Friday, 3 May 2013

Black Panther Wallpaper Hd Android Desktop Abstract Iphone 5 Design Backgournd Mobile

Black Panther Wallpaper Biography

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The Black Panther (T'Challa) is a fictional character appearing in publications by Marvel Comics. Created by writer-editor Stan Lee and penciller-co-plotter Jack Kirby, he first appeared in Fantastic Four #52 (July 1966). He is the first black superhero in mainstream American comics, debuting several years before such early African-American superheroes as Marvel Comics' the Falcon and Luke Cage, and DC Comics' Tyroc, Black Lightning and Green Lantern John Stewart.The Black Panther's name predates the October 1966 founding of the Black Panther Party, though not the black panther logo of the party's predecessor, the Lowndes County Freedom Organization, nor the segregated World War II Black Panthers Tank Battalion.[1][2] He is the first Black superhero in mainstream comic books; virtually no Black heroes were created before him, and none with actual superpowers. These included the characters in the single-issue, low-distribution All-Negro Comics #1 (1947); Waku, Prince of the Bantu, who starred in his own feature in the omnibus title Jungle Tales, from Marvel's 1950s predecessor, Atlas Comics; and the Dell Comics Western character Lobo, the first Black person to star in his own comic book. Previous non-caricatured Black supporting characters in comics include U.S. Army infantry private Gabriel Jones of Sgt. Fury and his Howling Commandos.Following his debut in Fantastic Four #52-53 (July-Aug. 1966) and subsequent guest appearance in Fantastic Four Annual #5 (1967) and with Captain America in Tales of Suspense #97-99 (Jan.-March 1968), the Black Panther journeyed from the fictional African nation of Wakanda to New York City, New York to join the titular American superhero team in The Avengers #52 (May 1968), appearing in that comic for the next few years. During his time with the Avengers, he made solo guest-appearances in three issues of Daredevil, and fought Doctor Doom in Astonishing Tales #6-7 (June & Aug. 1971), in that supervillain's short-lived starring feature. He later returned in a guest-appearance capacity in Fantastic Four #119 (Feb. 1972) during which he briefly tried using the name Black Leopard to avoid connotations invoking the Black-militant political party the Black Panthers.[3]

He received his first starring feature with Jungle Action #5 (July 1973), a reprint of the Panther-centric story in the superhero-team comic The Avengers #62 (March 1969). A new series began running the following issue, written by Don McGregor, with art by pencilers Rich Buckler, Gil Kane, and Billy Graham, and which gave inkers Klaus Janson and Bob McLeod some of their first professional exposure. The critically acclaimed[4] series ran in Jungle Action #6-24 (Sept. 1973 - Nov. 1976).[5]

One now-common innovation McGregor pioneered was that of the self-contained, multi-issue story arc.[6] The first, "Panther's Rage", ran through the first 13 issues, initially as 13- to 15-page stories. Starting with Jungle Action #14, they were expanded to 18- to 19-page stories; there was additionally a 17-page epilogue. Two decades later, writer Christopher Priest's 1998 series The Black Panther utilized Erik Killmonger, Venomm, and other characters introduced in this arc.

Critic Jason Sacks has called the arc "Marvel's first graphic novel":

    [T]here were real character arcs in Spider-Man and the Fantastic Four [comics] over time. But ... 'Panther's Rage' is the first comic that was created from start to finish as a complete novel. Running in two years' issues of Jungle Action (#s 6 through 18), 'Panther's Rage' is a 200-page novel that journeys to the heart of the African nation of Wakanda, a nation ravaged by a revolution against its king, T'Challa, the Black Panther.[6]
The second and final arc, "Panther vs. the Klan", ran as mostly 17-page stories in Jungle Action #19-24 (Jan.-Nov. 1976), except for issue #23, a reprint of Daredevil #69 (Oct. 1970), in which the Black Panther guest-starred.[5] The subject matter of the Ku Klux Klan was considered controversial in the Marvel offices at the time, creating difficulties for the creative team.[7] The arc ended mid-story and Jungle Action folded, with Jack Kirby—newly returned to Marvel after having decamped to rival DC Comics for a time—immediately writing and drawing the new series Black Panther, which ran 15 issues (Jan. 1977 - May 1979).
Black Panther Wallpaper Hd Android Desktop Abstract Iphone 5 Design Backgournd Mobile
Black Panther Wallpaper Hd Android Desktop Abstract Iphone 5 Design Backgournd Mobile
Black Panther Wallpaper Hd Android Desktop Abstract Iphone 5 Design Backgournd Mobile
Black Panther Wallpaper Hd Android Desktop Abstract Iphone 5 Design Backgournd Mobile
Black Panther Wallpaper Hd Android Desktop Abstract Iphone 5 Design Backgournd Mobile
Black Panther Wallpaper Hd Android Desktop Abstract Iphone 5 Design Backgournd Mobile

Black Panther Wallpaper Hd Android Desktop Abstract Iphone 5 Design Backgournd Mobile
Black Panther Wallpaper Hd Android Desktop Abstract Iphone 5 Design Backgournd Mobile
Black Panther Wallpaper Hd Android Desktop Abstract Iphone 5 Design Backgournd Mobile
Black Panther Wallpaper Hd Android Desktop Abstract Iphone 5 Design Backgournd Mobile
Black Panther Wallpaper Hd Android Desktop Abstract Iphone 5 Design Backgournd Mobile          

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