Part 1: The Super-Hero’s American Exceptionalism
by Mort ToddSuper-heroes are uniquely American in origin and reflective of the “Greatest Generation” that created them. Their progenitors can be traced to ancient myths though their direct foundation springs from American legends like Paul Bunyan and John Henry. Pulp literature fermented these heroes from the 1800s with Buffalo Bill, Nick Carter and on to Doc Savage. By the 1930s super-powered and costumed characters showed up in the newspaper comic strips including Popeye and the Phantom.

The characters we now recognize as super-heroes crystallized with the debut of Superman in 1938. Representative of the American experience, Superman was the ultimate immigrant. Not merely from another country, the Man of Steel came from a whole different planet! With his success, publishers released a myriad of titles featuring crime-fighting patriotic adventurers who all fought for “truth, justice and the American way.” That included those who were born on an all-female island (the star-spangled Wonder Woman), from Atlantis (the Sub-Mariner), robots (the Human Torch) or even dead people (the Spectre and Kid Eternity)! Gaining super powers even reformed criminals as in Plastic Man’s case.
America hadn’t yet entered World War II and super-heroes were already bashing Nazis. There were no isolationists in comics and when the Japanese attacked America the characters leapt into the fray, punishing Hitler, Tojo and Mussolini on seemingly endless covers. Individual comic titles sold in the millions and were read by all demographics. This era of comics was rightly dubbed the Golden Age.
Super-heroes were the epitome of American Exceptionalism; there wasn’t anything they couldn’t do. In contrast, European fiction was rife with super-criminals, from Fantômas and Dr. Mabuse, on to comics with killer protagonists, most notably Diabolik. Murderers like Kriminal, Satanik, Killing and Fatalik followed. This could be due to the fact that after centuries of strife, as well as being on the losing end of two world wars, their culture was not as optimistic as the United States.
Sales of super hero comics peaked after the war and many publishers transitioned to other genres like teen humor, funny animals and most ominously, crime and horror.
Psychologists and social critics looking to explain the rise of juvenile delinquency latched onto the lurid content of comic books. Fredric Wertham, a psychiatrist who had defended cannibals and child rapists in court, wrote the book Seduction of the Innocent, which posited that comics, especially of the crime and horror ilk, caused kids to go bad. He accused super-heroes of sado-masochism and defined the innocuous relationship of Batman and Robin as homosexual.

This lead to the infamous United States Senate Subcommittee on Juvenile Delinquency in 1954, ultimately chaired by the coonskin cap wearing Senator Estes Kefauver (D-TN). The bad publicity led to the formation of the Comics Code Authority by a cadre of comic publishers to self-censor their titles, similar to what the Hays Code did with films earlier in Hollywood.
The net result was that comic book content was lobotomized and the medium limited to children and adults with arrested development. Super-heroes had mostly left the scene except for the triumvirate of Superman, Batman and Wonder Woman… and their adventures were rendered mundane under the Code.
The genre was revitalized in the late 1950s when DC Comics revamped its older characters for a new generation. Neoteric versions of the Flash, Green Lantern and more were introduced and, noting their popularity, Marvel Comics launched a new batch of characters in the early 1960s. They had the significant characteristic of “heroes with problems…” Spider-Man couldn’t get a date, Iron Man had heart problems and the Fantastic Four were bickering with each other.
This appealed to eggheads and college students who preferred Marvel to the staid and conservative (read “square”) heroes at DC and Marvel started receiving positive press in magazines from Esquire to Rolling Stone. Marvel writer/editor Stan Lee got a lot of credit for the success, but it can’t be denied that the innovative and dynamic artwork of Steve Ditko and Jack Kirby is what primarily dragged readers into the “Marvel Universe.”
Comic sales were atrophying in the 1960s with the Batman comic almost cancelled until the premiere of his groundbreaking TV series. Batmania hit the world and comic sales rose to 1940s levels with every publisher doing super-heroes again though sales soon dropped off again.
