1. New Mutants #45
Although, like most kids, I had read a comic here or there, the comic that turned me into a collector was New Mutants #45. I bought that comic sometime in the last week of July or the first week of August, 1986, on a ferry between Vancouver and Vancouver Island. I was 11 years old. It is funny, because New Mutants #45 is a pretty low-key story—not the sort of thing you expect will turn a kid into a diehard lifelong collector. The story is about a group of superpowered teenagers who go to a dance at another high school, where they meet Larry. Larry seems shy, but nice, but then he makes a derogatory joke about mutants, not knowing his new acquaintances are mutants. In the Marvel Universe, anti-mutant sentiment is a stand-in for homophobia and racism. So, Larry’s stuck his foot in his mouth. The thing is, Larry is a mutant, too, and only told the joke to try to seem cool. The New Mutants do not know this, so they shun him. Some other students from Larry’s school target him with some bullying, calling him a mutant and threatening him. They did not know Larry was a mutant, either—they were just messing with him—but the threat hits home, and Larry kills himself.
Again, I was 11 years old. I did not know comics could be like this.Footnote 1 I also did not know anything about mutants. I might have heard of the X-Men, of which The New Mutants was a spin-off, but this was all pretty new to me. Who were these characters, who seemed so much like ordinary people? This was a self-contained little story, but it raised so many questions, and I needed to know more. So, I picked up the next issue, which brought in the X-Men and a host of other characters—Moira MacTaggart, the Morlocks, Magus—and so more questions. In search of answers, I started reading backward, picking up what back issues I could find and afford while continuing to buy each new copy of The New Mutants that came out.
Like most comics of its time, The New Mutants was a serialized story, told in mostly, monthly installments.Footnote 2 You could pick up new issues off the news stand, at a corner store, or—apparently—on a ferry. Or, if you had one nearby, you could go to your local comic store. And if you wanted older issues, from months or years past, the comic store is usually where you had to go. But the back-issue selection of any comic store is inevitably spotty (and an 11-year-old’s allowance is scant), so I had to fill in that story in pieces. Perhaps I bought another recent issue of the series, or maybe I went back to the beginning, if I could find some early issues—I cannot actually remember the order I did all of this in, but it was piecemeal. The series had, at that point, been running for about 4 years, and I had a lot of catching up to do. I would compare the experience to starting a lengthy novel at Chapter 45, and continuing to read forward in the book, but also reading randomly from Chapters 1 to 44 until you had read them all. This is a process that took years.
Of course, just as one does not just watch a single show on television, I started collecting other comics as well. I bought The Justice League of America just as the original series was coming to an end. I bought The All-Star Squadron, a series based on nostalgia for an era in comics decades before I was born.
It became clear to my parents that this was my thing, and for Christmas in 1989, they gave me a book—Comic Book Collecting for Fun and Profit, by Mike Benton. In the opening chapter, Benton makes some passing mention of collecting comics for something like aesthetic reasons—“to study the works of these individual creators,” to “read the latest exploits of a favorite comic character and share in his growth and development” (Benton, Reference Benton1985, p. 3). Under the heading, “What This Book Is All About,” Benton begins:
Collecting comics should always be done first for the personal pleasure and satisfaction it gives. Yet comics can be bought, sold, and traded as investment items, just like any other collectible. (Benton, Reference Benton1985, p. 7)
With that, the “fun” part of collecting is put aside, and the next 140 pages are spent on the “profit” part. Then-14-year-old me was not interested in the profit part. I collected because I wanted to know the rest of the story. I bought new issues to keep up, and I bought back issues to fill in gaps in the narrative told so far.Footnote 3 And I do not think my experience was unusual in this regard.
2. Gappy Narratives
The gappy experience of narratives is not itself altogether unusual. Back in the day, if you missed an episode of your favorite television series, you might have to wait around for a rerun to catch up. You might have seen Aliens in the theatre, not knowing it was a sequel, and then had to rent Alien to fill in what you were missing. You might pick up Michael Connelly’s novel The Last Coyote at the airport, only to discover that it was the fourth Harry Bosch novel, making several references to events and characters in the earlier books. A trip to your local library might be in order.
