From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
This is a list of notable
Jewish American cartoonists . For other Jewish Americans, see
Lists of Jewish Americans .
Ralph Bakshi , animator (
Fritz the Cat ,
The Lord of the Rings )
[1]
[2]
Brian Michael Bendis , comic book writer
[3]
Dave Berg , cartoonist (
Mad )
[4]
John Broome
[5]
Al Capp , cartoonist (
Li'l Abner )
[6]
[7]
Roz Chast , cartoonist (
The New Yorker )
[8]
Howard Chaykin , comic book writer
[9]
Daniel Clowes , alternative comics writer (
Ghost World )
[10]
Gene Colan , comic book artist (
Daredevil )
[11]
Peter David , comics writer and "writer of stuff"
[12]
Will Eisner , comics artist (
The Spirit )
[6]
[13]
Jules Feiffer , cartoonist
[14]
Lyonel Feininger , cartoonist (
Kin-der-Kids )
[13]
Bill Finger , comics artist and creator of
Batman
Max Gaines , founder of
EC Comics , pioneering figure in the creation of the modern comic book
[4]
William Gaines , comics artist and
Mad founder
[4]
Rube Goldberg , cartoonist
[6]
[15]
Jordan B. Gorfinkel , comic book writer (
Batman ) and cartoonist
[16]
Milt Gross , Gross Exaggerations
[13]
Allan Heinberg , comic book writer (Young Avengers )
[17]
Herblock , cartoonist; three
Pulitzer Prizes
[18]
Harry Hershfield , cartoonist (
Abie the Agent ,
Desperate Desmond )
[19]
Al Hirschfeld , caricaturist
[20]
Al Jaffee , cartoonist (
Mad )
[15]
Bob Kane , comics artist (
Batman )
[13]
Gil Kane , comics artist (
Green Lantern )
[21]
[22]
Jack Kirby , comics artist and writer (
Captain America ,
Fantastic Four ,
Hulk ,
Fourth World (comics) )
[23]
Neil Kleid , cartoonist, graphic designer
[13]
Aline Kominsky-Crumb , cartoonist (
Dirty Laundry )
[24]
Adam Kubert , comics artist
[13]
Joe Kubert , comics artist
[13]
Harvey Kurtzman , comics artist and Mad editor
[25]
Mell Lazarus , cartoonist (
Momma ,
Miss Peach )
[26]
[27]
[28]
Stan Lee , comics writer (co-creator of
Spider-Man , co-creator of
X-Men , Hulk ,
Fantastic Four , and
Avengers )
[23]
Robert Mankoff
[8]
Michael Netzer ,
American-Israeli artist best known for his
comic book work for
DC Comics and
Marvel Comics in the 1970s,
[29] as well as for his online presence.
[30]
[31]
[32]
Eli Valley , cartoonist and author best known for Diaspora Boy .
[33]
Martin Nodell , comics artist (
Green Lantern )
[34]
Nina Paley , cartoonist, animator and
free culture activist (
Sita Sings the Blues ).
[35]
Harvey Pekar , comix writer (
American Splendor )
[36]
Trina Robbins , comix writer
[25]
Joe Shuster , comics artist (
Superman )
[37]
Jerome Siegel , comics artist (
Superman )
[37]
Art Spiegelman , comics writer (
Maus )
[6]
[38]
Mat Tonti , comics writer ("The Book of Secrets")
Alan Weiss , comics artist and writer
See also
References
^ Erens, Patricia (1984),
The Jew in American Cinema , Indiana University Press, p.
365 ,
ISBN
0253204933
^ Murray Polner (1982),
American Jewish biographies , Facts on File, Incorporated,
ISBN
9780871964625
^
"The Ultimate Spider-Decade: Part 2" .
Comic Book Resources . Retrieved November 30, 2010 .
^
a
b
c Sangiacomo, Michael. "Jewish men took lead role in creating comics industry",
The Plain Dealer . October 4, 2003. p. E6
^ From Krakow to Krypton: Jews and Comic Books
https://books.google.com/books?isbn=0827610432
Arie Kaplan - 2010 - Art
Broome. makes. a. clean. sweep. Julius“Julie”Julius“Julie”. Schwartz was, like Mort ... One of those clients was a Jewish short story writer named John Broome.
^
a
b
c
d
"Contemporary Scribes: Jewish American Cartoonists" .
Shofar: An Interdisciplinary Journal of Jewish Studies . Retrieved November 27, 2010 .
^
"The Escapist: Fantasy, Folklore, and the Pleasures of the Comic Book in Recent Jewish American Holocaust Fiction" .
Shofar: An Interdisciplinary Journal of Jewish Studies . Retrieved November 27, 2010 .
^
a
b
"That's funny? Jews in New Yorker cartoons" .
The Boston Globe . Archived from
the original on January 10, 2010. Retrieved November 30, 2010 .
^ Cooke, Jon B. (April 2005).
Comic Book Artist Collection . TwoMorrows.
ISBN
9781893905429 . Retrieved November 30, 2010 .
^
"Celebrity Jews" . Jweekly.com. August 2, 2007. Retrieved November 30, 2010 .
