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''The Playboy'' is a graphic novel by Canadian cartoonist Chester Brown, serialized in 1990 in Brown's comic book ''Yummy Fur'' and collected in different revised book editions in 1992 and 2013. It deals with Brown's guilt and anxiety over his obsessive masturbation to ''Playboy'' Playmate models. The story begins with Brown's first purchase of an issue of ''Playboy'' as a teenager. His obsessive masturbating gives him great guilt and anxiety, and out of fear of being caught he repeatedly rids himself of copies of the magazine, only to retrieve them later. His conflicting emotions follow him into adulthood until he purges them by revealing himself through his comics. The free, organic arrangement of odd-shaped panels of simple, expressive artwork contrasts with Brown's more detailed grid-like pages in his 1980s work, such as ''Ed the Happy Clown''. ''The Playboy'' forms part of Brown's early-1990s autobiographical period, and was the first book-length work he planned as a complete story. Brown conceived it as a longer work with what became his next graphic novel, ''I Never Liked You'' (1994), but found the larger story too complex to handle at once. The story has attracted praise for its revealing honesty and criticism from those who saw it as glorifying pornography. ''Playboy'' publisher Hugh Hefner wrote Brown to express concern over Brown's sexual anxieties in a post-sexual revolution world. ==Background== Chester Brown grew up in Châteauguay, a Montreal suburb with a large English-speaking minority; he does not speak French. He described himself as a "nerdy teenager" attracted to comic books from a young age. He sought a career drawing superhero comics, but was unsuccessful in finding work with Marvel or DC after graduating from high school. He moved to Toronto and discovered and the small-press community. He began to self-publish a minicomic in 1983 titled ''Yummy Fur''. From 1986 Toronto-based Vortex Comics began publishing ''Yummy Fur''. After making a name for himself in alternative comics with the surreal serial ''Ed the Happy Clown'', Brown turned to autobiography after reading such work by Julie Doucet and Joe Matt. The work of his friend and fellow Toronto cartoonist Seth inspired Brown to pare down his drawing style during the early 1990s. He tentatively began his autobiographical period with a pair of short tales, and gradually became freer with his panel layouts and simpler in his artwork. 抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)』 ■ウィキペディアで「The Playboy」の詳細全文を読む スポンサード リンク
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