Whenever a story is told serially, you can, of course, read the parts out of order. But two things made reading comics out of order different from other gappy experiences of narratives: the sheer number of potential back issues, and the scarcity of copies. There might be a lot to catch up on, and they might have very limited availability. But, unlike missing episodes of a TV show, it was at least possible to hunt down these issues.
New Mutants #45 had a cover date of November 1986. This is not the month that it was published, but about 3 months after that. Back in the day, if a newsstand did not sell a comic by the cover date, the proprietor could tear off the cover and send that back to the publisher for credit. Coverless comics were supposed to be pulped, creating a long-term scarcity effect.Footnote 4 Eventually, comics specialty stores started holding on to their unsold issues, building the familiar back-issue bins.
Like most comics of its time, New Mutants #45 was written with the assumption that it might be picked up by readers unfamiliar with the series or its characters. The first panel of the story lays out the basics. Then, within the next few pages, each of our major characters is named, along with some little tidbit about them. Illyana Rasputin is “Magik,” a teleporter and ruler of “Limbo.” Sam Guthrie is “Cannonball”—he can fly, and he is dating a rock star. Some of this happens in dialogue. Some of it is internal monologue. Some of it comes from our narrator. There is a lot of set-up weaved into the story, but more questions inevitably accumulate as we read the issue, hinting at the 4 years of story the new reader has missed.
Collecting and reading a given comics series—like The New Mutants—in this gappy way had a promised conclusion: eventually getting to close that last narrative gap, finishing the puzzle. But the fictional world of Marvel Comics also promised the near-impossibility of filling all of those gaps—of reading the whole story. In an important sense, The New Mutants is not a stand-alone series—indeed, very, very few Marvel series are.
Marvel Comics had, since Stan Lee helmed the ship, been built on the idea that this was all one big story. From the 1960s onward, Marvel’s marketing was very much grounded in what the kids now call FOMO: fear of missing out. Comics scholar Douglas Wolk, who set out to read every Marvel Comic ever printed—all 540,000+ pages—notes that the Marvel creators from the 1960s and 1970s “figured out how to make the individual narrative melodies of all of their comics harmonize with one another, turning each episode into a component of a gigantic epic” (Wolk, Reference Wolk2023, p. 4). Since all of the characters existed in the same fictional world—and most of them in the same fictional version of New York City—Marvel heroes bumped into each other all the time (often with their fists). Comics scholars Jordan Raphael and Tom Spurgeon suggest, “Marvel was creating brand loyalty by paying attention to a wider Marvel tale, offering crucial details of a continuing and interconnected story to those fans who cared enough to look closely” (Raphael & Spurgeon, Reference Raphael and Spurgeon2003, p. 118). All of those stories were in one way or another intertwined. Characters in one series referred to characters and events from others.Footnote 5 The impacts of important events carried across titles. Eventually, the writers and editors started dropping little footnotes into comics panels, so readers would know exactly which current or back issues they needed to hunt down to connect all the pieces together. Since all of the stories were connected, if you missed an issue of Captain America or Black Panther or Man-Thing, you risked forever missing a piece of the puzzle, and (thanks to those footnotes and in-text references) you knew it. So, Marvel Fanatics did not just buy The Fantastic Four or The Avengers. They bought everything. At least, that was the idea.
