The Misunderstanding Of Superman

Winged Knight

Still just a crazy man with a wolf on his head
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I recently found this intriguing article exploring the themes of Superman and how often DC and their writers have felt they've needed to "reinvent" the character over and over again. It's a neat analysis on just how often DC has struggled with the character who should be the flagship of their company, along with some suggestions on how they might write Superman such that he is both dynamic and consistent to the themes that went into his creation.

I thought it might make for some good discussion on one of fiction's most recognizable characters, so I decided to share it with you all.


The Trouble With Superman
For decades the Man of Steel has failed to find his groove, thanks to a continual misunderstanding of his strengths.
Asher Elbein Feb 7, 2016 Culture

Superman should be invincible. Since his car-smashing debut in 1938, he's starred in at least one regular monthly comic, three blockbuster films, and four television shows. His crest is recognized across the globe, his supporting cast is legendary, and anybody even vaguely familiar with comics can recount the broad strokes of his origin. (The writer Grant Morrison accomplished it in eight words: "Doomed Planet. Desperate Scientists. Last Hope. Kindly Couple.") He's the first of the superheroes, a genre that's grown into a modern mass-media juggernaut.

And yet, for a character who gains his power from the light of the sun, Superman is curiously eclipsed by other heroes. According to numbers provided by Diamond Distributors, the long-running Superman comic sold only 55,000 copies a month in 2015, down from around 70,000 in 2010—a mediocre showing even for the famously anemic comic-book market. That's significantly less than his colleague Batman, who last year moved issues at a comparatively brisk 150,000 a month. Mass media hasn't been much kinder: The longest-running Superman television show, 2001's Smallville, kept him out of his iconic suit for a decade. Superman Returns recouped its budget at the box office, but proved mostly forgettable. 2013's Man of Steel drew sharp criticism from critics and audiences alike for its bleak tone and rampaging finale. Trailers for the sequel, Batman v Superman: Dawn of Justice, have shifted the focus (and top billing) to the Dark Knight. Worst of all, conventional wisdom puts the blame on Superman himself. He's boring, people say; he's unrelatable, nothing like the Marvel characters dominating the sales charts and the box office. More than anything, he seems embarrassing. Look at him. Truth? Justice? He wears his underwear on the outside.

Behold! I give you the problem of Superman. It's a problem that has less to do with the character himself and more to with DC Comics, which found itself stuck with a flagship character it thought needed fixing. In trying, it broke him nearly beyond repair.

* * *​

The storytelling engine Joe Shuster and Jerry Siegel devised for Superman when they created him should be, like their hero, bulletproof. Clark Kent is a mild-mannered reporter hiding his secret identity from the world, including his sharp, competent coworker, who happens to be the woman of his dreams. He's stuck in a love triangle with himself, between the man he is, and the man he wishes he could be. He's an immigrant driven not by tragedy but by an unshakable sense of right and wrong and a desire to fix the world for the less fortunate—a battle that can never end. As the famed comics creator Alan Moore wrote:

Almost certainly by instinct rather than by psycho-social analysis, two Cleveland teenagers had crafted a near-perfect and iconic fantasy which spoke to something deeply rooted in the psyche of working America [in the early 1930s] … At his inception, Superman seems very much a representative of the downtrodden working classes his creators hailed from, and a wonderful embodiment of all the dreams and aspirations of the powerless.

This is who the character is at his best: not a walking set of superpowers, but a man fighting for truth and justice to the best of his considerable ability.
Superman was so popular in the 1940s that his comic was adapted into a smash-hit radio show, which itself proved popular enough that it helped bring down parts of the Ku Klux Klan. Before long, he was the biggest comic-book character in the world. But Siegel and Shuster, exploited and cast aside by the company whose fortunes they had made, saw barely a dime of the profits. Away from his creators and under DC's management, Superman changed from a rabble-rousing populist into a bland icon of the establishment, cycling through the same sets of adventures every few years: a hero with nothing better to do than devise elaborate pranks to play on Lois Lane. Despite the gloriously silly super-science of Silver Age Superman, with its time-travel, transformation rays, and bottled cities, the engine rusted under the hood.

