SACRAMENTO, Calif. (AP) โ On a recent day at Sacramento native Lecho Lopezโs comic shop in the city, his 5-year-old nephew read his first word aloud: โbad.โ It was from a graphic novel.
There was irony in that being his first word, because Lopez credits comic books with many positive things in his life. That is why he supports repealing a city ordinance dating back to 1949 that bars the distribution of many comic books to kids and teens. It is not enforced today.
โItโs a silly law,โ said Lopez, who has a red-and-black tattoo of the Superman logo on his forearm, in an interview at his store, JLA Comics. โA lot of good things come out of comic books.โ
A City Council committee unanimously voted this week to advance the repeal and designate the third week of September as โSacramento Comic Book Week.โ It now heads to the full council for a vote. The ban prohibits distributing comic books prominently featuring an account of crime that show images of illegal acts such as arson, murder or rape to anyone under 18.
In the mid-20th century, as comic books were on the rise, fears spread over their impact on children, with some arguing they could lead to illiteracy or inspire violent crime. The industry decided to regulate itself, and local governments โ from Los Angeles County to Lafayette, Louisiana โ passed bans to shield certain comics from young people. While some cities like Sacramento still have those laws on the books, they are rarely if ever enforced.
Now, proponents of repealing the Sacramento law say it is necessary to reflect the value of comics and help protect against a modern wave of book bans.
Local artist pushes for repeal
Comic book author Eben Burgoon, who started a petition to overturn Sacramentoโs ban, said comics โhave this really valuable ability to speak truth to power.โ
โThese antiquated laws kind of set up this jeopardy where bad actors could work hard to make this medium imperiled,โ he said at a hearing Tuesday held by the city councilโs Law and Legislation Committee.
Sacramento is a great place to devote a week to celebrating comics, Burgoon said. The city has a โwonderfulโ comic book community, he said, and hosts CrockerCon, a comics showcase at a local art museum, every year.
Sam Helmick, president of the American Library Association, said โthere is no good reasonโ to have a ban such as Sacramentoโs on the books, saying it โflies in the face of modern First Amendment norms.โ
The history behind comic book bans
The movement to censor comics decades ago was not an aberration in U.S. history, said Jeff Trexler, interim director of the Comic Book Legal Defense Fund, which fights to protect the free-speech rights of people who read or make comics.
New York, for example, created a commission in the 1920s dedicated to reviewing films to determine whether they should be licensed for public viewing, based on whether they were โobsceneโ or โsacrilegiousโ and could โcorrupt moralsโ or โincite crime,โ according to the state archives.
โEvery time thereโs a new medium or a new way of distributing a medium, there is an outrage and an attempt to suppress it,โ Trexler said.
The California Supreme Court ruled in 1959 that a Los Angeles County policy banning the sale of so-called โcrimeโ comic books to minors was unconstitutional because it was too broad. Sacramentoโs ban probably doesnโt pass muster for the same reason, Trexler said.
There is not a lot of recent research on whether there is a link between comic books and violent behavior, said Christopher Ferguson, a professor of psychology at Stetson University in Florida. But, he said, similar research into television and video games has not shown a link to โclinically relevant changes in youth aggression or violent behavior.โ
Comic-book lovers tout their benefits
Leafing through comics like EC Comicsโ โEpitaphs from the Abyssโ and DCโs and Marvelโs collaboration โBatman/Deadpool,โ Lopez showed an Associated Press reporter images of characters smashing the windshield of a car, smacking someone across the face and attacking Batman using bows and arrows โ the kinds of scenes that might be regulated if Sacramentoโs ban were enforced.
But comics with plot lines that include violence can contain positive messages, said Benjamin Morse, a media studies lecturer at the University of Nevada, Las Vegas.
โSpider-Man is a very mature concept,โ said Morse, who became an โX-Menโ fan as a kid and later worked at Marvel for 10 years. โItโs a kid whoโs lost his parents, his uncle dies to violence and he vows to basically be responsible.โ
Lopezโs mother bought him his first comic book, โUltimate Spider-Man #1,โ when he was around 9 years old, he said. But it was โKingdom Come,โ a comic featuring DCโs Justice League, that changed his life at a young age, with its โhyperrealisticโ art that looked like nothing he had ever seen before, he said.
He said his interest in comic books helped him avoid getting involved with gangs growing up. They also improved his reading skills as someone with dyslexia.
โThe only thing that I was really able to read that helped me absorb the information was comic books because you had a visual aid to help you explain what was going on in the book,โ Lopez said.
And a comic book can offer so much more, Burgoon said at this weekโs hearing.
โIt makes imaginative thinkers,โ he said. โIt does not make widespread delinquency. It does not make societal harm.โ
