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Library of Congress Opens Records of Anti-Comic Book Shrink

eldavojohn writes "Some light is being shone on comic book history today as the Library of Congress opens up the 222 boxes of a German psychiatrist's evidence and papers against comic books. Dr. Fredric Wertham is well known by comic book fans as the author of Seduction of the Innocent, a bestselling book linking comic books and juvenile delinquency — leading to a full blown congressional investigation (some say witch hunt) of the comic book industry. Wertham was long involved with criminal trials before campaigning against comic books and promoting industry and government censorship for children. Ars adds a little more context for the younger crowd and notes that he later tried to move against television violence but couldn't find the publisher backing he had against comic books."

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  1. Re:Congress: The New Superhero! by Wyatt+Earp · · Score: 4, Informative

    It is not accurate to lump him in with Jack Thompson, did you read the article linked to Ars?

    In the 1940s he opened an outpatient mental health clinic in Harlem for the poor.

    "Wertham was an eloquent critic of Jim Crow segregation. His research on its harmful psychological effects was cited in the 1954 Brown versus the Board of Education Supreme Court case. And he spoke out for the welfare of people behind bars, including Ethel Rosenberg, who was eventually convicted and executed for espionage, along with her husband, Julius."

    He was trying to help society and try to make the world a better place, he just added 2+2 up and got 5.321 when it came to violence and comic books.