New Mutants #46 follows from New Mutants #45, but it also follows from Uncanny X-Men #211, helping to kick off the “Mutant Massacre” storyline, which would also spill over into X-Factor, Power Pack, and Thor, and set up narrative echoes that still reverberate today. “Crossovers” like this—where the narrative thread of one comic weave through those of another—became more and more common, promising more and more FOMO for continuing readers. In other words, comics creators wrote their stories to account for—and to exploit—exactly this “gappy” sort of experience of the story.Footnote 6
The primary feature of this gappy experience, I would suggest, is a certain sort of wonder: wonder about who these characters are, about their relationships to each other, about how they fit into this much, much bigger story. The English “wonder” comes from the Old English wundor, probably derived from the German Wunde or wound: an opening, a gap (Parsons, Reference Parsons1969, p. 85). If I next picked up New Mutants #1, I would learn that the team originally had five members, and not all eight we find in issue #45.Footnote 7 So, when did the others join the team? I would also learn that the story of the New Mutants actually starts in Marvel Graphic Novel #4, which would prove even more elusive—it would have had a smaller print run, and did not fit in back-issue boxes, so it was more of a pain for stores to stock.Footnote 8 Reading New Mutants #1 answers some of the questions raised in reading issue #45, but inevitably raises others. As gaps are filled, the field of possibilities—of what happens in those remaining narrative gaps—narrows, leading to more precise questions, a more directed kind of wonder. Unlike other gaps in my knowledge—when was Saskatchewan founded? why are there only two kinds of egg-laying mammals?—the wonder that I feel about these narrative gaps is something occurrent: something I experience. These are questions that I actively wonder about. Re-reading the comics in my collection refreshes the questions, should they drift to the background.
3. Closure and SEARCHING
Discussing reading in terms of questions and answers might bring to mind Noël Carroll’s theory of erotetic narration—a theory he first introduced in 1984, and spent the next several decades expanding and refining.Footnote 9 Erotetic narration is the telling of a story in a way that earlier and later scenes and events are related to one another as questions are related to answers. “Such narration,” Carroll says, “which is at the core of popular narration, proceeds by generating a series of questions that the plot then goes on to answer” (Carroll, Reference Carroll1990, p. 130). This sort of narrative structure might be most obvious in whodunits—and, indeed, Carroll originally introduces his theory as a theory of suspense—but Carroll eventually expands his theory to take in a much broader range of narratives. “Page turners” are those that keep their readers entranced in this question-and-answer format. Cliffhanger serials depend on it.
Carroll’s theory is ultimately a theory of closure. And in literary terms, closure is discussed almost exclusively in terms of endings. The presumption is that the ending is where everything comes together—where all of the questions have ideally been answered. Carroll notes:
The notion of closure refers to the sense of finality with which a piece of music, a poem, or a story concludes. … Closure is a matter of concluding rather than merely stopping or ceasing or coming to a halt or crashing. When an artist effects closure, then we feel that there is nothing remaining for her to do. There is nothing left to be done that hasn’t already been discharged. Closure yields a feeling of completeness. (Carroll, Reference Carroll2007, p. 2)
Porter Abbott centers such closure in terms of conflict: “When a narrative resolves a conflict, it achieves closure, and this usually comes at the end of the narrative. We expect stories to end” (Abbott, Reference Abbott2008, p. 56).
Carroll is careful to distinguish his erotetic theory from another theory of closure tracing back to Aristotle: that narrative satisfaction is tied to the causal chains traced through the story.Footnote 10 Aristotle contends:
The object of the imitation [in tragedy] is not only a complete action but such things as stir up pity and fear, and this is best achieved when the events are unexpectedly interconnected. This, more than what happens accidentally and by chance, will arouse wonder. (Aristotle, Reference Grube1989, p. 1452a)
Edward Branigan gives the modern version:
A narrative ends when its cause and effect chains are judged to be totally delineated. There is a reversibility in that the ending situation can be traced back to the beginning; or, to state it another way, the ending is seemingly entailed by the beginning. This is the feature of narrative often referred to as closure. (Branigan, Reference Branigan1992, p. 20)Footnote 11
Although an individual issue of a comic might provide closure in either the causal or erotetic sense, comic book series rarely wrap up so neatly. Series typically rattle on—for years, sometimes for decades—until they are cancelled, often swapping out writers, all the time trailing new narrative threads behind them.Footnote 12 Carroll notes something similar with soap operas, which he describes as having “indefinitely large, expanding, and wide-open middles”:
Even if All My Children and The Guiding Light—which began life on the radio and then sprawled onto television—ever go off the air, they would never be able to tie up into a tidy package all the plot lines they have set in motion. (Carroll, Reference Carroll2007, p. 2)
Soap operas “lack closure,” Carroll says, and presumably he would say the same for the majority of comic series.
