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So I was browsing for some alternate history fiction unrelated to the confederacy when I stumbled upon this. And the second I saw it I knew I was going to have to share and talk about it.
The book is about superheroes in a world where the confederacy won the American Civil War and as such the entire world is completely different in the modern day of the books writing (1985). The United States is not only divided between the union and the Confederacy but also several different states and countries have occupied what is America in OTL.
Captain Confederacy ran for 12 issues in 1986-87 for Steel Dragon Press; it was later picked up by Marvel’s Epic Comics for four issues starting in November 1991. The protagonist wasn’t some vague embodiment of “Southern pride”—he starts out as a propaganda tool used by the Confederate States of America to maintain the status quo. And that status quo, in this alternate reality, isn’t pretty; the black citizens of the CSA are distinctly second-class, and the powers that be want them to stay that way.
Captain Confederacy addressed the South’s old ghosts by following history to an alternate, perhaps-logical conclusion—or tried to. As the series progressed, the South did change, later enlisting a black woman as a protegée Captain. Whether the comic was successful or merely provocative is up to readers to decide, and creator Will Shetterly invites you to do just that.
The source where I found this has a link to where the original creator posted the complete series regrettably it seems that wherever he hosted it the site has been terminated.
The art from the original 12 issue mini series isn’t very good. Although the epic imprint four issue series seems to have improved it’s art a lot better.
I haven’t read it yet but from this little snippet it does appear that the book is by no means a celebration of Southern pride or any of that it out right condemns the existence of slavery and the existence of the confederacy in no uncertain terms. It has characters drop the N-bomb left and right. It’s all appropriate given how backwards and racist the setting is but it’s still rather shocking for a modern reader.
Has anyone else heard of this?
The book is about superheroes in a world where the confederacy won the American Civil War and as such the entire world is completely different in the modern day of the books writing (1985). The United States is not only divided between the union and the Confederacy but also several different states and countries have occupied what is America in OTL.
Who Remembers "Captain Confederacy"? (Not Coming to a Wal-Mart Near You)
The nearly-forgotten "Captain Confederacy" comic book wrestled with issues of Southern identity and featured a hero who wore a Confederate flag getup.
www.heavymetal.com
Captain Confederacy ran for 12 issues in 1986-87 for Steel Dragon Press; it was later picked up by Marvel’s Epic Comics for four issues starting in November 1991. The protagonist wasn’t some vague embodiment of “Southern pride”—he starts out as a propaganda tool used by the Confederate States of America to maintain the status quo. And that status quo, in this alternate reality, isn’t pretty; the black citizens of the CSA are distinctly second-class, and the powers that be want them to stay that way.
Captain Confederacy addressed the South’s old ghosts by following history to an alternate, perhaps-logical conclusion—or tried to. As the series progressed, the South did change, later enlisting a black woman as a protegée Captain. Whether the comic was successful or merely provocative is up to readers to decide, and creator Will Shetterly invites you to do just that.
The source where I found this has a link to where the original creator posted the complete series regrettably it seems that wherever he hosted it the site has been terminated.
The art from the original 12 issue mini series isn’t very good. Although the epic imprint four issue series seems to have improved it’s art a lot better.
I haven’t read it yet but from this little snippet it does appear that the book is by no means a celebration of Southern pride or any of that it out right condemns the existence of slavery and the existence of the confederacy in no uncertain terms. It has characters drop the N-bomb left and right. It’s all appropriate given how backwards and racist the setting is but it’s still rather shocking for a modern reader.
Has anyone else heard of this?
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