Little Dot: Difference between revisions
No edit summary |
m (Text replacement - "{{Page-ok|11/20}}" to "") |
||
Line 1: | Line 1: | ||
{{Header|Little Dot 11/20}}{{DEFAULTSORT:Dot, Little}} | |||
[[image:Little-dot-03.jpg|thumb|right|Little Dot]] | [[image:Little-dot-03.jpg|thumb|right|Little Dot]] | ||
'''Little Dot''' was a [[comic]] book [[character]] published by '''Harvey Comics''' between 1949 and 1982, and then sporadically until 1994. A little [[girl]] obsessed with dots, spots and round, colorful objects, Dot first appeared in 1949 as a supporting feature in '''Sad Sack''' and by 1953 was given her own series, joining Harvey's growing cast of child-oriented comedy characters. The title lasted almost three decades and introduced several other popular headliners (including '''Little Lotta''' and '''Richie Rich''') as back page fillers. Another spinoff title which ran for thirteen years was '''Little Dot's Uncles & Aunts''', about the adventures of Dot's impossibly extended [[family]], each with an obsessive interest of their own. | '''Little Dot''' was a [[comic]] book [[character]] published by '''Harvey Comics''' between 1949 and 1982, and then sporadically until 1994. A little [[girl]] obsessed with dots, spots and round, colorful objects, Dot first appeared in 1949 as a supporting feature in '''Sad Sack''' and by 1953 was given her own series, joining Harvey's growing cast of child-oriented comedy characters. The title lasted almost three decades and introduced several other popular headliners (including '''Little Lotta''' and '''Richie Rich''') as back page fillers. Another spinoff title which ran for thirteen years was '''Little Dot's Uncles & Aunts''', about the adventures of Dot's impossibly extended [[family]], each with an obsessive interest of their own. |
Revision as of 23:47, 30 November 2020
Little Dot was a comic book character published by Harvey Comics between 1949 and 1982, and then sporadically until 1994. A little girl obsessed with dots, spots and round, colorful objects, Dot first appeared in 1949 as a supporting feature in Sad Sack and by 1953 was given her own series, joining Harvey's growing cast of child-oriented comedy characters. The title lasted almost three decades and introduced several other popular headliners (including Little Lotta and Richie Rich) as back page fillers. Another spinoff title which ran for thirteen years was Little Dot's Uncles & Aunts, about the adventures of Dot's impossibly extended family, each with an obsessive interest of their own.
A number of sources - including Don Markstein's Toonopedia - have described Little Dot as a 'one note character,' citing the strip's apparent reliance on formulaic gags and repetitious images (i.e. Dot's dots). This is something of an over-simplification; Dot's storylines involved a considerable amount of slapstick humor and domestic comedy, often quite unrelated to the strip's signature theme. Like her in-house contemporary Little Audrey, Dot frequently found herself at odds with parents, teachers and other representatives of DotTown's adult population, often to the inhabitants' mutual exasperation.
Dot's adventures featured intermittent spanking imagery, usually the consequence of a domestic dispute with one of her parents (most often her mother). Following the visual conventions of the period, Dot was normally depicted being spanked on the panties (bare bottomed depictions being extremely rare in Code-approved comics). In recent years, Little Dot has experienced a minor revival within the online spanking community, particularly amongst older respondents with fond memories of Harvey's long running children's titles.
See also
Notable "Little Girl" Strips
Links
- Handprints Comics Galleries
- Shoujo Imageboard: Toongirls on AnonIB (defunct as of 2011)
- Shoujo Imageboard: Downloads on AnonIB (defunct as of 2011)
Chat rooms • What links here • Copyright info • Contact information • Category:Root