In 1938, pioneering science fiction magazine
Amazing Stories had fallen on hard times, and had been purchased by Chicago-based cartoonist-turned-ad man
William B. Ziff. He turned its editorial direction over to Chicago
science fiction fan Ray Palmer. Ziff's company had obtained a dominant position in advertising for black-oriented publications, and he was familiar with Jackson's work for the
Defender and other papers. Jackson illustrated three stories in the first Palmer-edited issue of
Amazing (June 1938). Over the next four years, his work would appear in nearly forty issues of
Amazing and its stablemate,
Fantastic Adventures, with Jackson frequently illustrating more than one story in a single issue. Jackson is believed to be the first black artist used regularly in science fiction magazines. While not genre-savvy, he became more familiar with the field, and was recognized as an especially suitable artist for the kind of humorous science fiction content that Palmer liked to run. He was profiled in
Amazing's "Introducing the Author" feature, a rarity for an artist, with a photo which guaranteed that the magazine's readers understood that Jackson was black, a college man with a suburban family and considerable experience in his profession. After four years in the science fiction field, Jackson realized the potential for science fiction to safely criticize contemporary America by displacing action to another world or time. He stopped his work for the science fiction magazines, but turned the
Defender's long-running
Bungleton Green strip into science fiction and Green himself into a superhero. "Bung" is killed, revived and rebuilt, time travels first to 1778 (to showcase the shameful history of American slavery), then to
Memphis in 2043, where blacks and whites have built a colorblind utopia, but a newly-risen continent of green people treats whites ("chalkies") in a manner painfully familiar to Jackson's black readers of the 1940s. (By 1947, this transformation would be reversed —
"it was all a dream" — and another artist would take over the strip, returning it to its gag strip origins which Jackson disdained.) == After Chicago ==