Try GOLD - Free

Indian comics, redrawn from the margins

Business Standard

|

January 03, 2026

Once woven into everyday reading, the medium is surviving through dogged intent rather than scale

- AYUSHI SINGH New Delhi, 2 January

Indian comics, redrawn from the margins

For three days every year, in 11 cities, Indian comics briefly come back into view.

At last year's Comic Con, which concluded its Delhi edition in December, creators stood behind narrow tables stacked with self-published books. Legacy characters reappeared on banners. Readers stopped long enough to browse, talk, and ask questions.

But outside such encounters, Indian comics remain largely absent from bookshops, libraries, and routine reading-a gap felt more keenly today because they were once commonplace.

For decades, comics in India were not a niche interest. They travelled through railway trolleys and were passed between siblings, discovered by accident rather than design. Chacha Chaudhary, Champak, Tinkle and Amar Chitra Katha were ubiquitous. That everyday circulation has collapsed. What remains is a smaller, fragmented ecosystem of creators, publishers, and readers, held together less by scale than by persistence. Indian comics today exist largely outside mass visibility, rebuilding slowly and often from the margins.

Holding it together

Comic Con is about survival.

Illustrator Saumin Suresh Patel, chief design officer at Indusverse, a studio creating original Indian superhero intellectual property (IP), has been attending Comic Con since 2011. He returns not for footfall alone, but for something the internet has not yet replaced.

"Online, everyone hits like," he said.

"Here, you get genuine reactions." Indusverse was founded by a group of creators and media professionals who also included Arunabh Kumar, CEO of The Viral Fever (TVF), the digital content studio behind television shows such as Kota Factory and TVF Pitchers. The intent, Patel said, was to build contemporary characters rather than rework older archetypes.

Owning IP determines whether a comic can travel beyond print into other formats, something Indian comics have struggled to do at scale.

MORE STORIES FROM Business Standard

Business Standard

AI Impact Summit's focus is to give voice to Global South: India AI CEO

Q&A: India will use the AI Impact Summit to showcase itself as an artificial intelligence (AI) service provider to companies and countries worldwide, IndiaAI Chief Executive Officer (CEO) Abhishek Singh said in an interaction with Aashish Aryan in New Delhi.

time to read

2 mins

January 05, 2026

Business Standard

Business Standard

X to remove illegal content, ban offenders

Microblogging site X will act against illegal content by removing it, permanently suspending accounts that uploaded the material and working with local governments as required, the Elon Musk-owned social media platform said on Sunday.

time to read

1 min

January 05, 2026

Business Standard

After Mustafizur IPL release, B'desh wants its T20 WC matches shifted out of India

The Bangladesh Cricket Board (BCB) on Sunday decided against sending its national team to India for the T20 World Cup next month citing security concerns and government advice, following IPL franchise Kolkata Knight Riders's decision to release pacer Mustafizur Rahman on Board of Control for Cricket in India (BCCI)'s instruction.

time to read

1 min

January 05, 2026

Business Standard

'Deep concern': MEA monitoring situation

India on Sunday voiced “deep concern” over the US capturing Venezuela’s President Nicolas Maduro and his wife in a military operation, and said it is closely monitoring the unfolding situation in the oil-rich South American country.

time to read

1 mins

January 05, 2026

Business Standard

Chhattisgarh proposes ₹1.25 trn investment for development in former Naxal-affected areas

The Chhattisgarh government has proposed an investment of %1.25 trillion for development of former Naxal-affected regions, aimed at expanding basic infrastructure and administrative reach in remote districts, Chief Minister Vishnu Deo Sai said during a media interaction in New Delhi.

time to read

1 min

January 05, 2026

Business Standard

Airlines ask passengers not to use power banks during flight

Directions follow DGCA circular that warns of fire risks posed by lithium batteries

time to read

2 mins

January 05, 2026

Business Standard

Business Standard

Maduro taken out, allies left in charge

>Maduro faces narco-terrorism charges; being held at Brooklyn jail >Vice-President Delcy Rodriguez takes over as interim leader >Rubio talks of oil ‘quarantine’ until US demands accepted

time to read

3 mins

January 05, 2026

Business Standard

Telecom firms, Navi Mumbai airport operator lock horns over network access

A battle is brewing between the country’s leading telecom services providers (TSPs) and Adani group-run Navi Mumbai International Airport Ltd (NMIAL), with the telcos seeking the Department of Telecommunications' (DoT's) intervention over allegations that they have been denied “right of way” at the airport and are being forced to mandatorily use a network deployed by the airport operator at what they describe as “grossly exorbitant and untenable” charges aggregating to ₹44.16 crore a year to provide services to customers.

time to read

2 mins

January 05, 2026

Business Standard

Governance deficit

Indore’s water tragedy highlights systemic flaws

time to read

2 mins

January 05, 2026

Business Standard

Venezuela accounts for just 1% of our exports: Bajaj Auto

Bajaj Auto on Sunday said its exports to Venezuela accounts for less than 1 per cent of its total overseas shipments.

time to read

1 min

January 05, 2026

Listen

Translate

Share

-
+

Change font size