Fluid consistency (i.e. style) is then imposed by stories and those who write/draw them (insofar as the two marry to create a unified style, though something it would seem like two separate consistencies are acting on a character, such as when the art doesn't complement the writing well or vice-versa). There is another force that acts on style/consistency however, and that's TIME. In other words, the bottle's fluid is in a state of Fermentation. This models how the same bottle might today look very different from what how it did in the 1940s, the 1960s, or the 1990s.

Style evolves (hopefully towards more sophisticated forms) and along with it, readers' tastes. The process fits the Continuity Bottle model: When a bottle is started, elements are poured into it, creating the original constituents. Each time a story is told, something is added to the Fluid or the Fluid is changed in some way. For example, if the bottle initially has no comedic Tonal Pockets, a comedic story would add that pocket to the Fluid. Any element of style may then be added/created, and over time, the bottle's contents may migrate towards a certain stylistic consistency. For example, the more gritty stories are told within the bottle's universe, the grittier its overall fluid will be. Or to take a poke at the 90s, the more pouches on any given costume, the higher the likelihood of other costumes gaining pouches.
And this is where the reader finally has an effect on the bottle. By "liking" a certain stylistic consistency, the reader encourages creators to add more of the same, just as the reader's interest can make certain dynastic molecules develop more than others. Is this Continuity's equivalent of observation having an effect on what is observed? The reader's experience of consistency (or should we refer to it as the fluid's "taste"?) definitely stimulates the spread (or non-spread) of that consistency/taste or of a dynastic molecule. And that experience's influence isn't limited to just one bottle. "Liking" something in one bottle, will cause other bottles' fluid to also evolve in that direction. Think of how elements of the Image style became prevalent in Marvel and DC comics in the 90s, or how Marvel's house style from the 60s on influenced and overtook DC's by the mid-70s. The reader's appreciation could be seen a form of radiation that acts on fermentation evenly, like sunlight affects fermenting alcohol. Bottles are grouped together and suffer similar changes (the metaphor can be extended to include more obscure dynastic molecules that shirk off "fashion" - these are truly "obscured" by being at the back or bottom of a bottle, away from the majority of readers' "light"). Of course, if this radiation can be said to exist, it is one whose wavelength is changed by the very act of hitting continuity fluid:

A Typical History of Fermentation

It's the Golden Age and we've just started a Continuity Bottle. The fluid is simple and orderly and few dynastic molecules ever interact with each other. Fluid consistency favors pulp, condensed storytelling and thick, bold line work.
In the 1950s, reader interest in superheroes wanes stunting the development of most dynastic molecules in favor of other genres (Tonal Pockets), some of which are contained in our bottle (war comics and westerns, for example), though there is very little interaction between these new developing dynastic molecules.
It's the Silver Age and many previous elements have sunk behind semi-porous Partitions (we're calling these names like Earth-2). By now, there are a lot more elements swimming through the fluid, and more interaction, though most dynastic molecules seem to stay in their own corner. Fluid consistency favors crazy action, B-movie science and a greater variety of stylized art styles.
In the 1970s, interaction continues to grow, complexifying continuity. Tonal Pockets other than superheroics - like horror - once again attempt to gain dominance, but this time, they tend to fully interact with the rest of continuity.
In the 1980s, heightened interaction becomes the favored model giving rise to the "crossover event". The Marvel bottle takes the path of complexifying continuity even more (the X-continuity would be the model), while other bottles are poured into in the DC bottle, which is given a good shake to break down the partitions therein (Crisis). As the fluid becomes more chaotic (i.e. made more complex), a greater number of styles and genres crop up as the bottle's fluid tries to find its new balance.
It's now the Dark Age of the '90s. Continuity becomes ever more complex/chaotic in large part because of Funnels in the bottle's interior (DC funneling old ideas from older continuity into its present fluid) or exterior (Marvel's two-way funnels with Image, sharing character archetypes and artistic styles liberally). Fluid consistency now favors dark anti-heroes and EXTREME! art, while the Vertigo Partition forms in the DC bottle to protect Tonal Pockets from the fermentation process (though the appropriate consistency would not have been attained without the "darkness" of the surrounding fluid.
In the 2000s, reader interest has moved consistency away from some of the extremes of the 90s, but creators are now finding their bottles to be much too complex. It could even be said that some of the readership is now favoring (and so forcing continuity fluid to also favor) simpler continuity. There are many possible reactions, from shaking the bottle to start things anew and suppress certain continuity elements behind Continuity Walls (Infinite Crisis, One More Day), to funneling continuity data from the main bottle to a space behind a new partition's virgin fluid (Ultimate Universe, Johnny DC).
It's a new decade, but already DC is set to shake its bottle again. I get the feeling however that it has less to do with decomplexifying continuity by starting a new configuration, and more to do with breaking Continuity Walls and reinjecting elements from older continuities back into the main body of the bottle (the Nostalgia argument). It is of course too early to tell which way the Fermentation process will take us. Will it be wine? Or vinegar?
No comments:
Post a Comment