In 1962, the competition arrived. In August of that year, the newly christened Marvel Comics, already humming with hits like The Fantastic Four, debuted Amazing Fantasy #15, the first appearance of Spider-Man. Steve Ditko and Stan Lee, his creators, had reinvented the Superman engine, taking the archetype of the superheroic outsider and making him an underdog through a series of clever tweaks. Where Clark Kent's romantic life was a game, Peter Parker's was a soap opera; where Clark's boss was gruff, Peter's was a jerk; where Kent was ignored in civilian guise, Parker was actively picked on. Marvel had, in effect, figured out how to supplant Superman. In doing so, they began selling not just to children but also to college students, and eventually to adults. It was a challenge that DC, formerly the dominant comics publisher, had to answer.

DC responded to Marvel in halting steps during the 1970s by refashioning many of its characters to be a little more quarrelsome and a little less aspirational. Some, like Batman, easily made the switch. Others, like Flash or Wonder Woman, were reinvented to varying degrees of success. But with Superman the company routinely stumbled, worried about messing up its star hero.

In 1971 DC hired Jack Kirby, the architect of Marvel Comics, but instead of assigning him the main Superman book, it put him on a spin-off, Jimmy Olsen. Even as Kirby was cranking out concepts that would become pivotal to the DC Universe, the company had other artists redrawing his Superman in the house style. It assigned the Batman writer Denny O'Neil to tell more modern Superman stories, but rolled back his changes as well. As the comics landscape shifted, Superman remained either purely superheroic or continued to lean on the endless, increasingly tired triangle of Lois, Clark, and Superman. DC had typecast its flagship character as a company man, and no amount of multicolored kryptonite or super-pets could change that.

The character was still popular enough in the wider cultural sphere: The 1978 film Superman, starring Christopher Reeve and Margot Kidder, was a hit. But eventually DC faced facts: The comic needed fixing. In 1985, DC hired John Byrne, a writer from Marvel, as part of a massive retooling effort. The resulting series, Superman: Man of Steel, summoned a bit of the competition's swagger, quickly reinventing and streamlining portions of Superman's universe while keeping its fundamental cheeriness. The evil scientist Lex Luthor became a corporate raider. Bits of continuity ephemera, like Clark Kent's early career as Superboy, were dropped.

For a while, things ran smoothly, but Superman couldn't quite seem to shake his stodgy reputation. Despite Byrne's reboot, the comics' sales again flagged, rising only in the 1990s with a series of increasingly desperate stunts. DC married Clark Kent and Lois Lane. It killed Superman and brought him back. It split him into two different bodies, one red, one blue. Each event brought diminishing returns. Finally, DC decided it was time to try and give Superman a fresh start for the new millennium.

To date, it has not stopped trying.

* * *​

The problem DC faced was this: You can't fix something if you're not sure where it's broken. One of the issues halting a successful reinvention of Superman is a shift in the nature of the comics market. Since the 1980s, the dominant trend in the industry has been specialty comics shops replacing newsstands as primary distributors. Given this change, companies like Marvel and DC have focused their marketing toward an ever-dwindling market of adult fans, darkening their characters in an attempt to keep the interest of a readership desperate for mainstream respectability. In effect, adults were colonizing young-adult narratives and warping them in the process—an early example of what later occurred with Michael Bay's legendarily crass Transformers films.

In one of the uglier paradoxes of the superhero-comics industry, characters who were devised to entertain children soon became completely unsuitable for them. Leaning into this trend in an effort to entice new adult readers, DC largely abandoned its strengths as a publisher of optimistic, bizarre superheroics and fumbled for an edgier identity. Aspirational characters were hit hard by this change—Wonder Woman in particular has suffered nearly as many reboots as Superman, the latest of which has cast her as the bloodthirstiest of her Justice League coworkers, her trademark lasso of truth traded for a sword.

But the trend proved particularly damaging to the Man of Steel. The 1986 Dark Knight Returns, one of the landmark wave of "mature" superhero comics, cast him as a Reaganite stooge and ended with Batman knocking him out. The choice directly shadowed Superman's history up until the present. The dour trailers for Batman v Superman draw directly from the imagery of The Dark Knight Returns, with several shots paralleling panels from the earlier comic. The effect is to shout for everybody watching: This is a serious film. Pointedly, in these trailers Superman never once smiles.

In fact, it's hard to escape the impression that Superman's own company finds him a bit embarrassing. As the comics writer Chris Sims points out in his review of the anniversary compilation Superman: A Celebration of 75 Years, DC's company line on Superman seems to be that he's "a depressed sad sack who never wins." The company ditched his iconic red trunks in 2011 and placed him instead in the blue, armor-like suit he currently wears on film. In response to fan complaints that Superman was "too powerful" and thus boring, it constantly adjusted his level of strength. Broader attempts to reconcile the character with its new approach have been filled with false starts and cold feet: Many of the innovative Superman runs of the past decade, including Joe Casey's short-lived attempt to position the character as a pacifist, were either quickly rolled back or derailed by editorial interference. Promising new approaches, including a radical late '90s pitch by the modern comics superstars Grant Morrison, Mark Millar, and Mark Waid, likewise went unexplored.

