Template:Short description Dick Hafer (July 20, 1937 – July 5, 2003)[1] was an American comics artist. He is best known for his Christian and conservative comics with strong political and anti-extramarital sexuality views.
Hafer wrote about 70 comics. Although he is known most for his controversial political comics, Hafer covered a wide variety of topics: from church life (Church Chuckles[2]), to model railroads (Sometimes You Gotta Compromise: A Light-Hearted Look at Model Railroading--And Model Railroaders[3]), to dog ownership (So You Want a Dog: Questionable Answers to Your Questions About Doggie Ownership[4]).
Hafer is best known for his conservative social and religious views. One of his most controversial comics was the 1986 anti-homosexual comic Homosexuality: Legitimate, Alternative Deathstyle.[5] One of his best selling works was I Know That We're a Throw-Away Society, but This is Ridiculous!, an anti-abortion pamphlet published 1988. He also specifically targeted politicians of the Democratic Party: he parodied Ted Kennedy in Every Family Has One: Little Black Sheep (1982), and Michael Dukakis in Magical Mike (1988).
References
External links
- "The Comics Commando: Cartoonist Dick Hafer likes underdogs, including small companies he thinks are being pushed around. Bullies beware!"—Magazine profile from June 1, 1982
- Part 1 and Part 2 of Homosexuality: Legitimate, Alternative, Deathstyle—presented by Comics With Problems
- "What, me vicious? The lighter side of Ted Kennedy" Article on Hafer and Every Family Has One in The Boston Phoenix