Binky Brown Meets the Holy Virgin Mary

Binky Brown Meets the Holy Virgin Mary

A comic book cover.  The Virgin Mary stands over a kneeling boy who covers his groin with his hands.

Original comic-book cover
Last Gasp, 1972
Creator Justin Green
Date 1972
Publisher Last Gasp Eco Funnies

Binky Brown Meets the Holy Virgin Mary is a comic-book story by American cartoonist Justin Green, published in 1972. Green takes the persona of Binky Brown to tell of the "compulsive neurosis" that he struggled with in his youth and which he blamed on his strict Catholic upbringing. Green was later diagnosed with obsessive–compulsive disorder (OCD) and came to see his problems in that light.

In the story, sinful thoughts that he cannot control torment Binky Brown; to his alarm phallic objects become literal penises and project what he calls "pecker rays" at religious objects such as churches and statues of the Virgin Mary. He develops an internal set of rules to obey and punishments for breaking them. The torment does not subside, and he come to reject the Catholic Church in defiance as the source of it. The work combines a wide variety of visual and narrative techniques in a style that echoes the torment of its protagonist.

Binky Brown had an immediate influence on contemporaries in underground comix: such cartoonists as Aline Kominsky, Robert Crumb, and Art Spiegelman soon turned to producing similarly confessional works. Binky Brown has gained a reputation as the first major work of autobiography in English-language comics, and many aspects of its approach have become widespread in underground and alternative comics.

Background

Justin Green (b. 1945) was born to a Jewish father and Catholic mother and raised Catholic.[1] As a child he at first attended a Catholic parochial school, and later transferred to a school where most students were Jews.[2] He rejected the Catholic faith in 1958 as he believed it caused him "compulsive neurosis"[3] that decades later was diagnosed as obsessive–compulsive disorder (OCD).[4]

Green was studying painting at the Rhode Island School of Design when in 1967 he discovered the work of Robert Crumb and turned to cartooning, attracted to Crumb's "harsh drawing stuffed into crookedly-drawn panels".[5] He experimented with his artwork to find what he called an "inherent and automatic style as a conduit for the chimerical forms in [his] own psyche".[6] He dropped out of an MFA program at Syracuse University[7] when in 1968 he felt a "call to arms"[5] to move to San Francisco, where the nascent underground comix scene was blossoming amid the counterculture there.[5]

At the time, comic books had a reputation in the US as low-brow children's entertainment, and the public often associated them with juvenile delinquency. Comics had little cultural capital and few American cartoonists had challenged the perception that the medium was inherently incapable of mature artistic expression.[8]

Synopsis

Statue of Virgin Mary mounted on a wall
Binky Brown desperately tries to keep his imagined "pecker rays" from touching religious symbols, such as statues of the Virgin Mary.

Green takes the persona of Binky Brown,[9] who opens the story writing a confession of the neurosis that has tortured him since puberty. In his childhood, he knocks over a statue of the Virgin Mary and feels intense guilt over this affront to his mother and to God. Binky is raised a Catholic and undergoes the religious indoctrination of nuns[10] at a strict Catholic parochial school that commonly employs corporal punishment.[11] He forms an image of a vengeful God, which fills him with feelings of fear and guilt.[10]

Binky's intrusive thoughts bring him to believe his body is trying to lead him to sin and eternal punishment. He develops an internal system of rules to cope with these thoughts and punishes himself for violations. He wards off thoughts and fantasies he cannot control and that give him guilt by silently repeating the word "noyatin" to himself, a contraction of the repentant "not a sin".[11]

As he approaches adolescence and becomes aware of his sexuality he begins to see common objects as phalluses—phalluses that project unholy rays. These objects include his fingers, his toes, and his own penis, and he obsessively tries to deflect their "pecker rays" from reaching holy items such as churches or statues of Mary. Binky finds his anguish all-consuming as he imagines the destruction he cannot avoid, and spends hours praying to God for forgiveness. As an adult, Binky confronts his faith and by smashing a set of statues of the Virgin Mary declares himself free of the Church and its influence on him.[10]

Composition and publication

Green spent about a year working on the 44-page Binky Brown Meets the Holy Virgin Mary. He took a few months making cards of what he called "factual incidents or neurotic habits"[12] to incorporate. During the seven months he drew the work Green received a monthly stipend of $150 from Ron Turner, the founder of underground comix publisher Last Gasp Eco-Funnies.[12] Last Gasp published the story as a one-shot comic book in 1972[9]—Green's first solo title.[13] It went through two print runs of 55,000 copies each[4] with a "Youngsters Prohibited" label on the cover.[3]

