Vividly illustrated and enjoyably hyperbolic, Pulp Empire tells its tale as a kind of horror comic. . . . Like any self-respecting superhero movie, it deserves a sequel. -- J. Hoberman * The Nation * "Stuart L. Bernath Book Prize, honorable mention.Pulp Empire is a beautiful, unique, and provocative book. Turning to comic books as a revealing source for popular culture and policy in the Cold War, Hirsch captures the nightmares, hopes, and dreams of countless citizens in a nuclear world. In his close analysis, comic books are both projections and promoters of core beliefs about conflict and power. With their reach among diverse readers, the comic books set the discursive boundaries for many discussions about good and evil, as well as strong and weak, in a time of transition for formerly isolationist Americans. Hirschs book blends cultural analysis with discussions of gender, race, and nationalism. His book opens many valuable perspectives on the complex sources of Cold War thinking." * Society for Historians of American Foreign Relations * "A thought-provoking and perspective altering history of the American comic book as both a cultural and imperial force. . . . Pulp Empire is beautiful and glossy and more than worthy of the visually stunning and often disturbing comics it comments on." * H-War * "[ Pulp Empire] makes a strong contribution to the fields of US imperialism, Cold War popular culture, and the ugly history of racial caricature in comics. It also demonstrates how all histories are global histories if we look outside the panels." * Pacific Historical Review * "A highly accessible book, carried by wry prose and well-positioned analysis of a lavish selection of comics panels and covers from DC, Timely/Marvel, EC, and othersall in vibrant color. . . . Pulp Empire demonstrates that comics evolved in lockstep with the expansion of the United States and the global communities it helped create." * Journal of American Culture * Ill be frank: I love this book. Hirschs writing is crisp and exciting and its a joy to see the history of comic books and the Cold War United States told from such a fresh angle. This fun, sharp book is one Ill be thinking about for a while. * Daniel Immerwahr, author of How to Hide an Empire: A History of the Greater United States * Every so often, a single book changes our understanding of an entire topic. Hirschs brilliant, artfully written Pulp Empire does that for mid-twentieth-century American studies. The billions of comic books that rolled off American presses and circumnavigated the globe in the 1940s and 50s reveal significant unexplored aspects of American society, politics, and foreign policy. While Hirschs spectacular research introduces American historians to a new field of study, his elegant writing invites a broad audience to read this unique and beautifully produced book. * Martin J. Sherwin, Pulitzer Prizewinning coauthor of American Prometheus and author of Gambling with Armageddon * It has been a long time since I read a history of comic books that genuinely brought significant new issues and sources to the table. Pulp Empire is such a booksmart, lively, and well-written. Hirsch positions the early decades of the American comic book in a global context and illuminates the anxieties this powerful new form of popular culture inspired not only in parents and cultural critics but also in government officials and world leaders. * Jared Gardner, author of Projections: Comics and the History of Twenty-First-Century Storytelling * "As Hirsch outlines in Pulp Empire, comics have always been entwined with capitalism, race, and foreign policy. . . . Hirsch makes an important inroad into not only understanding the cultural politics of the Cold War, but in the forces that led to the omnipresence of comic book motifs in the present." * The Progressive * "Elegantly written and lavishly illustrated, the tome documents the authors deep dive through the creepy archives of the United States government. . . . Its a lurid, fascinating tale, narrated with pep and grace." * The Lowbrow Reader * "A remarkable volume, very rich and unique in the depth of research, attractive in design, highly-revealing and full in content, and crisp and pleasurable in readability." * International Journal of Comic Art * "Hirschs book is beautifully, evocatively written andwith its full-page color illustrations and gorgeous production valuewill easily appeal to general audiences soaked in contemporary comic book culture. . . . Pulp Empire is an essential read for the current moment of reckoning in American culture, revealing how these issues shaped a business that has now, in the age of DC and Marvel blockbusters, become synonymous with America on the world stage." * International Journal of Communication * "Pulp Empire is filled with fascinating anecdotes and incisive analysis of the ephemera of US empire. This book offers something for an array of audiences from fervent comic book fans to historians of American foreign policy. Hirsch deftly deals with several dimensions of comics hidden history from their perpetuation of racist and sexist tropes to their use as a unique tool of soft-power popular abroad across class lines. Finally, Hirschs analysis of the debates over the atomic age played out in comic book pages proves both entertaining and enlightening. Pulp Empire effectively interrogates the intersection between politics and popular culture and profiles how superheroes have been deployed to serve American expansionist goals." * Not Even Past * Vivid, lurid. . . Pulp Empire is an important addition to the growing library of books that are serious about comics. . . . A must read for both scholars and fans. * St. Louis Jewish Light * "Hirsch in Pulp Empire for the first time analyzes the massive cultural and political potential of the comic book for world history. . . . Pulp Empire is an intriguing title that will find its way into many comic books studies libraries, and it is also of interest for students of American Studies and criminology." * Pop Culture Shelf * "An ambitious work. . . Enormously enjoyable. . . To his credit, Hirsch pulls no punches in identifying racism as one of the linchpins of the pulp empire." * Passport * "An extraordinary book that reveals just how heavily the federal government relied upon comic books to disseminate ideological messages, even as many politicians targeted them as a threat to morals at home. . . . A superb book about American cultural propaganda, one that deserves a wide audience and hopefully will spur additional research on this underaddressed aspect of American cultural diplomacy during the Cold War." * Canadian Military History * "Pulp Empires seven chapters move chronologically and thematically through the checkered history of propaganda comics from World War II through the Cold War. Across these chapters, Hirsch balances coherent historical narrative with sharp close readings of a deep archive of familiar commercial and obscure governmental comicsand selfishly I often found myself wanting to hear even more about several comics throughout. Sharpening these analyses, and what readers will notice long before they read the arguments within, are visually stunning full-page and half-page color illustrations of comics and archival materials throughout that make Pulp Empire a truly beautiful academic monograph." -- Vincent Haddad * Criticism *