Angela Bocage

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Angela Bocage is a bisexual[1] comics creator who published mainly in the 1980s and 1990s. Bocage was active in the queer comics community during these decades, publishing in collections like Gay Comix, StripAIDS USA, and Wimmen’s Comix.[2] Bocage also created, edited, and contributed comics to Real Girl, a comics anthology.

Personal Life/Career[]

Bocage was born in Fayetteville, Arkansas.[3] She attended the University of California in Santa Cruz as an art major in the 1970s where she was part of the Graphic Stories Guild with Mark Clegg, another comics artist.[4] She published a comic strip called “The Worm” in the Guild's publication. The Graphic Stories Guild was a student-run comics club that published issues of student comics for distribution both on an off campus.[5] While at Santa Cruz, Bocage also participated in the creation of fanzines “Slug Tesserae” and “Amoeba Earhart Flyer.”[6] Also in college, Bocage created a women's section in the university newspaper.[1] Bocage eventually went back to school for law and became an immigration attorney based in Boston.[4]

Bocage worked at a headhunting firm but left in the 1980s to create comics.[3] She also worked as a graphics editor for AIDS News Service, the organization that also published her comic "(Nice Girls Don't Talk About) Sex, Religion, and Politics."[3]

Bocage has two children named Robin and Jasmine.[3] She is an activist for reproductive freedom.[2]

Comics and Contributions[]

  • Renegade Romance (1987)
  • The Trouble with Girls (1987)
  • StripAIDS USA (1988)
  • Taboo (1988)
  • Women's Glibber
  • Choices (1990)
  • Frighten the Horses
  • East Bay Guardian
  • Weird Smut
  • Gay Comix issues 11 (1988) and 13 (1988)
  • Girljock
  • Wimmen's Comix issues 12 (co-editor with Rebecka Wright,[7] artist of “Wild Heat”), 13 (artist of “Features”), 14 (back cover artist and artist of “On The Edge”), 16 (“Rust Belt Romance” and “Sons and Lovers”), 17 (“Prickophobia”)
  • Lana's World
  • "(Nice Girls Don't Talk About) Sex, Religion, and Politics"
  • Real Girl (1990-1997)

In addition to creating her own comics, Bocage also did lettering for several other comics artists.[6]

In 1991, Bocage contributed an essay to The Comics Journal titled "Define the Terms, Dismiss the Dregs, and Enjoy the Results: A Feminist's Case for Pornography."[1]

Real Girl[]

Real Girl is a comic anthology published by Fantagraphics Books that ran from 1990 to 1997. Comics in Real Girl highlight themes of gender, sexual orientation, and sex.[8] Real Girl had nine published issues, all of them edited by Bocage. Bocage create comics for issues 5 (“Queer, With Children”), 6 (“Sex, Religion, and Politics”), 7 (“Our Wedding Night”), 8 (“Schlock Therapy” and “Educating Lance”), and 9 (“Angry Girls/Aaron Dreams,” “stupid questions/bi-girls,” and “Aaron Becomes Chimerical”).[8] Along with Bocage's own comics, Real Girl featured works from other comic artists.

Artists featured in Real Girl:

References[]

  1. ^ Jump up to: a b c Bocage, Angela (July 1991). Groth, Gary (ed.). "Define the Terms, Dismiss the Dregs, and Enjoy the Results: A Feminist's Case for Pornography". The Comics Journal. 143: 3–4.
  2. ^ Jump up to: a b Ross, Bob; Mangels, Andy (1998). "A History of Contributors". Gay Comix 25. pp. 72–73.
  3. ^ Jump up to: a b c d Warren, Roz (1995). Dyke Strippers: Lesbian Cartoonists from A to Z. Cleis Press. p. 23.
  4. ^ Jump up to: a b Clegg, Mark (October 2018). "A Lifetime of Comics". UC santa Cruz Magazine. Retrieved 1 October 2019.
  5. ^ White, Dan (March 2018). "Comic Relief". UC Santa Cruz Magazine. Retrieved 1 October 2019.
  6. ^ Jump up to: a b Dooley, Kevin, ed. (1988). Amazing Heroes #141. Fantagraphics Books. p. 67.
  7. ^ Groth, Gary, ed. (2016). The Complete Wimmen's Comix. Seattle, WA: Fantagraphics Books, Inc. ISBN 978-1-60699-898-4.
  8. ^ Jump up to: a b Bocage, Angela (1990–1997). Real Girl 1-9. Seattle, WA: Fantagraphics Books.

External links[]

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