underground periodicals such as
Arcade and
Weirdo. "Sweet Void of Youth" in 1976 follows Binky from high school to age thirty-one, torn between cartooning and more respected forms of art. Aside from occasional one-off strips, his more regular cartooning appeared in the ongoing strips
The Sign Game, in
Signs of the Times magazine, and
Musical Legends in America, in
Pulse! Such later work has attracted far less attention than
Binky Brown.
(pictured) and other writers who bared their personal lives in their work. Though autobiographical elements had appeared earlier in the work of underground cartoonists such as Crumb,
Spain, and
Kim Deitch,
Binky Brown Meets the Holy Virgin Mary has gained credit as the first important work of
autobiographical comics in English. To Charles Hatfield
Binky Brown is "the ur-example of confessional literature in comics"; for
Paul Gravett Green was "the first neurotic visionary to unburden his uncensored psychological troubles";
Douglas Wolk declared Green and his work "ahead of the memoirist curve"; Art Spiegelman declared: "What the
Brontë sisters did for Gothic romance, what
Tolkien did for sword-and-sorcery, Justin Green did for confessionary, autobiographical "; and
Publishers Weekly called the work the "
Rosetta Stone of autobiographical comics".
Binky Brown Meets the Holy Virgin Mary has appealed mostly to comics fans and cartoonists, and has gained little recognition from mainstream audiences and arts critics. Spiegelman has speculated this neglect comes from the nature of the comics medium; in contrast to explicit works such as
Philip Roth's ''
Portnoy's Complaint'', the penises in Green's work are visual. According to underground historian Patrick Rosenkranz, Green represents a break with past convention by being "the first to openly render his personal demons and emotional conflicts within the confines of a comic". Green denied credit, calling confessional autobiography "a
fait accompli, a low fruit ripe for the plucking", examples of which abounded in literary works he had read by
James Joyce,
James T. Farrell, and Philip Roth. He has accepted credit for "anticipat the groundswell in literature about obsessive compulsive disorder by almost two decades", for which he knew of no precedent. Chute sees major themes of isolation and coping with OCD recurring in autobiographical works such as
Howard Cruse's
Stuck Rubber Baby (1995) and
Alison Bechdel's
Fun Home (2006). Hatfield sees echoes of Green's unrestrained approach to dealing with a mental condition in
Madison Clell's
Cuckoo (2002)—about Clell's
dissociative identity disorder—and in
David B.'s
Epileptic (2003). To cartoonist
Jim Woodring, Green's autobiographical work "has never been surpassed". Woodring's own autobiographical work in
Jim draws from his dreams rather than his waking life. British-American cartoonist
Gabrielle Bell sympathized with Brown's approach, which she described as "talking about his feelings or his emotional state when he was illustrating it with striking images that were sort of absurd or a weird juxtaposition". Green's influence extended overseas to cartoonists such as the Dutch
Peter Pontiac, who drew inspiration from
Binky Brown and
Maus to produce
Kraut (2000), about his father who
collaborated with the Nazis during World War II. The story ranked No. 9 on
The Comics Journals list of the best hundred English-language comics of the 20th century, and featured as the cover artwork for the autobiographical comics issue of the journal
Biography (Vol. 31, No. 1). Artwork to
Binky Brown appeared in an exhibition of Green's work at Shake It Records in Cincinnati in 2009. Robert Crumb 2010.jpg|alt=Photo of a bearded and bespectacled man opening a book|
Robert Crumb took to putting himself on display shortly after reading
Binky Brown. Art Spiegelman (2007).jpg|alt=Photo of a bespectacled man|
Art Spiegelman stated there would have been no
Maus without
Binky Brown. JimWoodringDrawing.jpg|alt=Photo of a bearded and bespectacled man drawing|
Jim Woodring stated Green's autobiographical work "has never been surpassed"; his own autobiographical work depicts his dreams. ==References==