This article addresses Alan Moore’s earliest work for zines and underground papers from 1971 to 1980. It argues that the hippie counterculture was a formative influence not only on his anarchist politics but his approach to cultural production, and an awareness of its significance is therefore crucial to the critical understanding of his oeuvre as a whole. Equally Moore’s experience of the underground augments historical understanding of the UK counterculture itself and the role of comics within it, and challenges dominant chronological narratives that insist on a definitive split between its political and cultural wings during this period. This article considers Moore’s output in illustration, poetry and prose, but particularly focuses on ...
Through a comparative discussion of Alan Moore and Eddie Campbell’s From Hell (serialized 1989−96, c...
The early to mid-1960s bore witness to the birth of the Underground, a loose collection of writers, ...
This paper explored the impasse between critical theory and visual culture studies in terms of oppos...
This paper explores some of British creator Alan Moore’s earliest comics in underground and alternat...
Drawing from a recently published book on Alan Moore’s early work as a cartoonist, this paper approa...
One of Alan Moore’s earliest comics, ‘St Pancras Panda’ (1978-9), appeared in Oxford community paper...
Whatever perspective one takes, contradictions in the relationship between the capital and the provi...
This chapter focuses on the role that alternative publications played in the cultural, political, an...
This chapter focuses on the role that alternative publications played in the cultural, political, an...
In the years around 1968 London was home to a sizeable community of writers, musicians, artists, and...
This chapter focuses on the role that alternative publications played in the cultural, political, an...
This article suggests a deep relationship between comics and anarchism. The examination of this fund...
Exhibition at LCC as part of the London Design Festival Alternative do-it-yourself (DIY) publishi...
Initially the terms 'underground' and 'alternative' are defined British underground periodicals and ...
An understanding of the geographies of resistance benefits from an exploration of alternative geogra...
Through a comparative discussion of Alan Moore and Eddie Campbell’s From Hell (serialized 1989−96, c...
The early to mid-1960s bore witness to the birth of the Underground, a loose collection of writers, ...
This paper explored the impasse between critical theory and visual culture studies in terms of oppos...
This paper explores some of British creator Alan Moore’s earliest comics in underground and alternat...
Drawing from a recently published book on Alan Moore’s early work as a cartoonist, this paper approa...
One of Alan Moore’s earliest comics, ‘St Pancras Panda’ (1978-9), appeared in Oxford community paper...
Whatever perspective one takes, contradictions in the relationship between the capital and the provi...
This chapter focuses on the role that alternative publications played in the cultural, political, an...
This chapter focuses on the role that alternative publications played in the cultural, political, an...
In the years around 1968 London was home to a sizeable community of writers, musicians, artists, and...
This chapter focuses on the role that alternative publications played in the cultural, political, an...
This article suggests a deep relationship between comics and anarchism. The examination of this fund...
Exhibition at LCC as part of the London Design Festival Alternative do-it-yourself (DIY) publishi...
Initially the terms 'underground' and 'alternative' are defined British underground periodicals and ...
An understanding of the geographies of resistance benefits from an exploration of alternative geogra...
Through a comparative discussion of Alan Moore and Eddie Campbell’s From Hell (serialized 1989−96, c...
The early to mid-1960s bore witness to the birth of the Underground, a loose collection of writers, ...
This paper explored the impasse between critical theory and visual culture studies in terms of oppos...