It's mostly nostalgia, let's be frank.
What one "discovers" in his youth, will stay with him forever.
And will be glorified.
I doubt that modern youth will take a liking to those (often crudely drawn) golden age classics.
Even I don't. That's why I start with the 50s.
EC rules. Hehe.
Hi tilliban. May be to some degree (surely not in its entirety otherwise you’d deny any value to criticism, which nonetlehess is inherent and can’t be honestly avoided, even when we are speaking of "taste"), but then we must see what "nostalgia" actually is. It’s never have been clear to me. Nostalgia may simply be one of the strongest indicators of something pointing deep within the human earth.
Now, you are telling me you read EC comics as a kid in Germany? I wasn’t aware of such publications.
Now, I have never liked EC in particular, but it took very little for me to become thoroughly fascinated with the golden age. And this has obviously nothing to do with nostalgia as you seemed to intend when you spoke, because it would plainly stop to Marvel's early silver age.
There is also another consideration, and this comes from temperament. I think I am more fascinated by drama than comedy, while I see you are a comical actor (if I get it right from your site). Now, it's not that comedy has to map out tragedy or vice-versa, but it's undeniable there is a basic appreciation of a story in one of the two keys, be it adventurous or not.
Personally, I truly enjoy comical aspects in a dramatic, even highly dramatic story, but I am not so attracted to horror "per se".
There is a very interesting study (I recall) published by a french magazine in the 1990s which looked at Kirby’s "Fourth World" applying to it the two aspects of comedy and tragedy as they were in ancient greece. Maybe he jumps to partially arbitrary conclusions, but I recall it’s very interesting, and it helped me appreciate the stories, as I read a good part of them afterwards.
This also reminds me that there aren’t just "female furies" or Big Barda on New Genesis and Apokolips, but also Bekka, and definitely charming female plain human characters (not to mention Beautiful Dreamer). I say this for narf.
@Paw: Many thanks for all the references and information: I’ll have to delve into it, now.
In fact, broad scots doesn’t seem exaggeratedly difficult, well not more than american slang anyway…