The first generation of comic fans soon became professionals, aping Stan Lee’s work without his context and adding their own political and psychological attitudes. “Social relevance” was the rage, and while award winning and noted in The New York Times, these new themes did not translate to new sales. During this period, Green Arrow’s sidekick was revealed to be a heroin addict, vigilante heroes became killers and Iron Man was ultimately revealed to be an alcoholic.
Next: The Fall of the Super-Hero





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61 Comments
Well, with the news that Dunn is done, Glenn Beck is my new SUPERHERO
I look forward to your next part. Many of today's writers fail to understand heroism and exceptionalism and instead want to parade their neurotic self hatred for all to see.
Good take on the early history, looking forward to the rest.
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we'll take 'G.I. Combat', 'Sgt Rock' and of course, 'Sgt Fury and his Howling Commandos'…
Particularly the 'Haunted Tank-' commanded , named after and haunted by- Jeb Stuart. D.C.'s were the best, but Marvel didn't lag far behind. And the artwork was second to none.
By the the late 60's the WWII comic had sadly run it's course. Then the revisionism started…
Sigh.
Here's a slightly different take:
The superheroes were given flaws because making them flawless paragons of American virtue would render their adventures boring. We know they'd always win and that everything would be wrapped up with a neat little bow, so things had to be shaken up with Marvel. Making the heroes more complex is good; it allows for new ways to surprise the reader, as well as new things to tell stories about.
The problem was that the heroes were constructed entirely of flaws, and that they came to lack any sort of heroic qualities at all, the creators not wanting them to be "black-and-white" and therefore "reactionary."
This cannot be remedied by any sort of affirmative action, saying things like "Put more conservatives in the comics!" and other such victicrat nonsense. Start writing and drawing your own comics, like Fawstin is doing (when he'll be done is anyone's guess.)
With the exception of a few stories written by frustrated political hacks, I think Marvel still does a pretty good job of portraying "flawed but heroic" figures. When Joe Kelly gets a hold of Peter Parker, he turns into an amoral scumbag, but then it's back to Peter being the original hard luck kid who would do anything to do the right thing.
Super-heroes are uniquely American in origin
Obviously you've never heard of 'Jew Man' from the Old Testament.
(joke, only a joke, and nothing but a joke.))
Fall of the superhero?
I don't think that's a strong enough word to describe the descent of the modern 'hero'…
The newest American superhero is Sgt. Kim Munley, who stopped a Muslim terrorist from killing more Americans.
Unfortunately, I don't think today's political correctness would allow a comic book rendering of her heroism.
Salute!
Why don't kids want to read about super-failures?
Could it be the politicians are setting the bar to high?
The Super-Hero is completely dead. Again. I stopped reading this spring for the plain and simple reason that everything has become so politicized. I just want the Avengers to defeat Baron Zemo and the Masters of Evil please.
You're on to something, joking aside.
Judges, 3:31:
After Ehud came Shamgar son of Anath, who struck down six hundred Philistines with an oxgoad. He too saved Israel.
Heck, pick any sentence from Judges. Chances are, the righteous are putting boot to ass.
And… surprise!.. neurotic self hatred is not very fun to read.
Just watched a news clip of Obamo delivering the Ft Hood memorial speech, from his teleprompter.
What a an absolutely monumentally complete waste of oxygen that individual is. How disgusting that the Commander -in Chief was unable to speak to that tragedy without having to read the speech.
He will be well-qualified for a job as a news anchor at any of the Obamamedia news outlets when he finishes his term
One thing certain: even George Soros doesn't have enough money to ever spin Obama into a super-hero.
(Note to self: Ramp up the heroism and the super-ness in the works-in-progress.)
Speaking of Sgt. Rock, the character will be the star in an upcoming movie:
http://dc.localhires.com//events/MjcxMA==/Arlingt...
