Showcase #4 (Oct. 1956), generally considered the start of the  Silver Age. Cover art by Carmine Infantino & Joe Kubert.Amazing Fantasy #15 (1962), the debut of one of the Silver Age's most significant superheroes. Art by Jack Kirby & Steve Ditko.The Silver Age gets named in a letters column: Justice League of America #42 (Feb. 1966}; art by Mike Sekowsky (penciler), Murphy Anderson & Bernard Sachs (inkers)Typical Marvel Silver Age cover: silent action and floating heads. Iron Man #18 (Oct. 1969), art by George Tuska.The groundbreaking Fantastic Four #1 (Nov. 1961). Cover art by Jack Kirby and unconfirmed inker.Eastern mysticism meets American sideshow: Deadman in Strange Adventures #207 (Dec. 1967). Art by Neal Adams.Nick Fury: Agent of S.H.I.E.L.D. #7 (Dec. 1968): signature surrealism by Jim Steranko.
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Bronze Age (1970-79)

The Silver Age of Comic Books was a period of artistic advancement and commercial success in mainstream American comic books, predominantly in the superhero genre, that lasted roughly from the late 1950s/early 1960s to the early 1970s. It was preceded by the Golden Age of Comic Books. more...

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During the Silver Age, the character make-up of superheroes evolved. Writers injected science fiction concepts into the origins and adventures of superheroes. More importantly, superheroes became more human and troubled, and since the Silver Age, character development and personal conflict have been almost as important to the image of a superhero as superpowers and epic adventures.

Events leading to the Silver Age

Following World War II, superheroes faced a steady decline in popularity. Their development was complicated by the rise of gritty horror and crime comic books, as well as by national parental concerns ignited by Dr. Fredric Wertham's influential book Seduction of the Innocent, and fanned by U.S. Senate hearings on juvenile delinquency. In response, the comic book industry implemented the Comics Code, which forbade gore, sexual suggestiveness, and disrespect of authorities, among other tenets. This made certain genres more difficult to publish, though comic books, like the similarly constrained media of film and television, of necessity, developed new means of storytelling and new types of stories.

History

The beginning (as well as the end) of the Silver Age is cause for debate, but it is generally agreed that the period began with DC Comics’ Showcase #4 in 1956, which introduced the modern version of the Flash. Under editor Julius Schwartz, the Flash was the first of many old characters revised as streamlined, science fiction-influenced models. Others included Green Lantern, the Atom and Hawkman. DC also introduced The Justice League of America, an all-star group consisting of its most popular characters.

The success of these series meant DC had found a viable format that could make for successful properties under Comics Code Authority restrictions. This helped breathe new life into the medium and sales began to recover.

The period also saw the rise of Marvel Comics, under the guidance of writer-editor Stan Lee and artists/cowriters Jack Kirby and Steve Ditko, who introduced more sophisticated characterization and dynamic plotting into superhero comics. The most popular and influential Marvel character of this period was Spider-Man. Other significant and long-lasting Marvel heroes introduced during the Silver Age include The Fantastic Four, The Incredible Hulk, Iron Man, Thor, Daredevil, The X-Men, and Marvel's own all-star group, The Avengers. After an initial period of hesitance, DC began to adopt some of Marvel's creative approaches.

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Amazing Spider-Man #194 First App Black Cat! 1979 Rare! $3.85 Incredible Hulk #181 Cgc Nm- 9.2 Ow/W Pgs 1St Wolverine $1,225.00
Dc Comics Presents #26 Cgc 9.8, 1st New Teen Titans! $112.50 317: Leica: Leicavit M 'Leica Historica 1975-2005' 144 $503.80
Archie At Riverdale High #13/68/69/74 Comics 1974-80 $9.99 Amazing Spider-Man #200 Nm 1980 Giant Origin Issue $42.00
Amazing Spider-Man #195 Nm Marvel 1979 2nd Black Cat $24.00 Amazing Spider-Man #194 Vf Marvel 1979 1st Black Cat $26.00
Amazing Spider-Man #185 Nm Peter Parker's Graduation $24.00 7 Issues Everything'S Archie Teen Humor Comics 1976-91 $9.99
Amazing Spider-Man #183 Nm Rocket Racer Marvel 1978 $24.00 Bulk Lot Vintage Comics Superman Batman Superboy $5.20
Amazing Spider-Man #182 Nm Rocket Racer's Back in Town $24.00 Amazing Spider-Man #155 Nm Marvel Comics 1976 Whodunit $32.00
Amazing Spider-Man #138 Vf Madness Means the Mindworm! $21.00 Amazing Spider-Man #121 F 1973 Death of Gwen Stacy. $57.00
Amazing Spider-Man #120 F Marvel Comics 1973 Vs. Hulk $24.00 Amazing Spider-Man #109 Vf 1972 Enter Dr. Strange! $39.00
Amazing Spider-Man #102 Vf Marvel 1971 Origin Morbus $73.00 Vintage collectable-Apex Treasury of Underground Comics $3.88
Amazing Spider-Man #101 Vf 1971 1st Morbius $114.00 Conan The Barbarian #1 Robert Howard Barry Smith 1970 $89.95
Amazing Spider-Man #137 Vf/Nm 2nd Harry O. Green Goblin $55.00 Amazing Spider-Man #122 Vg Death of the Green Goblin $38.00
Battle War & Commando Library Comics $3.25 Amazing Spider-Man #97 F 1971 Green Goblin Drug Issue $30.00
Iron-Man Lot #136,151,154,156,157, 158, 159 $1.99 Amazing Spider-Man #78 - 1969 $11.95
Batman 251 Joker Cover Sharp Copy See Pics! $9.99 9 Star Spangled War Stories # 189-204 Vg Unknownsoldier $5.00
Marvel Comics & Ideal, Evil Knievel Comic Book $7.99 Amazing Spider-Man #117-1973 vg/vg- Spiderman Smasher $2.99
(3) G.I.Combat #140(Vg+) #141(Vf) #148(Vf/Nm) Great$$ $20.00 Superman #254 7/'62 ~ Neal Adams-a ~ A Near Mint- Copy $24.99
(4))Amazing Adventures #1,2,4 & 5 Kirby-a;#2 Fant.Four $37.00 Dc Comics! Action Comics #398! Great Looking Book! $1.99
Terror Tales 3 May 1971 Htf Sci-Fi Eerie Horror $14.00 Terror Tales 2 April 1973 Eerie Scarce Mummy $14.00
Weird Vampire Tales 2 Very Scarce Aug 81 Bondage Eerie $21.00 Terror Tales 5 Sept 1970 Htf Eerie Decapitation Cover $19.00
Horror Tales 2 Mar 1972 Classic Horror Eerie Scarce $19.00 Terror Tales 6 Nov 1970 Decapitation Eerie Decapitation $19.00
Weird Vampire Tales 3 Very Scarce Eerie 1980 Bondage $19.00 Terror Tales 2 March 1971 Htf Eerie Horror Monster $17.00
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Prices current as of last update, 11/20/08 9:00am.


See also...
Cartoon Character, Bronze Age (1970-79), Comics
Classics Illustrated, Bronze Age (1970-79), Comics
Horror, Sci-Fi, Bronze Age (1970-79), Comics
Other Bronze Age, Bronze Age (1970-79), Comics
Superhero, Bronze Age (1970-79), Comics
War, Bronze Age (1970-79), Comics

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