In The Sun[14] in 1990 Green had an essay published entitled "The Binky Brown Matter" in which he describes discusses the OCD with which he was diagnosed years after completing Binky Brown.[4] Last Gasp reprinted the story in 1995 in The Binky Brown Sampler, a softcover anthology of Binky Brown strips with an introduction by Art Spiegelman[10] and an expanded version of "The Binky Brown Matter".[14]

Green sold the original artwork to the strip in the 1970s; McSweeney's staff contacted the owner of the artwork, Christine Valenza, to make fresh scans for a standalone reprinting in 2009,[10] overseen by McSweeney editor Eli Horowitz. It had a print run of 5,000 copies and reprints the artwork at the full size of the originals; the page reproductions mimic the actual pages, including marks, smudges, and corrections.[15]

Editions

Editions of Binky Brown Meets the Holy Virgin Mary
Year Title Publisher ISBN Format
1972 Binky Brown Meets the Holy Virgin Mary Last Gasp Eco Funnies Comic book
1995 The Binky Brown Sampler Last Gasp 0-86719-332-8 Softcover collection
2009 Binky Brown Meets the Holy Virgin Mary McSweeney's 978-1-934-78155-5 Deluxe hardcover

Style and analysis

A comic-book panel of a naked man hanging over a sickle bound head to foot, drawing with a pen in his mouth
Binky Brown makes visual its author's internal anguish.

The story takes the form of a guilt-ridden confession.[16] In the opening, the adult Binky hangs over a sickle, bound from head to toe and listening to Ave Maria as he draws with a pen in his mouth.[17] He declares his intention: "to purge myself of the compulsive neurosis which I have served since I officially left Catholicism on Halloween, 1958."[3] He justifies the work to communicate with the "many others [who] are slaves to their neuroses" and who, despite believing themselves isolated, number so many that they "would entwine the globe many times over in a vast chain of common suffering".[17]

Though Green built Binky Brown on an autobiographical base he fabricated many scenes—such as one in which Binky is bullied by two third-graders—"to suggest or convey a whole generalized idea about some subjective feeling, such as order or fear or guilt".[12] To critic Charles Hatfield Binky Brown displays a "radical subjectivity"[18] that calls into question the notion of objectivity in autobiography.[18] The presentation is insistently subjective and non-literal in its visuals.[19]

Despite the heavy tone, humor is prominent.[20] The work is conscious of its own creation—Green's drawing of it frames the narrative proper and there are constant reminders of it throughout.[3] Green patterned the opening after those featuring the Crypt-Keeper in EC Comics' Tales from the Crypt series from the 1950s. Green used the adult Binky as the narrator of the captions and as a way to tie together the past and present timeframes.[6] There is a disconnect in that the narrator refers to his younger self as "he".[19] Other references to comics include a Sinstopper's Guidebook, which alludes to Dick Tracy's Crimestopper's Textbook[18] and a cartoon by Robert Crumb in the background.[3]

A comic book cover depicting a farmer working in a field against a backdrop of windmills, title Treasure Chest
Comics and Catholic images are scattered throughout Binky Brown, such as the parochial Treasure Chest comic book.

Green employs numerous Catholic symbols, such as a word balloon adorned with symbols of Christ's martyrdom to represent the depth of Binky's desperation. Catholic works such as a catechism and Treasure Chest parochial comics appear throughout the work.[3]

Despite strict censorship in other media in the US, explicit sexuality was common in underground comix. Binky Brown was the first work of autobiographical comics to depict explicit sexuality: penises appear throughout, and Binky masturbates in one scene.[21] The central symbol of the penis recurs sometimes subtly as in the images of pencils used to craft the work,[3] and more often explicitly, as every phallic-like object Green sees because a literal "pecker ray"-projecting penis in Binky's mind.[12]

Art Spiegelman described the artwork as "quirky and ungainly".[22] Though it appears awkward, Green put considerable effort into elements such as graphical perspective, and draws attention to his craft by depicting himself drawing and by placing the drawing manuals Perspective and Fun With a Pencil in the backgrounds. Green makes wide use of visual metaphors, in contrast to the mundane tales of Harvey Pekar, another prominent early practitioner of autobiographical comics.[3] In Binky Brown symbols become literal, as when Binky imagines himself becoming a snowball hurtling into Hell or as a fish chased by a police officer who wears a crucifix.[2] The work displays a wide array of visual techniques: diagrammatic arrows; mock-scholarly documentation; a great variety in panel size, composition, and layout; and a range of contrasting mechanical and organic rendering techniques, such as screentone alongside dense hand-drawn hatching.[18] The symbolic and technical collide where the Virgin Mary becomes the vanishing point of Binky's converging "pecker rays".[3]

Two panels of a comic strip of a man being buried alive
Precursors in comics to Binky Brown '​s unrestricted psyche include Winsor McCay's Dream of the Rarebit Fiend (February 25, 1905).