Good to see someone talking comics, with Bosch's temporary exile in effect. The hero books are in a pretty sad state right now acroos both big publishers. Infinite Crisis is an apt name for what has kept DC's premier heroes absent from the premiere books for too damned long. An Marvel is suffering from almost relevance, but always deferring to having the ultimate bad guys be corporate villains or tools thereof. I sure hope Captain America comes back willing to fight terrorists from ALL areas of the globe, even the (GASP) Middle East. I do think Matt Fraction is doing a hell of a job on Iron Man at the moment though.
My bad, that was the wrong link.
Here is the right link:
http://www.icv2.com/articles/news/16238.html
Well, although I'd be happy to see the Maoist gone, she isn't really gone, nor was she fired. According to Michelle Malkin's site, she was "interim" only and has moved aside for the permanent person, although she's still around as a consultant.
Sorry to burst your bubble.
Glenn Beck does so much for this country, he deserves a medal!
Relating back to the theme of this blog, from watching that clip of her Maoist speech on Beck, did anybody else get reminded of the Joker (TDK version) from the way she talked, smacking her lips and such? That was all I could think of as I watched her prattle on. Seems only fitting…
Well, I'm sure the fact that it's female heroism would help.
Poor writing made their adventures boring more than anything else. While there was indeed a Comics Authority Code, publishers continually tested its limits. When I was a kid my family had gone through a lot of setbacks seemingly, through my then 10 year-old eyes, a lot more than other families. I read superhero comic to momentarily escape my problems. While I liked Marvel's more-flawed-than-DC's-characters, I grew tired of continually reading about someone else's grief… I had enough of my own. DC may have been perceived as more "square" but I loved their stories because of the characters' virtue which helped me aspire to be better than my circumstance. Sure I knew the good guy was going to win and because of that I could "win" too.
I hope they don't "GI Joe" the character. I'd like to see a Sgt. Rock along the lines of Clint Eastwood in Heartbreak Ridge.
I hope the next part gets into how the comic industry, not just superheroes titles, or the print or webcomics, but the entire industry has gone off the liberal deep end. It's worse then Hollywood ever was! Hopefully with the dying of the direct market and the print floppy, the door will be open for more voices and bigger audience outreach will be possible. Comics didn't start off being just for kids and it's a shame that it's become just for liberal adults many with arrested development issues. Hopefully the industry will grow and be able to recapture the universal appeal and variety it once had with the internet.
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I prefer Superman: Red Son, or Watchmen.
Ugh, I hate those "relevant" comics. Yeah, they won "critical acclaim", but the general public knew better. Kind of like how terrible movies usually win the Oscar for Best Picture.
I know. I grew up reading GI Joe comics and couldn't bear watching them being turned into a PC "UN peacekeeping force." (Sidebar: The soldiers in the Transformers movie was closer in spirit to a live action Joe film.)
On a brighter note, comic artist Billy Tucci provides a great memorial to WWII vets as well as Sgt Rock:
http://www.newsarama.com/comics/091110-Billy-Tucc...
Fraction's Iron Man is almost worth the Dark Reign nonsense. The finale when Tony Stark turns the tables on the "victorious" Norman Osborn was priceless.
Also, like the "V" remake, the series reads as a not so subtle swipe at the current regime in the White House and Congress. And that's a good thing.
Or our current hero who won the peace prize for a real piece of work! So far he has failed to make good on most of his promises.
As a member of the US Armed Forces I can honestly say that all the real superheros truly are American. Then again from living close to Boulder CO and watching the hysterical left in action on their own turf, I can safely say that most of the real supervillians are American too.
Bravo, Mort! Looking forward to part two.
That is a brilliant idea!
Mr.Fawstin, would you like to take a crack at it?
Please?
