Why a boy and his tiger still matter
Top image: Rachel Schmidt/Encyclopedia Britannica
Calvin and Hobbes, Bill Wattersonâs beloved comic strip, ended three decades ago this month, yet its magic endures, says William Kuskin, CU Boulder English professor and expert on comics and graphic novels
When teaching his popular course onÌęcomic books and graphic novels,ÌęWilliam Kuskinâs classroom represents a microcosm of the university, where engineering majors sit alongside business students and aspiring writers.
In that mix, the comic strip Calvin and Hobbes, which debuted in November 1985, sparks an enthusiasm across studentsâeven though the comic strip ended its syndicated run in December 1995, before most of those students were born, says Kuskin, aÌę°”ÍűœûÇű Department of English professor and department chair.
âStudents will march down at the end of class and gush about Calvin and Hobbes,â he says. âItâs not just nostalgia; thereâs an ongoing love for it in this generation.â

William Kuskin, CU Boulder department chair and professor of English, teaches a course on comics and graphic novels that draws students from disciplines across the university.
That love often comes with a personal twist.
âA lot of dads and kids sat around reading comics together,â Kuskin explains. âStudents tell me this course brings them closer to their dads. Thereâs a comic culture out there that spans generations.â
While no new Calvin and Hobbes comic strips have been produced since 1995, author Bill Watterson authorized theÌę between 1987 and 2005 that reprinted comic strips from various years. In honor of the publication of the three-volume The Complete Calvin and Hobbes in 2005, re-runs of comic strip were made available to newspapers from Sept. 4, 2005, to Dec. 31, 2005.
Kuskin says the beloved comic strip is not just a relic of the bygone newspaper eraâitâs a shared language of humor and imagination between generations.
Describing Calvin and Hobbes to a newcomer
How does one describe what Calvin and Hobbes is about to the uninitiated?
Kuskin says the task is not as easy as it sounds, because the comic transcends its characters. On one level, itâs about Calvin, a mischievous 6-year-old boy who enjoys undertaking adventures with his stuffed tiger, Hobbes, who seemingly comes to life with biting humor when alone with Calvin. Beyond that, Kuskin says, itâs about the endless possibility of childhood, served up with doses of humor, philosophy and whimsy.
He identifies two endearing qualities that he says gives the comic strip its remarkable staying power. The first is its balance of cynicism and sentimentality.
âCalvin and Hobbes critiques the world but ends with love and warmth,â he says. âAs cruel as the outside world is, they still have time for a hug. Our world needs thatâmaybe now more than ever.â
Kuskin says Wattersonâs work reminds its audience that skepticism doesnât have to cancel tenderness. He notes that Calvinâs sharp observations about consumerism or dreary school regimen coexist with moments of pure joyâsnowball fights, sled rides and bedtime musings.
Calvin and Hobbes invites readers to slow down, to imagine, to laughâand perhaps to question what really matters, Kuskin says.
âOur culture promotes avarice and excess over happiness and personal expression,â he says, quoting Watterson: âTo invent your own lifeâs meaning is not easy, but itâs still allowed, and I think youâll be happier for the trouble.ââ
Kuskin says the second appeal of Calvin and Hobbes results from the comic stripâs role as a portal to the imagination.
âHobbes himself is a gateway,â he says of Calvinâs stuffed tiger. âHeâs both real and imaginary. That ambiguity invites readers to participate in the magic.â
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The Exploring Calvin and Hobbes exhibit will be open to the public through Dec. 31 at the Fenimore Art Museum in New York City. (Screengrab: Fenimore Art Museum)
From cardboard-box âtransmogrifiersâ to intergalactic daydreams, Kuskin says the comic strip celebrates childhood imagination. Hobbesâneither fully stuffed nor fully aliveâembodies that space where fantasy and reality blur, Kuskin says.
Comics as high art
Kuskin says the recent Calvin and Hobbes exhibition at theÌę underscores the comic stripâs artistic stature, which he sees as part of a broader movement to elevate comics.
âComics have a fundamental tension,â he explains. âThey donât belong comfortably to any one discipline. Theyâre literature, but theyâre also visual art. And theyâre tied to franchise culture.â
That tension creates a spectrumâfrom mass-market superhero films to avant-garde graphic novels. Watterson, like Art Spiegelman (author of Maus), staked out the high-art end of that spectrum, resisting the strong pull of merchandising, Kuskin says.
âHe stood by his principles. He made his art. Itâs beautiful and lasting,â he adds. âThere are many ways to make comics, but Wattersonâs wayâpurity of vision, resistance to exploitationâdefines a kind of artistic practice thatâs very beautiful.â
Art over commerce: Wattersonâs high road
Unlike many cartoonists who embraced merchandising, Watterson famously resisted commercialization. Thus, no Hobbes plush toys and no animated specials. Kuskin sees that as a principled stand.
âWatterson fought hard for artistic control,â he says. âHe framed his work as art, connecting back to early innovators like George Herriman (Krazy Kat) and Winsor McCay (Little Nemo). Comics often straddle art and commerceâWatterson pushed toward high art.â
That decision was not without cost. While Peanuts became a multimedia empireâcomplete with beloved TV specialsâCalvin and Hobbes remained confined to the printed page. That purity may be why the strip feels timeless rather than dated, Kuskin says.
âWould the world have been better for a few more Hobbes stuffed animals snuggled in at night?â he muses. âWatterson thought not. He believed the work should speak for itself.â
The cultural company Calvin and Hobbes keeps
Will CU Boulder students still be talking about Calvin and Hobbes in another 10 years?
âCalvin and Hobbes critiques the world but ends with love and warmth,â he says. âAs cruel as the outside world is, they still have time for a hug. Our world needs thatâmaybe now more than ever.â
Kuskin doesnât hesitate in his response: âAbsolutely. Parents and grandparents will keep sharing it. And itâs entered that rare cultural spaceâlike Spider-Man, Batman or even Marilyn Monroe. Itâs iconic.â
That âiconic spaceâ includes other comic strips that transcended their medium: Peanuts, Krazy Kat and Little Nemo. Like them, Kuskin says, Calvin and Hobbes combines accessibility with depthâsimple enough for children but layered enough to be appreciated by adults.
âThe best comics have always transcended age,â he says. âTheyâre not just for kids. They explore fantasy, philosophyâeven avant-garde art.â
And while Calvin and Hobbes often gets mentioned in the same breath as Peanuts, Kuskin says featuring cute kids and animals is not a prerequisite for a comic strip having enduring appeal.
âWŸ±±ô±ô Dilbert ever go away? I canât imagineâit nails corporate life,â he says.
Endings as beginnings
For Kuskin, Wattersonâs final comic stripâwith Calvin and Hobbes sledding into a snowy landscapeâis a farewell, but also a reminder that imagination is infinite.
âItâs about endings as beginnings,â he explains. âThe snow becomes a metaphor for possibility. Wattersonâs goodbye is a clean startânot an end.â
The dialogue is simple: âItâs a magical world, Hobbes, old buddy ⊠letâs go exploring.â But Kuskin says its resonance in the comic panels is profound: the blank whiteness of snow mirrors the blank pageâa canvas for imagination.
âThe snow looks like snow because we invent it as snow in our imagination,â he says. âThatâs the genius of Wattersonâhe makes us co-creators.â
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