Critic Joseph Witek sees the shifting between different modes of traditional comics representation at times presents a literalist view through "windowlike panels",[19] and at others "representational, symbolic, allegorical, associative, and allusive", an approach analogous to "Binky Brown's massively and chaotically overdetermined subjectivity".[19] Witek finds roots for the fractured psychological landscape of Binky Brown in the comics of earlier eras: the unrestrained psyches in the dreams of Winsor McCay's Dream of the Rarebit Fiend, the irrational, shifting landscapes of George Herriman's Krazy Kat, and Superman's obsessively contrarian nemesis Bizarro.[23]

In Binky Brown Green blames the Catholic Church for his psychological troubles; years later, he was diagnosed with OCD, and came to see these episodes in that light rather than as the fault of the Church.[10] He nevertheless continued to blame the Church for contributing to his anxieties and maintained that religion has a magnifying influence on the condition. He said the abandoning of both religion and recreational drugs made it easier to cope with his condition.[6] In 1990 a Catholic priest raised concerns that Binky Brown may be harmful to minors; Green countered that he believed it was the Church that was harming minors.[11] Green has likened his OCD to a "split vision" which made him "both the slave to the compulsion and the detached observer".[8]

Literary scholar Hillary Chute sees the work as addressing feminist concerns of "embodiment and representation"[24] as it "delves into and forcefully pictures non-normative sexuality".[24] Chute affirms that despite its brevity Binky Brown merits the label "graphic novel" as "the quality of work, its approach, parameters, and sensibility"[5] mark a "seriousness of purpose".[5]

Reception and legacy

The strip went out of print for two decades after selling its initial print runs, during which time enthusiasts traded copies or photocopies.[22] Rather than through cartooning, Green made his living painting signs, and contributed occasional cartoon strips to various publications.[22] Aside from occasional one-off strips, his more regular cartooning appeared in the ongoing strips The Sign Game in Signs of the Times magazine and Musical Legends in America in Pulse!.[25] His later work has attracted far less attention than Binky Brown.[26]

Binky Brown Meets the Holy Virgin Mary strip has appealed mostly to comics fans and cartoonists and has gained little recognition from mainstream audiences and arts critics. Art Spiegelman speculated this neglect comes from the nature of the comics medium; in contrast to explicit works such as Philip Roth's Portnoy's Complaint, the penises in Green's work are visual.[22]

Photo of a middle-aged man
Green had read Philip Roth (pictured) and other writers who bared their personal lives in their work.

Though autobiographical elements had appeared earlier in the work of underground cartoonists such as Crumb, Spain, and Kim Deitch,[27] Binky Brown Meets the Holy Virgin Mary has gained credit as the first important work of autobiographical comics in English.[28] According to underground comix historian Patrick Rosenkranz, Green represents a break with past convention by being "the first to openly render his personal demons and emotional conflicts within the confines of a comic".[12] Green denied credit, calling confessional autobiography "a fait accompli, a low fruit ripe for the plucking",[12] examples of which abounded in literary works he had read by James Joyce, James T. Farrell, and Philip Roth. He has accepted credit for "anticipat[ing] the groundswell in literature about obsessive compulsive disorder by almost two decades",[12] for which he knew of no precedent.[12] Green used the Binky Brown persona over the years in short strips and prose pieces that appeared in underground periodicals such as Arcade and Weirdo.[29] "Sweet Void of Youth" in 1976 follows Binky from high school to age thirty-one, torn between cartooning and more respected forms of art.[13]

Green recounted "a strong energy" that Binky Brown drew from his readership, the first significant response he got from his work.[30] The story has had a wide influence on underground and alternative comics,[9] where its self-mocking[18] and confessional approach has inspired numerous cartoonists to expose intimate and embarrassing details of their lives.[31] Under the influence of Binky Brown, in 1972 Aline Kominsky published her first strip, the autobiographical "Goldie: A Neurotic Woman"[32] in Wimmen's Comix #1.[30] Other contemporary underground cartoonists were soon to incorporate confessional autobiography into their work.[28] Robert Crumb followed the same year with "The Confessions of R. Crumb" and continued with numerous other such strips.[12] Art Spiegelman, who had seen Binky Brown in mid-creation in 1971,[33] went as far as to state that "without Binky Brown there would be no Maus"—Spiegelman's most prominent work.[34] The same year as Binky Brown's publication, Green asked Spiegelman to contribute a three-page strip to the first issue of Funny Aminals, which Green edited. Spiegelman delivered the three-page "Maus" in which Nazi cats persecute Jewish mice, inspired by his father's experiences in the Auschwitz concentration camp; years later he revisited the theme in the graphic novel of the same name.[35] Comics critic Jared Gardner asserts that, while underground comix was associated with countercultural iconoclasm, the movement's most enduring legacy was to be autobiography.[36]