Curiously, however, one of the first to introduce the notion of closure into literary studies, Barbara Herrnstein Smith, is quick to note that closure is not merely a matter of endings:
[T]he occurrence of the terminal event is a confirmation of expectations that have been established by the structure of the sequence, and is usually distinctly gratifying. […] Closure need not, however, be temporal; that is, it is not always a matter of endings. […] [A]lthough one can speak of closure in works of spatial art it is obviously inappropriate to speak of it there as a quality of finality or conclusiveness. Whether spatially or temporally perceived, a structure appears “closed” when it is experienced as integral: coherent, complete, and stable. (Smith, Reference Smith1968, p. 2)
We associate closure with the satisfaction of a “proper ending” (Holland, Reference Holland2009, p. 164). But, of course, we associate closure with endings because we tend to engage with stories linearly. The association of closure with endings is really just an accident of how we normally take in stories. If we read story-parts out of order, closure will be achieved as the narrative gaps are closed, and the story is completed from the outward in.
Smith’s explanation suggests that closure is as much a psychological state as it is a formal literary one, and theorists tend to muddy the waters by describing closure in both senses, oscillating between them freely.Footnote 13 Certainly, closure is typically associated with narrative structure, and is often described as a sense of satisfaction found in the completeness of the story. Norman Holland writes: “We need to have the loose ends tied up, with no dangling entanglements and no annoying whys left over… We need closure” (Holland, Reference Holland2009, p. 166).
Carolyn Korsmeyer makes some similar observations about curiosity—the sort of engagement one feels with an artwork, which drives active search for discovery. Korsmeyer notes that “the satisfaction of curiosity is an artistic virtue” (Korsmeyer, Reference Korsmeyer2023, n.p.). That is to say that it is good—artistically—when the artist rewards curiosity. And, where the questions raised by a story are in principle unanswerable, or where the story provides an answer that actually reduces active engagement, Korsmeyer suggests a negative aesthetic outcome.
Sometimes the gappy experience of narrative is the deliberate effect of a work’s formal structure. A story may begin in media res—in the middle of the action—and require backtracking to complete the story. A story may leave out a chunk of narrative completely. Robert Rodriguez’s 2007 film Planet Terror (making up part of the Rodriguez/Tarantino double-feature, Grindhouse) leaned into its vintage aesthetic by introducing a “missing reel” at the height of the story’s dramatic action. There was an awful lot in that missing reel, apparently: several separate storylines have come together as unconnected characters have found their way together to the Bone Shack diner, Sheriff Hague has been shot, El Wray’s mysterious origins have been revealed, and the diner has caught on fire. It is a gag, of course, because there is no missing reel to be found, and so that bit of missing middle—that narrative wound—is really a part of the work. The gappiness in comics collecting is not really a part of the work, but of how the work is encountered. And the issues that would fill those narrative gaps and complete the story are out there to be found. And so we hunt.Footnote 14
In looking to explain the pleasure associated with literary closure, Norman Holland looks to the core structure of Jaak Panksepp’s foundational theory of affective neuroscience, and in particular to one of the seven primary process command systems proposed by Panksepp—what he calls “the SEEKING system” (Panksepp, Reference Panksepp1998). Panksepp isolated the seven primary emotional action systems by means of electrical stimulation of the mammalian (including the human) brain, locating the SEEKING system in the extended lateral hypothalamic corridor, running from the ventral tegmental area in the upper brain stem (which mediates dopamine release) to the nucleus accumbens (the neural interface between motivation and action). Panksepp refers to the SEEKING system as an “incentive or appetitive motivational system” engaging a number of behaviors, from hunting food to the philosophical search for higher meaning (Panksepp, Reference Panksepp1998, p. 145, citing Robinson & Berridge, Reference Robinson and Berridge1993). While the SEEKING system is found across mammal species—and perhaps beyond—in humans, Panksepp suggests, the feelings arising from SEEKING are “intense interest,” “engaged curiosity,” and “eager anticipation” (Panksepp, Reference Panksepp1998, p. 149). Although SEEKING is activated by the presence of dopamine and, subjectively, activation of the SEEKING system feels introspectively like “liking,” the “wanting” provoked by the SEEKING system arises from separate psychological processes and neural substrates.Footnote 15 Panksepp notes a distinction in the respective affects: “The affective state [of SEEKING] does not resemble the pleasurable feelings we normally experience when we indulge in various consummatory behaviors. Instead, it resembles the energization organisms feel when they are anticipating rewards” (Panksepp, Reference Panksepp1998, p. 146). Think of this as the pleasure of the hunt rather than the pleasure of the feast. Footnote 16
