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  2. Category:Satirical comics - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Category:Satirical_comics

    The Barn (comic strip) Barry McKenzie; Battle for Britain (Private Eye) Battle Pope; Benchley (comic strip) Between Friends (comics) Biebel; Biff (cartoon) Mr. Block; Boban and Molly; Bobo (Italian comics) The Bogies; The Boondocks (comic strip) Breakdowns (comics) Brewster Rockit: Space Guy! The Brilliant Mind of Edison Lee; Buckles (comics)

  3. Crazy Magazine - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Crazy_Magazine

    Marvel Comics (then known as Atlas Comics) first published a Crazy comic book in 1953. It ran for seven issues, through mid-1954, and was focused on popular culture parodies and humor. [ 3 ] The second comic title, as Crazy! , ran for three issues in 1973, and reprinted comics parodies from Marvel's late-1960s Not Brand Echh . [ 4 ]

  4. Society-related comics - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Society-related_comics

    Society-related comics are comics that reflect societal issues and topics.In Hong Kong, some of them are about social satire; some talk about daily lives of Hong Kongers; some caricaturists also talk about past lives of Hong Kong in order to recall a collective memory, etc. McDull is the first well-known society-related comic.

  5. Poorly Drawn Lines - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Poorly_Drawn_Lines

    Farazmand began making comic strips in high school, and created Poorly Drawn Lines while he was a freshman at University of California, San Diego. [2] The strip first appeared in UCSD's college newspaper, The Guardian. Farazmand has drawn the comic full-time since 2013, posting new strips every Monday, Wednesday, and Friday. [3]

  6. Get Your War On - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Get_Your_War_On

    In 2007, Get Your War On comics were included with the works of Jenny Holzer and Goya in the Dissent! exhibition of protest art at Harvard University's Fogg Art Museum. [7] As the author had promised, the strip ended the day that George W. Bush left office, January 20, 2009. Rees continues to maintain a blog, which covers topical political issues.

  7. Madam & Eve - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Madam_&_Eve

    A satirical strip, it started in 1992 and was based around the theme of a middle-class white woman, Gwen Anderson ("Madam"), and her black maid, Eve Sisulu, coming to terms with the new South Africa as the Apartheid era drew to a close. Theirs is a relationship of affectionate squabbling.

  8. Keith Knight (cartoonist) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Keith_Knight_(cartoonist)

    Keith Edgar Knight Jr. (born August 24, 1966) is an American cartoonist and musician known for his accessible yet subversive satirical comic strips The K Chronicles, (Th)ink, and The Knight Life. While his work is humorous and universal in appeal, he also often deals with political, social, and racial issues. [1]

  9. Hejji - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hejji

    Hejji is a short-lived 1935 comic strip, an early work and the only comic strip by prominent children's author Dr. Seuss (pseudonym of Theodor Geisel). Hejji was produced by Geisel during the Great Depression , two years before the publication of his first book.