To Jim Woodring, Green's autobiographical work "has never been surpassed".[37] Woodring's own autobiographical work in Jim draws from his dreams rather than his waking life.[37] British-American cartoonist Gabrielle Bell sympathized with Brown's approach, which she described as "talking about his feelings or his emotional state when he was illustrating it with striking images that were sort of absurd or a weird juxtaposition".[38] Green's influence extended overseas to cartoonists such as the Dutch Peter Pontiac, who drew inspiration from Binky Brown and Maus to produce Kraut (2000), about his father who collaborated with the Nazis during World War II.[37] Chute sees major themes of isolation and coping with OCD recurring in autobiographical works such as Howard Cruse's Stuck Rubber Baby (1995) and Alison Bechdel's Fun Home (2006).[4] Hatfield sees echoes of Green's unrestrained approach to dealing with a mental condition in Madison Clell's Cuckoo (2002)—about Clell's dissociative identity disorder—and in David B.'s Epileptic (2003).[18]

The story ranked No. 9 on The Comics Journal '​s list of the best hundred English-language comics of the 20th century,[39] and featured as the cover artwork for the autobiographical comics issue of the journal Biography (Vol. 31, No. 1).[28] Artwork to Binky Brown appeared in an exhibition of Green's work at Shake It Records in Cincinnati in 2009.[4]

  1. ^ Rosenkrantz 2011, p. 3.

References

  1. Green 2010, p. 56.
  2. 2.0 2.1 Hatfield 2005, p. 135.
  3. 3.0 3.1 3.2 3.3 3.4 3.5 3.6 3.7 3.8 Hatfield 2005, p. 134.
  4. 4.0 4.1 4.2 4.3 4.4 Green 2010, p. 58.
  5. 5.0 5.1 5.2 5.3 5.4 Chute 2010, p. 17.
  6. 6.0 6.1 6.2 Manning 2010.
  7. Levin 1998, p. 101.
  8. 8.0 8.1 Gardner 2008, p. 12.
  9. 9.0 9.1 9.2 Booker 2014, p. 480.
  10. 10.0 10.1 10.2 10.3 10.4 10.5 Booker 2014, p. 481.
  11. 11.0 11.1 11.2 Green 2010, p. 57.
  12. 12.0 12.1 12.2 12.3 12.4 12.5 12.6 12.7 12.8 Rosenkrantz 2011, p. 1.
  13. 13.0 13.1 Levin 1998, p. 102.
  14. 14.0 14.1 Levin 1998, p. 103.
  15. Reid 2009.
  16. Spiegelman 1995, pp. 4–5.
  17. 17.0 17.1 Gardner 2008, p. 8.
  18. 18.0 18.1 18.2 18.3 18.4 18.5 Hatfield 2005, p. 138.
  19. 19.0 19.1 19.2 19.3 Witek 2011, p. 229.
  20. Spiegelman 1995, pp. 4–5; Rosenkrantz 2011, p. 1.
  21. Chute 2010, pp. 18–19.
  22. 22.0 22.1 22.2 22.3 Spiegelman 1995, p. 5.
  23. Witek 2011, pp. 229–230.
  24. 24.0 24.1 Chute 2010, p. 19.
  25. Levin 1998, p. 104.
  26. Levin 1998, p. 107.
  27. Gardner 2008, pp. 7–8.
  28. 28.0 28.1 28.2 Witek 2011, p. 227.
  29. Levin 2005, p. 88.
  30. 30.0 30.1 Gardner 2008, p. 13.
  31. Hatfield 2005, p. 138; Spiegelman 1995, p. 4.
  32. Chute 2010, p. 34.
  33. Gardner 2008, p. 17.
  34. Spiegelman 1995, p. 4.
  35. Witek 1989, p. 103.
  36. Gardner 2008, pp. 6–7.
  37. 37.0 37.1 37.2 Rosenkrantz 2011, p. 3.
  38. Rosenkrantz 2011, p. 5.
  39. Spurgeon 1999.

Works cited

Further reading