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Incognegro (comics)

Incognegro
Incognego cover.jpg
Cover to graphic novel
Date February 2008
Publisher Vertigo
Creative team
Writers Mat Johnson
Artists Warren Pleece
Letterers Clem Robins
Editors Mark Doyle
Jonathan Vankin
ISBN

Incognegro is a black-and-white graphic novel written by Mat Johnson with art by Warren Pleece. It was published by DC Comics imprint Vertigo

The book was published by Vertigo in February 2008 as a hardcover () and in June 2009 as a softcover volume (). Titan Books also released British versions, the softcover in June 2009 () and the hardcover in August of the same year ().

The author, Mat Johnson, is an African-American who, due to his light skin, was able to be perceived as a White person. As a child he played games where he pretended to be an undercover black person investigating White hate crimes against blacks. He learned that Walter White, who served as the chief executive of the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People (NAACP), pretended to be a White person in order to investigate lynchings. In addition, he received inspiration from the 2005 birth of two twins, one of whom appears white and the other appears black.

Zane Pinchback is a reporter for a black newspaper in the early 1930s New York City. He has built his career investigating lynchings while undercover as a white person, as he is light-skinned enough to pass for white. He is about to retire, but then fate intervenes as his brother is charged with the brutal murder of a white woman in Mississippi. Fearing that his brother will be lynched before given a chance to clear his name, Zane decides to go on one final investigation to free him, and brings along a friend who hopes to assume his job after he retires.

The book has received positive reviews in The New York Times, San Francisco Chronicle, and Seattle Times. George Gene Gustines of The New York Times wrote that Incognegro "proudly exemplifies the graphic novel." Nisi Shawl of the Seattle Times wrote that "With its savvy comments on racial politics and privilege, "Incognegro" is a valiant and successful effort to redeem the past without rewriting it." Charles Solomon of the San Francisco Chronicle wrote that Incognegro' "portrayal of a savage chapter in the history of race relations in the United States reflects the growing diversity and maturity of the graphic novel."


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