Instead, the majority of Superman stories published in recent years have either been chair-rearranging reboots or have focused on the question of his relevance. The relaunches have been particularly difficult to ignore. Since 2001 alone, DC has commissioned five different reboots of Superman's origins in the comics: the excellent Superman: Birthright and All-Star Superman, the adequate Superman: Secret Origins, the execrable Superman: Earth One, and the ongoing (and rather good) Superman: American Alien. Mass media has gotten in on the act as well, with the show Smallville and the blockbuster Man of Steel likewise being obsessed with reinventing the character for modern America.

Questioning Superman's place in culture isn't an inherently bad idea, and it's no wonder that creators want to dig into his truth-and-justice symbolism in a world that seems to hold both in short supply. However, that impulse has led into a rabbit hole of navel-gazing narratives that endlessly attempt to justify the character's existence. In its constant attempts to "fix" Superman over the last 20 years, DC has largely forgotten to tell stories with him.

The irony of all this is that, for all the rust and ineffectual tinkering, the storytelling engine built by Siegel and Shuster still runs. Superman remains as inspirational a character as he did during the Great Depression: Considering the current state of rampant income inequality, brutal law enforcement and corrupt politics, the immigrant superhero from the planet Krypton may be more relevant now than he has been in years. What the comic requires now is not another reboot, but a forceful, committed attempt to refine the engine that currently exists—to stop trying to make Superman something he's not, and to focus instead on what he is. The current writer on Action Comics, Greg Pak, has leaned into this idea with stories of a more socially aware Superman. It's a good start. But it remains to be seen whether or not DC will allow it to stick.

* * *​

Who, then, is the modern Superman? Per Grant Morrison's critically acclaimed All-Star Superman (2005), a love-letter to the Silver Age of Superman comics, Clark Kent is a man whose god-like power is his incredible empathy, juxtaposed against strange and dastardly villains—tyrant suns, Bizarro clones, the megalomaniacal Lex Luthor. He's a journalist who fights corruption and oppression wherever he finds it, both in and out of costume, as in Mark Waid's Superman: Birthright (2004), which retells the character's origin with an emphasis on his relationships with the Daily Planet and the astute Lois Lane.

Perhaps most importantly, he's a character who deeply feels his responsibilities, but still manages to be cheerful, funny, and down to earth—the defining characteristics of Kurt Busiek's alternate-universe tale Superman: Secret Identity (2005). Secret Identity in particular is worth noting for another reason: it's the only Superman story to graft the refinements of Stan Lee's underdog Spider-Man back onto Superman. As a result, it's the best Superman story of the decade and perhaps one of the best of all time.

Taken together, these stories point to a way forward for Superman that could easily recapture people's imagination while mirroring Siegel and Shuster's original vision: stories of a man with the powers of a god, who chooses to live as a normal person and fight for normal people. Stories that are part newsroom drama and part mind-bending superheroics, mixing in corrupt corporations and alien invaders from other dimensions. Stories that can veer into snappy romantic comedy or genuine emotion with the removal of a pair of glasses. Stories that stop trying to reboot Superman and instead refine and build on what's already there.

In other words, if you believe in him, the man can fly.


Article here.
 
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My fave Superman 'era' was probably the John Byrne Man of Steel mini and the series that followed. Good series, and even addressed some of those questions like 'Why doesn't Lex figure out Supes is Clark Kent?' He did, he just doesn't believe it. Heh.
 
I never quite understood the "Superman is too powerful" complaint when characters like Doctor Fate, Spectre and even Zatanna on occasion can utterly eclipse him in power.
 
I never quite understood the "Superman is too powerful" complaint when characters like Doctor Fate, Spectre and even Zatanna on occasion can utterly eclipse him in power.

Because Superman is iconic and a part of pop culture.

Those three, as well as many other stronger entities in DC, aren't well known beyond the scope of the comics.
 
Because its easier to grasp how powerful Superman is than any of the others.

Heck, even aside from that. He has multiple foes just as brute strong as him, ones that everyone knows about. Zod, Bizarro, Doomsday, Darkseid.