^ Field, Tom; Colan, Gene (2005).
Secrets in the Shadows: The Art & Life of Gene Colan . TwoMorrows.
ISBN
9781893905450 . Retrieved November 30, 2010 .
^ Conway, Gerry; Wilson, Leah (22 June 2009).
Webslinger: unauthorized essays on your friendly neighborhood Spider-man . BenBella Books.
ISBN
9781935251521 . Retrieved November 30, 2010 .
^
a
b
c
d
e
f
g Samantha Baskind, Ranen Omer-Sherman (2008).
The Jewish graphic novel: critical approaches .
Rutgers University Press .
ISBN
978-0-8135-4367-3 . Retrieved November 27, 2010 .
^
"Mightier than the Sword; Jewish cartoons and cartoonists in South Africa" [
permanent dead link ] , Glenda Abramson, International Journal of Humor Research, Volume 4, Issue 2, Pages 149–64, ISSN 1613-3722, 1991
^
a
b
Stephen J. Whitfield (October 3, 2010).
"The Distinctiveness of American Jewish Humor" . Modern Judaism, Volume 6, Issue 3, pp. 245–60. Archived from
the original on January 13, 2016. Retrieved November 27, 2010 .
^
"Jordan B. Gorfinkel" . Huffington Post .
^ Heinberg –
[1]
Archived 2019-01-07 at the
Wayback Machine "Jewish authors who may be of interest... Allan Heinberg"
^ Cutler, Irving (1996).
The Jews of Chicago: from shtetl to suburb . University of Illinois Press.
ISBN
9780252021855 . Retrieved November 30, 2010 .
^
"Jewish Cartoonists and the American Experience" , A collaboration of the Ohio State University Melton Center for Jewish Studies and the Cartoon Research Library
^ Kilian, Michael (January 21, 2003).
"Al Hirschfeld: 1903–2003; Caricaturist's style awed public, celebrities alike" .
Chicago Tribune . Retrieved November 30, 2010 .
^ Baskind, Samantha; Omer-Sherman, Ranen (2008).
The Jewish graphic novel: critical approaches . Rutgers University Press.
ISBN
9780813543673 . Retrieved December 4, 2010 .
^ Weinstein, Simcha (June 27, 2006).
Up, up, and oy vey!: how Jewish history, culture, and values shaped the comic book superhero . Leviathan Press.
ISBN
9781881927327 . Retrieved December 4, 2010 .
^
a
b
"X-Men as J Men: The Jewish Subtext of a Comic Book Movie" .
Shofar: An Interdisciplinary Journal of Jewish Studies . Retrieved November 27, 2010 .
^ Brook, Vincent (2006).
You should see yourself: Jewish identity in postmodern American culture . Rutgers University Press.
ISBN
9780813538457 . Retrieved December 4, 2010 .
^
a
b Arie Kaplan (2008).
From Krakow to Krypton: Jews and comic books .
Jewish Publication Society .
ISBN
978-0-8276-0843-6 . Retrieved November 27, 2010 .
^
"Jewish Cartoonists and the American Experience" . The Ohio State University Billy Ireland Cartoon Library & Museum. Retrieved December 4, 2010 .
^
"Comics: Momma" .
The Washington Post . May 7, 2004. Retrieved December 4, 2010 .
^ Telushkin, Joseph (18 May 2010).
Jewish humor: what the best Jewish jokes say about the Jews . Harper Collins.
ISBN
9780062012852 . Retrieved December 4, 2010 .
^
"Michael Netzer at Lambiek" . Lambiek Comiclopedia. Retrieved 28 November 2011 .
^ Young, Thom (5 October 2005).
"Being and Time: An Interview with Michael Netzer" .
Comics Bulletin . Archived from
the original on 22 May 2011. Retrieved 28 November 2011 .
^ McMillan, Graeme (21 June 2006).
"Netzer: He don't want to ball around like everybody else" .
Newsarama . Archived from
the original on 16 June 2013. Retrieved 14 June 2015 .
^
Meth, Clifford (August 2004).
"Michael Netzer: Party Animal" . Comics Bulletin. Archived from
the original on 22 May 2011. Retrieved 28 November 2011 .
^ Diaspora Boy" Comics on Crisis in America and Israel . OR Books. 2017.
ISBN
9781682190708 .
^ Dubner, Stephen J. (December 13, 2006).
"The Death of a Jewish Superhero Creator" .
The New York Times . Retrieved December 4, 2010 .
^ Paley, Nina (March 18, 2009).
"My Official Position on Copyright" . blog.ninapaley.com . Retrieved August 6, 2018 .
^
"Of Mice And Menschen: Jewish Comics Come of Age" , Авторы P. Buhle, Журнал Tikkun, Издательство, Institute for Labor & Mental Health
^
a
b Shelley M. Buxbaum, Sara E. Karesh (2003),
"Important people in American Jewish history" , Jewish faith in America , Infobase,
ISBN
978-0-8160-4986-8
^
"We Were Talking Jewish; Art Spiegelmans's Maus as Holocaust Production , Contemporary Literature , Michael Rothberg, 1994
External links