The 1920s and 1930s saw further booms within the industry. The market for
comic anthologies in Britain turned to targeting children through juvenile
humor, with
The Dandy and
The Beano. In 1929,
Hergé created the
Adventures of Tintin newspaper strip for a Belgian-market comic supplement,
Le Petit Vingtième; this was successfully collected in a bound
comic album and created a market for further such works. The same period in the United States had seen newspaper
comic strips expand their subject matter beyond humour, with
action-adventure and
mystery strips launched. The collection of such material also began, with
The Funnies, a reprint collection of newspaper strips, published in tabloid size in 1929. A market for such
comic books soon followed. The first modern
American-style comic book,
Famous Funnies: A Carnival of Comics (also a reprint collection of newspaper strips), was released in the U.S. in 1933 and by 1938 publishers were printing original material in the new format. It was at this point that
Action Comics #1 launched, with
Superman as the cover feature. The popularity of the character swiftly enshrined
superhero comics as the defining
comics genre of American comic books. The genre lost popularity in the 1950s but re-established its domination of the form from the 1960s until the late 20th century. In Japan, a country with a long tradition of illustration, comics were hugely popular. Referred to as
manga, the Japanese form was established after World War II by
Osamu Tezuka, who expanded the page count of work to number in the hundreds, and who developed a filmic style, heavily influenced by the
Disney cartoons of the time. The Japanese market expanded its range to cover works in many genres, from juvenile
fantasy through
romance to adult fantasies. Japanese manga is typically published in large anthologies, containing several hundred pages, and the stories told have long been used as sources for adaptation into
animated film. In Japan, such films are referred to as
anime, and many creators work in both forms simultaneously, leading to an intrinsic linking of the two forms. During the latter half of the 20th century comics became a very popular
item for collectors and from the 1970s American comics publishers have actively encouraged collecting and shifted a large portion of comics publishing and production to appeal directly to the collector's community. The modern double use of the term
comic, as an adjective describing a genre, and a noun designating an entire medium, has been criticised as confusing and misleading. In the 1960s and 1970s, underground
cartoonists used the spelling
comix to distinguish their work from mainstream newspaper strips and juvenile comic books. Their work was written for an adult audience but was usually comedic, so the "comic" label was still appropriate. The term
graphic novel was popularized in the late 1970s, having been coined at least two decades previous, to distance the material from this confusion. In the 1980s, comics scholarship started to blossom in the U.S., and a resurgence in the popularity of comics was seen, with
Alan Moore and
Frank Miller producing notable superhero works and
Bill Watterson's
Calvin & Hobbes, and
Gary Larson's
The Far Side being syndicated.
Webcomics have grown in popularity
since the mid-1990s. Since the inception of the
World Wide Web, artists have been able to self-publish comics on the
Internet for a low cost. Hosting providers specifically designed for webcomics, such as
Keenspot and
Modern Tales, allow for a type of
syndication of webcomics.
Scott McCloud described in 2000 how creators of online comics can revolutionize the medium by embracing the digital space and making use of techniques such as
infinite canvas. Webcomics became more prolific in the early 2000s, as respected comics awards such as the
Eagle and
Eisner Awards started adding
categories for digital comics. ==See also==