Omnibus

Jack Kirby’s Lost Art (Entry 688.DE2203)

12 snips
Nov 27, 2025
Joseph J. Darowski, an English professor and comics scholar at Brigham Young University, dives into the legacy of Jack Kirby, a cornerstone of American pop culture. They discuss the profound impact of Kirby’s work and the mystery surrounding thousands of his missing original pages. Darowski explores Kirby's Jewish roots and discusses the complexities of co-creation at Marvel. The conversation also touches on how the comics industry evolved, the value of Kirby's art, and the ongoing treasure hunt for lost works, emphasizing his lasting influence on storytelling.
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INSIGHT

Pop Culture Became Legitimate Scholarship

  • Academia expanded to study comics and games because they shape mass culture more than traditional 'high' art.
  • Scholars adapted film and art analysis while developing new formal tools for comics and interactivity.
INSIGHT

Form Matters As Much As Content

  • Studying new media borrows classic literary theories and invents formal tools for unique features like panels and interactivity.
  • Analysis must address both content and medium-specific form to be meaningful.
ANECDOTE

Captain America Punched Hitler Pre-War

  • Jack Kirby co-created Captain America in 1940 and depicted him punching Hitler on the cover before US entry into WWII.
  • Kirby received hate mail from isolationists and offered to fight any complainant in a fist fight.
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