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====''JSA'' (1999β2006)<!--'JSA (comic book)' redirects here-->==== {{Infobox comic book title | italic title = no | title = JSA | image = | imagesize = frameless{{!}}upright=0.90 | caption = Cover to ''JSA'' #1 (August 1999). Art by [[Alan Davis]] and [[Mark Farmer]]. | schedule = | format = | publisher = [[DC Comics]] | date = August 1999 β September 2006 | issues = 87 | main_char_team = | writers = [[James Robinson (writer)|James Robinson]], [[David S. Goyer]], [[Geoff Johns]], [[Paul Levitz]] | artists = Various | pencillers = | inkers = | colorists = | creative_team_month = | creative_team_year = | creators = }} The JSA remained inactive for some time after the events of "[[Zero Hour: Crisis in Time|Zero Hour]]", but the surviving members of the Flash, [[Wildcat (Ted Grant)|Wildcat]], and Alan Scott (now going by the name Sentinel) have remained active throughout the DC Universe, having been placed as reserve JLI members, as evidenced in ''Justice League Europe'' #50. The Justice Society was revived as a monthly series called '''''JSA'''''<!--boldface per WP:R#PLA--> in 1999 which mixed the few remaining original members with younger counterparts. This incarnation of the team focused on the theme of generational legacy and of carrying on the heroic example established by their predecessors. The series was launched by [[James Robinson (writer)|James Robinson]]<ref>Manning "1990s" in Dolan, p. 287: "With a successful ''Starman'' revamp and acclaimed Elseworlds limited series ''The Golden Age'' already under his belt, Robinson had set the stage for his newest opus β the return of the Justice Society of America."</ref> and [[David S. Goyer]]. Goyer later co-wrote the series with [[Geoff Johns]],<ref>Manning "1990s" in Dolan, p. 288: "James Robinson left the title in the capable hands of [David] Goyer's new writing partner, Geoff Johns."</ref> who continued to write the series solo after Goyer's departure. The series featured the art of [[Stephen Sadowski]], [[Leonard Kirk]], and [[Don Kramer]], among others. It featured a story by [[Pulitzer Prize for Fiction|Pulitzer Prize]] winner [[Michael Chabon]]. During the events of ''[[Infinite Crisis]]'', some of the surviving Golden Age characters, such as Wildcat and the Flash, are transported to the new "Earth-Two," as created by [[Alexander Luthor Jr.]], and seem to recall the existence of the original one, albeit vaguely.<ref>{{cite comic|writer= [[Geoff Johns|Johns, Geoff]]|penciller= [[Phil Jimenez|Jimenez, Phil]]; Ordway, Jerry; [[Ivan Reis|Reis, Ivan]]|inker= [[Andy Lanning|Lanning, Andy]]; Ordway, Jerry; [[Art Thibert|Thibert, Art]]|story= Faith|title= Infinite Crisis|issue= 5|date= April 2006}}</ref>
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