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Primary Source Sets
Truth, Justice, and the Birth of the Superhero Comic Book
The cover of All Star Comics No. 19 (1943), featuring several characters gathered around Wonder Woman as she plays the piano.

The cover of All Star Comics No. 19 (1943), featuring several characters gathered around Wonder Woman as she plays the piano.

“Crimes Set to Music,” an All Star Comics issue, was published by DC Comics in the winter of 1943. The cover features the superhero Wonder Woman playing the piano while other members of the Justice Society of America (Johnny Thunder, Hourman, Dr. Mid-Nite, The Spectre, The Atom, Dr. Fate, Starman, and a silhouette of Hawkman) gather around. Introduced in 1940, the Justice Society of America was the first team of superheroes featured in comic books. After their initial popularity faded, several group members were reinvented and brought together again as the Justice League of America. Some Justice Society of America members, such as the Flash, the Green Lantern, and Wonder Woman, had their own titles.

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Citation Information
D. C. Comics, Inc., “All-Star Comics No. 19,” Digital Public Library of America, https://dp.la/item/883dc41b7157c2376d2dce35dfbc66fd.
Note: These citations are programmatically generated and may be incomplete.
Courtesy of National Museum of American History, Kenneth E. Behring Center via Smithsonian Institution.

Tips for Students

For this source, consider:

  • the author's point of view
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Item 11 of 11 in the Primary Source Set Truth, Justice, and the Birth of the Superhero Comic Book

Previous Item
The cover of the January 1939 issue of Action Comics featuring Superman.
The first issue of Batman, published in the spring of 1940, created by Bob Kane.
The 1941 issue of America’s Greatest Comics featuring Captain Marvel.
Excerpts from a radio interview with Bob Harvey, an historian of comic books and author.
A photograph of a boy reading a Captain America comic book in 1942.
A 1943 cover of Batman featuring Batman, Robin, Adolf Hitler, Benito Mussolini, and Hideki Tōjō.
An excerpt from an episode of Adventures of Superman (1954) entitled “Stamp Day for Superman.”
An excerpt from a “preliminary study” that discusses efforts to restrict comic books because they lead to delinquency in young people.
The cover of a Negro Heroes comic book from 1948 featuring Jackie Robinson.
The cover of Jungle Comics No. 57 (1940).
The cover of All Star Comics No. 19 (1943), featuring several characters gathered around Wonder Woman as she plays the piano.

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