Katy, Millie, Misty, and Me: Participatory Culture in Teen Fashion and Humor Comics

dc.contributor.authorWalsh, John A.
dc.date.accessioned2025-02-18T12:50:08Z
dc.date.available2025-02-18T12:50:08Z
dc.date.issued2019-06-27
dc.description.abstractThis paper explores pre-Internet, print-based participatory culture in the form of reader-contributed content to fashion and humor comics associated with characters such as Archie Comics’ Katy Keene and Marvel’s Patsy Walker and Millie the Model. Comics featuring these characters were published regularly from the 1940s into late 1960s and early 1970s. A key feature of these comics is the inclusion of reader-contributed content. Readers submitted— through the mail—fashion designs, story ideas, and other creative contributions. The artists on these comics would incorporate the readers’ contributions and credit the readers in the pages of the published comics. Through this form of reader-participation—a readerly practice that transcends “reading” in its literal sense—readers become co-creators of the comics they consumed, and in some cases, readers also become characters, as their contributions, identities, and images were woven into the fictional narrative and the textual and visual fabric of the comics. The Katy Keene and Millie the Model characters were revived in the 1980s, with Millie appearing as the aunt of the titular character from the six-issue series Misty, written and drawn by Trina Robbins. In these 1980s revivals, the practice of soliciting reader contributions was also reintroduced, and readers of the earlier comics took on new roles as primary creators, or resumed their previous roles as reader- contributors, alongside a new, younger generation of reader-contributors. In the comics under investigation, we witness the evolution of a particular textual/visual form of participatory culture that engages readers ranging in age from young children to middle-aged adults. The connections among readers, creators, characters, and the material comic book will be explored through analysis of the published comics alongside archival sources, including the original fan mail from readers to Trina Robbins and her creation, “Misty.”
dc.identifier.citationWalsh, J. A. (2019). Katy, Millie, Misty, and me: Participatory culture in teen fashion and humor comics. Paper presented at Bedephilia since the 1960s: Sub-culture and shared culture, Cité internationale de la bande dessinée et de l’Image, Angoulême, France, June 27, 2019.
dc.identifier.urihttps://hdl.handle.net/2022/33458
dc.language.isoen
dc.relation.journalBedephilia since the 1960s: sub-culture and shared culture, Cité internationale de la bande dessinée et de l’Image, Angoulême, France (conference)
dc.rightsKaty, Millie, Misty, and Me: Participatory Culture in Teen Fashion and Humor Comics © 2019 by John A. Walsh is licensed under Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial 4.0 International
dc.rights.urihttps://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/4.0/?ref=chooser-v1
dc.subjectcomic books
dc.subjectcomics
dc.subjectcomics studies
dc.subjectparticipatory culture
dc.subjectBill Woggon
dc.subjectTrina Robbins
dc.subjectKaty Keene
dc.subjectMillie the Model
dc.subjectMarvel Comics
dc.subjectArchie Comics
dc.titleKaty, Millie, Misty, and Me: Participatory Culture in Teen Fashion and Humor Comics
dc.typePresentation

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