Memetically, he's one punch man. In reality, that was almost never the case whether talking TV, movie, or comics and this trying to struggle against it in the stories is a poor game.
 
The problem is that he lives in the same universe as Batman and because of that has to be equally effective as Batman, to the point where they can be on the same team or oppose each other and it not be laughed off.

The problem isn't that Superman doesn't have appropriate level opposition for Superman, its that if Superman exists why do we need Batman?

So you end up comparing Superman to the villains of other heroes and he seems overwhelmingly powerful. And he is. And should be. But he can't be, because they need the Joker to be a credible threat to Superman because otherwise why would Batman matter in their team up story?

And you can't just answer "Batman is smart", because if you do all you do is reduce Superman to a giant blue punchman who Batman points at punchtargets. That ruins Superman as surely as anything else. Superman is supposed to be smart and innovative and resourceful as well; otherwise he couldn't take on Zod or Luthor or Brainiac.

The problem of Superman is Batman.
 
Of course to take the point further, the problem with Superman isn't Batman. Yes Batman is smart and since that's the only thing he's got that isn't supplanted by Superman's mythos and powers, you have to make Superman dumber to justify Batman's existence.

But that's not because Batman exists. It's because Batman and Superman comics share continuity that's the problem. If both of these characters had their own separate continuity, then the problem of Batman needing justification in a world where Superman exists is no longer a problem.

So ultimately, the problem of Superman is DC.
 
Good article, for my 2 cents I'd say that Superman's big problem is that he lacks meaningful flaws. I personally don't follow the character closely though.

Loved his DCAU stuff, though less than the Barman DCAU stuff. :V
 
Eh, I would argue it shouldn't be too big a deal to make Bruce and Clark both smart in different ways.

Yes. Batman can figure out where opponents are. He can figure out what they're doing. He figures out where to hit them where it hurts, and how to sneak to that place. Superman can figure out how to use his powers in creative ways, he can understand alien technology, etc.. And Batman can do stuff *while* Superman is holding off the horde of Robots, or Superman can use his x-ray and heat vision to do micro surgery while Batman is disguised as him to keep the baddie's super-heavy-hitter from noticing Superman's busy, or so on.


Also, very importantly, you shouldn't be nerfing Superman in his book for, "what about when he crosses over with Batman?". Trying to revolve Superman around Batman is, IMO, part of the problem. Make him gritty like Batman, don't have him be too good at smart stuff or he'll step on Batman's toes... all are ways to hamstring yourself.

In the 60s, Superman was massively popular, at his strongest... and had a co-book with Batman, World's Finest, in addition to JLA. They managed just fine then.
 
The problem is that he lives in the same universe as Batman and because of that has to be equally effective as Batman, to the point where they can be on the same team or oppose each other and it not be laughed off.

The problem isn't that Superman doesn't have appropriate level opposition for Superman, its that if Superman exists why do we need Batman?

So you end up comparing Superman to the villains of other heroes and he seems overwhelmingly powerful. And he is. And should be. But he can't be, because they need the Joker to be a credible threat to Superman because otherwise why would Batman matter in their team up story?

And you can't just answer "Batman is smart", because if you do all you do is reduce Superman to a giant blue punchman who Batman points at punchtargets. That ruins Superman as surely as anything else. Superman is supposed to be smart and innovative and resourceful as well; otherwise he couldn't take on Zod or Luthor or Brainiac.

The problem of Superman is Batman.

Allow me to reference the DCAU. In it, Superman was far less powerful than comics continuity. However, he didn't lose anything from his lower powerscale because compared to the world around him, he was still SUPERMAN. He could still hit superspeeds, he could still use superstrength, he could still fly.


However, his reduced powerlevels meant that Batman was still relevant. Superman might have been VERY smart, but he wasn't batman smart. He was educated, and clever, but not a genius.

Hence why I'm in favor of toning back Supermans strength somewhat while still keeping it superhuman. That way he'll still be the Man of Steel, but he won't make other characters irrelevant.




Anyways, the real issue is that people tend to try and make him something he's not. Superman is not gritty. Superman is not dark. But neither is he goofy and campy.

Fundamentally, Superman represents optimism. He's the superhero you go to not for grim stories about madmen and vile arch-criminals. Instead, he's meant to be inspiring, a good guy through and through, who fights cynics like Luthor or those who would crush the weak under their heels like Darkseid.

