Popular Culture Review Vol. 11, No. 2, Summer 2000 | Page 93

Towards a New Modernism in European Comics? After the incredible developments in the ‘'comic story” during the late sixties and early seventies, and the apparent consolidation of its new status and prestige during the period 1975-1985, a deep crisis has affected the European (i.e. continental') production. Collapsing sales rates, overproduction, the apparent absence of new voices, and the endless repetition of well known schemes caused the crisis to be so profound, that around 1990 even the economic survival of the sector seemed in danger. If recent data allows for a more optimistic view of the dynamism of authors and publishing companies (or at least of their capability of resistance), an analysis of the data cannot mask the important mutations which have taken place. Hence, a serious comparison between the situation of the European comic strip in 1966 (when comics were still a minor genre in an emerging market) and its current position (now that the genre has a new balance and possibly even a new growth) can hardly be made. Moreover, the solutions given to the problems caused by last decade’s overproduction and creative exhaustion have not managed to restore the sector’s artistic development- its dazzling variety. Rather, they have aimed at saving at all costs the economic infrastructure which appeared in the seventies. The marketing machine apparently still works satisfactorily, but the medium itself has undergone such tremendous changes that the crisis of the “comic strip” has only been furthered. The great expansion of the European comic strip from 1970 until the mid- eighties was given a boost by the concurrence of three main developments. The sudden diversification of production not only granted the traditional sectors of pulp and didactic youth fiction a vigorous adult counterpart, but also managed to open initially underground-inspired comics (for instance the famous “silly and mean” humour of magazines such as Metal Hurlant and Circus) to a wide range of mainstream narrative subgenres (e.g. those illustrated by A siiivre). The development of a new economic environment led to the promotion of new types of stories as well as new forms of sale and distribution (notable exceptions here are merchandising and advertising exploitations). Both authors and publishers became more professional and thus the creation of specialized shops rose dramatically. Increasingly, more host mediums were conquered: newspapers, weeklies, monthly magazines, albums (in hard back or paperback following the national traditions), and finally “real books”, which some Anglo-Saxon critics began to call graphic novels (this term is now well known in Europe too, although it has