Goofus And Gallant
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''Goofus and Gallant'' is an American children's comic strip appearing monthly in ''
Highlights for Children ''Highlights for Children'', often referred to simply as ''Highlights'', is an American children's magazine. It was started in June 1946 by educators Garry Cleveland Myers and Caroline Clark Myers in Honesdale, Pennsylvania. They worked for the ...
''. The comic contrasts the actions of the eponymous characters, presenting Gallant's actions as right and good and Goofus's as wrong and bad. Created by Garry Cleveland Myers and first published in ''Children's Activities'' in 1940, ''Goofus and Gallant'' moved to ''Highlights for Children'' when the magazine was founded in 1946. Throughout its history ''Goofus and Gallant'' has been interpreted as an effective
didactic Didacticism is a philosophy that emphasises instructional and informative qualities in literature, art, and design. In art, design, architecture, and landscape, didacticism is a conceptual approach that is driven by the urgent need to explain. ...
comic. The strip has reflected changes in attitudes about American parenting styles. It has been used in several studies as a stimulus to prompt children to identify kind and unkind actions, and the characters of Goofus and Gallant, as archetypes of badness and goodness, have been referenced in several works by philosophers.


History

''Goofus and Gallant'' was created by Garry Cleveland Myers and was first featured in the magazine ''Children's Activities'' in 1940. According to family legend, the grandchildren of Myers and his wife Caroline, Kent Brown and Garry Cleveland Myers III, inspired the characters Goofus and Gallant respectively. At first, the comic's characters were depicted as elves. In 1946, when the Myerses founded ''
Highlights for Children ''Highlights for Children'', often referred to simply as ''Highlights'', is an American children's magazine. It was started in June 1946 by educators Garry Cleveland Myers and Caroline Clark Myers in Honesdale, Pennsylvania. They worked for the ...
'', they brought ''Goofus and Gallant'' with them to the new magazine. By the 1950s, the strip's art style changed and Goofus and Gallant turned from elves to human boys. Throughout ''Goofus and Gallant''s history, numerous artists have drawn for the strip. The first was Maurieta Wellman who drew the strip until 1952. She was succeeded by Marion Hull Hammel who had the strip's longest tenure as illustrator, working for 32 years until 1984. Sidney Quinn, who since 1977 had already been illustrating ''The Timbertoes'', another ''Highlights'' feature, took over the art on ''Goofus and Gallant'' from Hammel and drew the strip for a decade until his death in 1994. Kit Wray illustrated the comic for a year in 1995 until Anni Matsick took over from 1996 through 2005. Since 2006, ''Goofus and Gallant'' has been illustrated by Leslie Harrington.


Format

The comic, published monthly in ''Highlights for Children'', consists of two panels depicting the actions of two children, Goofus and Gallant. Gallant's actions are always virtuous and respectful, in contrast to Goofus's, which are always rude and selfish. They are presented side by side with a brief caption (e.g., "Goofus turns on the television when there are guests; whenever guests arrive, Gallant turns off the television at once.") The direct results of their actions, good or bad, are never depicted. For many years, a short line of text reading "Gallant shows correct behavior" was included at the bottom of the comic. The strip's protagonists have varied in age and appearance over time, variously shown with long or short, or dark or light hair and aged twelve or eight or five years old. Goofus and Gallant have never appeared in the same panel of the comic. According to Brown, who was editor of ''Highlights for Children'', "Without Goofus, Gallant would be bland and no one would pay attention. But kids see parts of themselves in both characters. No one is as good as Gallant, and no one is as bad as Goofus. But being more like Gallant is something to strive for." By the 2020s, the comic included a line echoing this sentiment at the top of each installment: "There's some of Goofus and Gallant in us all. When the Gallant shines through, we show our best self." ''Goofus and Gallant'' has reflected shifts in American parenting styles and attitudes about how children (especially boys) ought to behave. While strips from the 1950s highlighted Goofus crying in pain and Gallant suppressing tears, strips from 2000 onward showed Goofus ignoring or reacting badly to hurts while Gallant expressed his emotions more openly to himself and others. Older installments of the comic also reflected a greater degree of autonomy for both Goofus and Gallant to explore unsupervised, while comics from 2000 onward rarely showed either child outdoors unsupervised by an adult.


Reception

The children's author and philosophy professor Claudia Mills wrote that ''Goofus and Gallant'' is heavily
didactic Didacticism is a philosophy that emphasises instructional and informative qualities in literature, art, and design. In art, design, architecture, and landscape, didacticism is a conceptual approach that is driven by the urgent need to explain. ...
but is nonetheless effective at imparting its lessons to children. According to author and professor of literature and pop culture Harold Schechter, "though Goofus is clearly meant to be obnoxious, even destructive–a bundle of unbridled aggression–he generally seems more appealing than the do-gooder Gallant", which Schechter believed necessitated the explanatory caption below each strip to confirm which character children should be emulating. Donald Kaul writing in ''
The Des Moines Register ''The Des Moines Register'' is the daily morning newspaper of Des Moines, Iowa, United States. History Early period The first newspaper in Des Moines was the ''Iowa Star''. In July 1849, Barlow Granger began the paper in an abandoned log cab ...
'' described Gallant as "an awful
prig In British English, a prig () is a person who shows an inordinately zealous approach to matters of form and propriety—especially where the prig has the ability to show superior knowledge to those who do not know the protocol in question. They se ...
" and wrote that while the children he observed reading ''Goofus and Gallant'' "continue to exhibit an average amount of Goofus behavior, heyalways identify completely with Gallant, the goody-goody. They jeer at Goofus's shortcomings and pat themselves on the back whenever Gallant turns himself in to do an onerous chore like taking music lessons." Alan A. Block wrote that ''Goofus and Gallant'' presents uncritical assumptions about what constitutes right and wrong, and rarely or never interfaces with situations of real-world prejudice.


Other uses

''Goofus and Gallant'' strips have been used for research purposes. A 2006 study gauging the development of ideas of respect and disrespect among American children used strips from the comic as stimuli to which the subjects could provide qualitative responses regarding why they believed Goofus's or Gallant's actions were respectful or disrespectful. A 2012 study used the strips to prompt
autistic Autism, also known as autism spectrum disorder (ASD), is a neurodevelopmental disorder characterized by differences or difficulties in social communication and interaction, a preference for predictability and routine, sensory processing di ...
and allistic children to identify whether the depicted child (either Goofus or Gallant) was behaving badly while researchers used an
fMRI Functional magnetic resonance imaging or functional MRI (fMRI) measures brain activity by detecting changes associated with blood flow. This technique relies on the fact that cerebral blood flow and neuronal activation are coupled. When an area o ...
to measure the neural networks used in reaching their conclusions. The concepts of Goofus and Gallant have also appeared in contexts divorced from the comic. Philosopher
Theodore Sider Theodore "Ted" Sider is an American philosopher specializing in metaphysics and philosophy of language. He is Distinguished Professor of Philosophy at Rutgers University. Family Sider is the son of theologian Ronald Sider. He is the partner of ...
used the characters in an argument against the notion of a binary heaven or hell conception of the afterlife. Sider conceived of Goofus and Gallant as near-equals, with Gallant only marginally better than Goofus, in arguing that sending the former to heaven and the latter to hell is antithetical to God's justice. Other philosophers such as Matthew Konieczka and Casey Swank have also called upon Goofus and Gallant as archetypes of bad and good when formulating arguments.


Explanatory notes


References

{{reflist, 30em American comic strips Comics characters introduced in 1940 1940 comics debuts Educational comics Comic strip duos Text comics Fictional twins Male characters in comics Child characters in comics Comics about children