Thing is, people(cough, *DC MOVIES* uncough) seem to think Optimism means 'goofy MCU' and seem to think serious means 'Christopher Nolans Batman'. Once again drawing upon the DCAU, specifically Superman' own show, we have a example of a piece of superman media in which the Man of Steel is mostly serious. Sure the show had it's occasional humor every now and again, but it managed to keep things surprisingly down to earth, and even during it's more serious arcs, you could still root for the good guy.

Unlike BvS where litterally everyone is basically a jerkbot.
 
Allow me to reference the DCAU. In it, Superman was far less powerful than comics continuity. However, he didn't lose anything from his lower powerscale because compared to the world around him, he was still SUPERMAN. He could still hit superspeeds, he could still use superstrength, he could still fly.


However, his reduced powerlevels meant that Batman was still relevant. Superman might have been VERY smart, but he wasn't batman smart. He was educated, and clever, but not a genius.

Hence why I'm in favor of toning back Supermans strength somewhat while still keeping it superhuman. That way he'll still be the Man of Steel, but he won't make other characters irrelevant.

I do think the toning-down-of-power makes sense (though DC seems to like to ratchet it up on a regular basis), but isn't strictly required. Morrison and Waid and Kelly's JLA runs had everyone at strong levels and the lower-power characters- and not just Batman who was at the height of GodBat- relevant.

Heck, I'm hard pressed to think of stories with higher end Superman versions where other characters didn't feel relevant... there's a few, but at the end of the day, he's in one place at a time and while he's smart and fast he works better with others.
 
Allow me to reference the DCAU. In it, Superman was far less powerful than comics continuity. However, he didn't lose anything from his lower powerscale because compared to the world around him, he was still SUPERMAN. He could still hit superspeeds, he could still use superstrength, he could still fly.


However, his reduced powerlevels meant that Batman was still relevant. Superman might have been VERY smart, but he wasn't batman smart. He was educated, and clever, but not a genius.

Hence why I'm in favor of toning back Supermans strength somewhat while still keeping it superhuman. That way he'll still be the Man of Steel, but he won't make other characters irrelevant.




Anyways, the real issue is that people tend to try and make him something he's not. Superman is not gritty. Superman is not dark. But neither is he goofy and campy.

Fundamentally, Superman represents optimism. He's the superhero you go to not for grim stories about madmen and vile arch-criminals. Instead, he's meant to be inspiring, a good guy through and through, who fights cynics like Luthor or those who would crush the weak under their heels like Darkseid.

Thing is, people(cough, *DC MOVIES* uncough) seem to think Optimism means 'goofy MCU' and seem to think serious means 'Christopher Nolans Batman'. Once again drawing upon the DCAU, specifically Superman' own show, we have a example of a piece of superman media in which the Man of Steel is mostly serious. Sure the show had it's occasional humor every now and again, but it managed to keep things surprisingly down to earth, and even during it's more serious arcs, you could still root for the good guy.

Unlike BvS where litterally everyone is basically a jerkbot.
Not particularly. Of whatever criticisms can be laid at the DCCU has, there are plenty of characters that don't seem all that poised to be jerks; Superman himself, for instance, is basically one of the best Supermen I've seen. (No seriously, I honestly really wish Henry Cavill had a better movie to work with.)
 
The article could have also mentioned the currently running Supergirl TV show, in which Superman is referred to (usually indirectly) and very briefly appears without really being seen clearly. They want him to exist but don't seem to actually want him on the show. Which is fine, cos it's not his show, but it comes across as weird since they have to have him exist as backstory or plot device without being a 'real character'.
 
Superman doesn't represent optimism. For the period from 1938 to 1985, almost 50 years, it was very clear, at first from Siegel and Shuster's development of Superman, and then people adhering to the fundamental basis of the character established by them, that Superman is a particular kind of power fantasy. The fantasy that the schlubby everyman, the guy who loses his glasses or gets bullied by coworkers, is actually incredibly potent and incredibly moral. That is, Clark Kent is us, but by transition, we are also Superman.

Superman #156 (Oct. 1962) makes this overt, in the three stories making up "The Last Days of Superman!", where a dying Superman carves on the moon with heat vision the message: "Do good to others and every man can be a Superman." This story was, as should be fairly obvious, one of the major inspirations for All-Star Superman. The creation of Supergirl, Superboy, and eventually Power Girl, also made this aspect of the character more universal in nature, or would have been, ideally.

