One of the greatest guides to the concept of continuity in a specific series is The DisContinuity Guide: The Unofficial Doctor Who Companionby
Paul Cornell, Martin Day and Keith Topping, first put out in 1995.
From my point of view the genius of this work is in the way the authors
peel back the layers of a complex text like Doctor Who, and start back at the beginning, when we didn't know anything about the series or what it would eventually evolve into.
This allows us to see the ways in which the universe was expanded, sometimes carefully, often times not. We get to see undeveloped themes and the earliest examples of new themes.
Like an evolutionary biologist studying our small, brown furred burrowing human ancestors, we get a look at the way things were without the baggage of the way things are.
This is the third of a series of posts in which I hope to look at Marvel Comics the same way.
This allows us to see the ways in which the universe was expanded, sometimes carefully, often times not. We get to see undeveloped themes and the earliest examples of new themes.
Like an evolutionary biologist studying our small, brown furred burrowing human ancestors, we get a look at the way things were without the baggage of the way things are.
This is the third of a series of posts in which I hope to look at Marvel Comics the same way.
Marvel Comics Silver Age DisContinuity 003
Title(s) :
The Menace of the Miracle Man The Monster Lives!
The Flame That Died!
In the Shadow of Defeat!
The Final Challenge!
Publication Date/On Sale Date :
March 1962/December 1961
Writer/Artists :
Sources :
Invasion of the Body Snatchers, Adventures of Superman episode "Three in One", Martian Manhunter, 20 Million Miles to Earth,
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