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The term "alternative comics" is one of several labels applied to a wide range of comic books, graphic novels, and allied forms created independently of large corporate publishers such as Marvel comics or DC comics. These comics have appeared since about 1980, in the wake of the underground comix movement of the late 1960s and early 70s. The works in question have variously been labelled "independent", "small press," "new wave," "post-underground" or "art comics." Self-published "minicomics" may also fall under the "alternative" umbrella.
What these disparate works have in common is that they present an alternative to the formulaic genre comics which dominate the US comic book industry (such as the superhero-themed products of Marvel and DC comic companies). Those "mainstream" comics are typically produced by a team of workers operating on tight deadlines: a writer, a penciler, an inker, a letterer, a colorist, and an editor. By contrast, alternative comics are often the product of a single creator who performs all of those functions and are published when deemed complete by the author, with little regard for regular distribution schedules. Since a solitary creator cannot produce pages as quickly as a team of creators, many creators submit short works to anthology publications that collect work from several creators. Where the content of "mainstream" comics is influenced by corporate managers attempting to maximize sales, "alternative" comics are often published in small numbers for specialized audiences, which allows for the publication of material that many in a more general readership would likely find obscure or offensive. In all of these ways, "alternative" comics build directly on the precedent set by underground comix.
The hippie counterculture and the associated comix distribution system had largely collapsed by the late 1970s. At that juncture, the independent comic artists who had emerged as part of the comix underground found it increasingly difficult to find publishers, and those that did continue to publish found that their audience had shrunk dramatically.
Two of the leading artists of underground comix addressed this situation in the early 1980s by starting magazines that anthologized new, artistically ambitious comics. RAW, a lavishly produced, large format anthology that was clearly intended to be seen as a work of art was founded by artist Art Spiegelman and his wife Françoise Mouly in 1980. Another magazine, Weirdo, was started by the leading figure in underground comix, Robert Crumb, in 1981.
Both of these magazines reflected changes from the days of the underground comix. They had different formats from the old comix, and the selection of artists differed, too. RAW featured many European artists, Weirdo included photo-funnies and strange outsider art-type documents. The underground staples of sex, drugs and revolution were much less in evidence. More emphasis was placed on developing the craft of comics drawing and storytelling, with many artists aiming for work that was both subtler and more complex than was typical in the underground. This was true of much of the new work done by the established comix artists as well as the newcomers: Spiegelman's Maus, much celebrated for bringing a new seriousness to comics, was serialized in RAW.
Another important factor in the establishment of alternative comics was the emergence in the late 1970s of the publishing house Fantagraphics. This small company, headed by Gary Groth and Kim Thompson, was instrumental in establishing a new audience for seriously intended comics. They created a magazine for the critical discussion of comics, The Comics Journal, reprinted a number of historical comics that had fallen into obscurity, and they published the work of a new generation of artists, notably Love and Rockets by the brothers Jaime, Gilbert and Mario Hernandez.
As the genre has grown and expanded, alternative comics have ranged from small-press comics that grew to become mainstream (Elfquest,Cerebus the Aardvark), to comics created purely for artistic expression (Raw), to journalistic and historical topics (Palestine, Louis Riel), to adult-oriented pornography and humor (Cherry Poptart and Xxxenophile). They have filled a creative niche left by the glut of superhero comic books published by mainstream companies.
Contrary to the romanticized notions of a supposed schism between alternative and mainstream comics, underground artists (such as Peter Bagge and Robert Sikoryak) are frequently tapped by large publishing houses such as DC or Marvel for their talents.