Abstract
The company now known as DC began as National Periodicals, publishing anthology series such as Adventure Comics, More Fun Comics, and Detective Comics. Superman, the first true “super-hero,” appeared on the scene in a brief story in Action Comics no. 1 (June, 1938). Batman appeared not long after, in the pages of Detective Comics no. 27 (May 1939)|3-and the world was never the same. In the late 1940s, National absorbed its competitor Ail-American Comics (which published such series as Green Lantern, Aquaman, and Green Arrow) and changed the company's name to Detective Comics, “DC” for short. The merger made DC the largest comic book company until the 1950s, when interest in the medium dried up, and Dell, who at that time published Walt Disney's comic books, took over the top spot.
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