Lucky Luke, the timeless Belgian comic depiction of a lonesome cowboy created by the team of Morris and Goscinny, will be celebrated in Istanbul with an extravaganza including an exhibition, a workshop and a panel
Comic books were a hovering presence in Turkey’s pop culture from the late 1950s until the 1980s, defining generations, their tastes and the boundaries of their imagination. It’s no surprise that kids who grew up with imaginary comic heroes dominating their childhood and adolescent lives are looking back on them now. While comic book culture went into a period of deep sleep with the increasing number of private TV channels and the emergence of videos and computers in the 1980s, the nostalgia has become unbearable for some kids, who have now grown up, whether they have become academics or artists, opened their own businesses or are working away in a job.
The lazy comic book readers of the past have become adults, reviving the cult of comic books in late 1990s through underground fanzines and secondhand booksellers. Now this has become an economy of its own, with old comic books published in new packages to suit expensive tastes, and collectors demanding insane amounts of money for old issues of comic books and the once-cheap memorabilia of childhood.
In this atmosphere, a comic book hero that was a big name for Turkish readers is getting the star treatment in Istanbul now. Belgian cartoonist Morris and writer René Goscinny’s timeless creation, the lonesome cowboy Lucky Luke (known as “Red Kit” to Turkish readers) is at the center of an extravaganza celebrating the history, art and fandom of the character.
Click here for full article (Hürriyet Daily News)
Lucky Luke celebrated in Istanbul
Arayan bulur:
comics,
Emrah Guler,
exhibition,
Goscinny,
Istanbul,
Lucky Luke,
Morris,
Red Kit
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