I developed my reading skills on DC…
Marvel had some things I liked, but they were far too serialized and too "angsty" for my tastes…
Superman was my favorite, but the Batman was an extremely close second…one guy with almost all the power in the world, the second getting by on strength, training, and his wits…
I miss those guys…although the Batman movies have been helping…
"During this period, Green Arrow’s sidekick was revealed to be a heroin addict, vigilante heroes became killers and Iron Man was ultimately revealed to be an alcoholic."
Oh, but that makes them more REAL and RELATABLE or some shit.
No shout out to Captain Marvel?! Shazam! He outsold Superman at one time, you know, until he was basically sued into limbo. And saying iron Man had heart problems is putting it mildly–the poor guy had inoperable shrapnel in his chest! His real problem was, of course, his alcoholism. Otherwise, great piece! I hope you'll address the various copyright battles that plagued the early creators, more vicious than Dr. Doom and the Joker combined, that left many of the Golden Age creators shut out of profiting from their creations that we still enjoy today. I would argue that video games are a huge factor in the decline of comic books for young readers: kids play games in which they can experience the powers of heroes (flight, strength, leaping, bashing) we could only read about, and while there are still a good number of titles geared soley for the kiddie market (no angst, blood or big bosoms), I'd wager most kids would much rather play a video game than read a comic. Frank Miller's Give Me Liberty is a gem, and I love anything Alex Ross paints. A really great recent book that's been getting press is R. Crumb's black and white graphic interpretation of the Book of Genesis. It's really quite wonderful.
According to Michelle Malkin's site, she was "interim" only and has moved aside for the permanent person, although she's still around as a consultant.
Why do I get the feeling that that's just the cover story?
Right on, Mort!
Very unbiased, and yet spelling out summations that really need to be said.
It still turns my stomach that Captain America is now as gun-crazy as Marvel's executive board.
…like they completely misunderstand the concept of "art as a mirror".
Wrote for Sky Comics and Caliber for a while. Now I write my own stuff and just post it on the web in prose form. My editor at Caliber wouldn't let me have a major character in Level X: The Next Level of Dreaming shoot Jocelyn Elders in a dream. Now I've developed my own universe (actually 2 now) and am working on a web novel for Nanowrimo.
I AM IMPRESSED that someone not only knows who Nick Carter is, but that he PREDATES James Bond. Kudos!
Two things to note: While Stan Lee is often credited as the father of the modern superhero, we should not forget he was also the driving force behind "Millie the Model".
Second: Without the revamping of content due to the Comics Code, we might never have had MAD Magazine.
Wrote for Sky Comics and Caliber for a while. Now I write my own stuff and just post it on the web in prose form. My editor at Caliber wouldn't let me have a major character in Level X: The Next Level of Dreaming shoot Jocelyn Elders in a dream. Now I've developed my own universe (actually 2 now) and am working on a web novel for Nanowrimo.
Beginning of the end – the day when comics went from 10 cents each to 12 cents each in the early 60s. I stopped buying soon afterwards.
Marvel – I never 'got' their vibe of 'books on steroids'. DC for me.
Last few decades – big-ass panels, too much 'art', too much 'story', too much introspection and 'relevance'.
I still have a few of my books from the late 50s and early 60s suffering from excessive amounts of needless Scotch tape and shaky cover-to-staple ratios. Frigging beatniks are still in play!
I read Sgt. Rock at the barbershop, but never bought them much.
I read a speach by John Botlon in the latest edition of the Hillsdale College monthly newsletter in which he mentioned a question posed to Pres. Obama about American exceptionalism. His response spoke volumes about his worldview, shared sadly by way to many of our fellow Americans. His response was something along the lines that he views American exceptionalism the same way a Brit views British exceptionalism, or a Greek views Greek exceptionalism. In short, there is nothing special about America to our Pres. We have come a very long way in a very short time, and if we need an illustration that all progress is not good, this is it. Once we are through with this ridiculous experiment with the most liberal ever elected to be the US President, we will have to recapture that what makes us great, namely our confidence that we are a force for good in the world. We know that we are regardless of what our elites think.
it's going to be set in (gag) the future… meaning revisionist shite…
Actually, the gun toting Cap is Bucky Barnes:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bucky
The original Cap recently reappeared and does NOT carry a gun:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Captain_America
Well, the comic company, Blue Water Productions, has published biographies of conservative women like Condoleezza Rice:
http://www.bookerrising.net/2009/10/bookeristas-i...
