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Bart’s transition from a television "prankster" to a comic book star allowed for deeper explorations of his character archetypes.

For a children's comic published in the mid-2000s, this was shockingly prescient regarding the state of popular media today. Bart’s transition from a television "prankster" to a

Through Bart’s eyes, the comics offer a meta-commentary on the very industry that created him, acting as both a participant in and a critic of "trash" culture. 1. The Comic Book as a Mirror of the Comic Industry It freed him from the constraints of network

For , the comic book wasn’t just a licensing afterthought. It was a liberation. It freed him from the constraints of network television and allowed him to become a vessel for media deconstruction, parody, and metafiction. Whether he is battling a rogue Radioactive Man or explaining to the reader why sitcom laugh tracks are weird, Bart Simpson on the printed page remains the sharpest critic of the media that created him. But on the printed page

The Simpsons live in a world of endless reruns. But on the printed page, Bart’s pranks are permanent. He isn’t yelling "Eat my shorts" at the TV anymore. He’s whispering it into the margins of pop culture history—and drawing a mustache on it.

Bart Simpson's influence on popular culture is marked by his ability to bridge the gap between "high" and "low" culture. Postmodern Iconography: Critics often describe Bart as a postmodern figure

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