The collector who simply waits for the next issue is not seeking; he is waiting—and there is not much he can do but wait. The pleasure of seeking is not the pleasure of delayed satisfaction; it is the pleasure in the ongoing act of hunting. And there is a pleasure in the hunt distinct from the pleasure in consuming the missing piece—the satisfaction of completion normally associated with closure. When it comes to searching for that missing issue, the pleasure is not merely found in the closing of the gap. There is an active and distinct pleasure in the gap itself. Panksepp notes: “As the animal encounters a need-relevant reward object and shifts into the consummatory mode, the appetitive urge to move forward ceases temporarily.” The pleasure of consuming the find temporarily replaces the pleasure of the hunt. But, for comics collectors, the hunt will resume.
4. Aesthetic Appreciation
Now, what about all of this makes it an aesthetic matter? Through the protracted process of seeking, the reader can only wonder about what is missing: wonder about the plot, wonder about the telling of the story, wonder about how character A got from where she was to where she is, wonder about character B’s ultimate fate. The imagination is left to its own devices, and this sounds like it has the ingredients of Immanuel Kant’s (1790/Reference Kant and Pluhar1987) aesthetic model.
At the core of Kant’s aesthetics is the idea of free play of the imagination, in which the faculties of the imagination and understanding operate in harmony, but without the understanding driving the imagination toward some goal, as it tends to do in our engagement with the world. Essentially perceptual in nature, free play of the imagination involves the unstructured engagement with an aesthetic object.
Kant’s notion of imagination is the faculty that allows one to project beyond given sensory data to probable sequels—to following a pattern and anticipating the next step. Kant centrally locates this sort of aesthetic judgment in the appreciation of nature, but allows that it might be extended to appreciating things like decorative wallpaper and instrumental music. In listening to Bach’s Fugue in G Minor, we get a sense of the melody forming the spine of the work. The melody reappears in a different key, forming a sort of question-and-answer format, and we start to get a sense of harmonic relationships developing, and we start making predictions about what will happen next. This is free play of the imagination—the open engagement with the aesthetic object.
Kant does not say anything in the third Critique about engagement with narratives, and literature always makes for an uncomfortable subject of aesthetics, where aesthetics is focused on the sensory. Still, stories engage our imagination in the same way that Bach’s composition does: we project how we think things will go based on how they have gone. And what is true in this way for the next issue of the comic would seem true for missed issues—narrative gaps. We, the collectors, project possibilities for how those gaps are filled. We imagine how the story might go. And when the gap is filled, we may be satisfied or dissatisfied with what we find. It may align with our projections, and it may not. If it does, we may be satisfied, but we may also be disappointed in its predictability. If we are surprised, we may likewise be satisfied or dissatisfied, depending on how well that surprise meshes with the story we already know. But that affect arises in the consummation, and is distinct from the pleasure arising in the free play of the imagination that accompanies the hunt itself.
To qualify as pure aesthetic judgment for Kant, free play of the imagination must be disinterested and non-conceptual. For my judgment to be pure, I cannot be judging what I perceive against some model of perfection (the perfect sunset, the perfect painting, the perfect story), and I cannot have a personal stake in the existence of the object being judged. Pure aesthetic judgment is characterized by its purposiveness—by having the feel of a goal-driven activity, but without any actual goal driving the process. As I have described it, however, comic collecting tends to be a very interested activity (I want to get my hands on that missing issue) and is associated with a goal (closure). However, the imaginative engagement with narrative gaps is not goal-driven in the way that, say, solving a math problem or trying to out-deduce Hercule Poirot might be. I am actively imagining the ways that narrative gap might be filled, but that experience will be more like wonder than trying to determine the “correct” answer.