And Sarah Palin:
http://www.icv2.com/articles/news/13563.html
So, a Munley bio comic isn't impossible.
Hahaha – I hesitate to add that the last comic book I bought as a child was an…..ARCHIE COMIC! I never used to buy Archies, but this issue was devoted entirely to the gang going to the NEW YORK WORLD'S FAIR in either 1964 or 1965. I had gone to the fair and was there on the final closing day, so this ARCHIE seemed like a good memento. Naturally, it is the one comic I bought from my pre-teenage years that is is excellent condition.
Nothing super-heroic occurs except that Archie manages to keep his hands off Veronica for yet one more issue.
Wanna trade?
So, Cobalt, forgive my crassness, is there any money in it for the independent web comic guy? How big is your audience? Just curious as comics' reach seems to have shrunk drastically aside from Marvel/DC.
[...] by Mort Todd Editor: This is the second part of a two-part series. You can read part one here. The 1970s showed the once-invincible comic book super-heroes to be losers, in attitude and sales. [...]
Alex Ross' work absolutely captures what I loved as a little kid reading comics.
The Human Torch is a robot? Since when?
What she said. Is his sister a robot too then?
The original Human Torch which was part of the Invaders was an android. Not Johnny Storm, but the one that fought along side Cap in World War II
American superheroes’ exceptionalism…
Mort Todd, a veteran in comics and animation, writes a two-part entry on Big Hollywood about the changing depiction of superheroes…
If you call the shooter at Fort Hood a, "Muslim terrorist", then that makes Timothy McVeigh a "Christian terrorist. American exceptionalism works only in comics; in reality it is the source of all of our problems. Without it, we'd not have the trouble we do today with Iraq, and Iran for example. American exceptionalism is greed and hubris wrapped in a flag.
First. I don't recall McVeigh saying he was killing people in the name of the Father, the Son, and the Holy Ghost. Hasan jumped up on the desk and shouted Allah Akbar! or some such nonsense.
Second, even if you were a case of Christian terrorism, that would still only be one case verses how many of Islamic?
Third, your second sentence is just plain wrong and is simply a case of "Let's blame America for all the world's problems." YOu are forgetting that we are the country that saved the world. We're the only country that when we conquer another country we give it back to the people. Your knowledge of American history is sorely lacking.
Your third sentence shows that you are simply parroting the modern talking points of the Hate America crowd and have no concept of the forces at work in the world today.
Your last sentence is simply ignorance and self loathing wrapped in pseudo-intellectualism.
I would suggest you actually educate yourself before you spout this kind of diarrhea of the mouth again.
If your knowledge of American history is greater than mine, you must have forgotten much of it. In Iran we put in place a man no different than the murderous Saddam, and look how well that's turned out. We and the Brits screwed the Iranians for their oil and thought that they would let us. That sounds like greed and hubris to me. Do you really know what Hasan said? Where you there? I bet you also believe in the "Magic Bullet" theory as well then. Hasan is just another "disgruntled employee"
It seems odd for Mr. Todd to use the term "egghead". It seems like a term to be used, not by an author, but an authoritarian.
The basic problem with your hypothesis, is that:
1. We and the Brits are getting the Iranian oil.
2. Things were going wonderful in Iran until we mentioned the pull-out.
3. As far as the present regime being any different than Sadaam. Funny, I haven't heard of it invading its neighbors, I haven't heard of any rape rooms, I haven't heard of political enemies being fed to the lions at his son's home. It's nice to make things up as you go along, but it helps if you are in touch with reality somewhere.
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