The purity of aesthetic judgment for Kant is the necessary foundation for grounding the universality of claims of beauty. The impurity in our case would mean that universal claims are unjustified. This makes sense: the imaginative experience of narrative gaps would be entirely subjective, depending on what comics you collect, and what issues you are missing. Moreover, with hundreds of titles published each month, comics collectors are probably more aware than most that their tastes and preferences are personal. But we can all, I think, appreciate others’ appreciation and engagement with the comics that appeal to them.
It may be that the pleasure arising from free play of the imagination comes from the SEEKING system, as Panksepp characterizes it, and it may not. Certainly, any collector hunting to fill a gap in a collection may expect to enjoy the pleasure of the hunt absent any imaginative engagement as I have described it. But it is hard to ignore how well the phenomenon maps onto the neuropsychological model. Although behaviors associated with the SEEKING system tend to be goal-driven, the system is also activated in open exploration behaviors. SEEKING need not even be conceptual in the rich sense that Kant has in mind—Panksepp’s most famous studies are on rats. What makes pure aesthetic judgment of interest to Kant is not that it engages some special faculty in us, but that it uses our normal faculties in an interesting way.Footnote 17 Curiosity, Korsmeyer submits, “is a dynamic emotion that enjoins active participation in discovery”—and, I would suggest, rewards active participation in imaginative exploration.Footnote 18
5. Modern Collecting
While many comics collectors will, I think, find something familiar in the account I’ve given, I expect that others will find that my account does not align with their own comic-collecting experience.
Many comics collectors are, as Mike Benton predicted, collecting for profit—or, at the very least, for building a collection of rare and valuable objects.Footnote 19 Back in the 1980s, back-issue bins were stuffed with comics in plastic “poly” bags sealed with tape, and supported with stiff cardboard sheets to keep them from bending. Behind the cash register of every comic store were some of the store’s really special issues—high-priced and rare, perhaps sealed in specialty “mylar” bags—stiffer plastic sleeves designed for archival storage, each bag costing as much as a new comic book. You might open up one of those “poly” bags to get at the goodies within, but you probably did not pull your Incredible Hulk #181 out of its mylar bag and leaf through it while you ate your Captain Crunch.Footnote 20 Today, those high-end comics are sold in sealed CGC “slabs” with a sort of guaranteed grade of its condition.Footnote 21 These slabs are not intended to be opened again. Certainly, those comics collectors looking for rare issues like these, or simply to complete their collections, will engage the SEARCHING system, but have no particular interest in the narratives those comics contain.
Other collectors who are interested in the stories, and who are looking to fill their narrative gaps, will find it much easier to do than I have described. I’ve never read Justice League of America #205, a curious gap in my collection, the third part in a three-issue arc featuring the Royal Flush Gang. I have been wondering for years about the story. I never managed to stumble across it in a back-issue bin when I was actively collecting. I could go online today and buy a copy for about $8, but I probably won’t. It’s too… easy. Alternatively, the issue would be included in The Justice League of America Bronze Age Omnibus, Vol. 4, if DC ever gets around to publishing it. Those hardcover collections tend to run about $100. So, there are options, but they are not as appealing as the hunt used to be. Back in 1986, there was no Internet, and comics publishers had not yet made a habit of collecting stories together and selling them as “trade paperbacks” or prestige hardcover volumes. Today, it is pretty easy to fill those narrative gaps. Closure is easy. There is no need to hunt anymore. And I think we are missing something as a result. And I think that’s a shame.Footnote 22
Darren Hudson Hick is a philosopher of art at Furman University and former Managing Editor of The Comics Journal. He is the author of Introducing Aesthetics and the Philosophy of Art (Bloomsbury 2023) and Artistic License: The Philosophical Problems of Copyright & Appropriation (Chicago 2017). He recently paid the co-creator of The New Mutants entirely too much money for a sketch of Cannonball.