Unfortunately, what we might call "Alan Moore's bad mood", or the toxic atmosphere of the 1980s, brought about an effort to get rid of silliness. And this concept is undeniably silly. A superhero that's powered by, what, their moral character? And they don't end up losing their powers each issue, like some particularly unlucky Dungeons and Dragons paladin?

So efforts were made to make Superman more serious. These have largely served to make him something of an also-ran, popular on the residual basis of being named Superman and on the collector's urge, but often essentially lacking in the elements that make him a compelling character.

Compounding on this, making the world around Superman more serious weakens and cheapens his character. When the world of Detective Comics Comics, Incorporated was unabashedly silly, and the evils of the world explored through metaphor, you could assume that Superman really had solved world hunger and privation and people like the Prankster were the greatest threat to civilization that existed. When it became serious, then Superman was ineffectual because he can't stop the latest ripped-from-the-headlines comic story, and his justification for not doing so generally made him look even more ineffectual, or else damaged any sense of him as a moral being, because he's relativistic enough in his morals that stopping genocides is verboten but punching Lex Luthor's latest battlesuit is necessary.

That is, in the stories that emerged in the Silver Age about Superman basically being God, the so-called "Superdickery" stuff, the point of the covers was that we knew Superman was a loving God-metaphor, and so the question is what inane set of coincidences would make him force Aquaman and Jimmy Olsen to seemingly fight to the death? In the Modern Age, or whatever, Superman is still a God-metaphor, but now he's an impotent or indifferent entity, not a benevolent one. Various efforts to adjust to this, like the morally disgusting "What's So Funny About Truth, Justice, and the American Way?" (Action Comics #775) have generally cast him in the role of an malefic God, who pretends to be benevolent but occasionally drops the mask to show that actually, he's constantly thinking about permanently crippling or at least horribly pulverizing you.

Man of Steel thus gets Superman right, by embracing limited potence but retaining benevolence, and then putting the real-world concerns behind fantasy metaphors. As a consequence, we have a Superman who is relentlessly ethical and thinks globally, who we are shown being taught ethics over and over again. And, of course, people hated it and misunderstood it relentlessly.
 
Various efforts to adjust to this, like the morally disgusting "What's So Funny About Truth, Justice, and the American Way?"

Care to elaborate a bit? I mean, I and my number of other people think that story is bullshit because of the strawmanning of other works evident in it. But to outright call it morally disgusting is interesting.
 
Care to elaborate a bit? I mean, I and my number of other people think that story is bullshit because of the strawmanning of other works evident in it. But to outright call it morally disgusting is interesting.

Well, let's set aside the part of the story where it's Superman fighting the Authority and lobotomizing Jack Hawksmoor.

The core of the story is that when confronted by these violent and murderous "superheroes," the solution for our hero is to act violent and murderous himself, outdoing all the other "superheroes", and then at the very end reveal it was all a trick, ha-ha (except for the part where he really did just give someone brain damage to cut off their superpowers), but he could do it all for real, if he wanted. He's watching you. Stay in line, or this time he might really kill you, instead of just faking it!

It's like, I dunno, reading an X-Men comic where Bolivar Trask is meant to be the hero. And that's before we point out that this is fucking Superman we are talking about here, can you really believe this shit? I mean, I can. Because it's just like how Robert Heinlein was so enraged by hearing someone disparage a veteran that he sat down and churned out StarShip Troopers, a pretty dang fascist novel, and didn't actually realize this fact until after it was published. Joe Kelly and Doug Mahnke were pretty offended by the Authority, and wrote a pretty bad comic in response.

The funny part of all this is how people treat it as this really great comic and what "Superman should be," showing that they didn't even understand what Kelly and Mahnke were trying to accomplish.

----------

So, to use this opportunity to jump off onto another rant, an example of a superhero that doesn't even have this core character to draw on is Wonder Woman. Where the Siegel and Shuster vision (which itself is quite a bit broader than what I've talked about so far) was preserved by Otto Binder and Mort Weisinger long enough to become the kind of absolute Superman that the character continually reverts to, Wonder Woman's basic elements were set down by William Moulton Marston and then immediately after his death discarded by Robert Kanigher and the character has, ever since, basically languished and kept alive primarily through the need to hold onto the IP.

There are some really obvious reasons why this had to happen, in that the basically textual lesbianism and femdom and active sexuality of the character was not going to survive the Comics Code Authority. There are some really obvious reasons why this was going to happen, in that the main appearances of Wonder Woman outside of Marston-written comics in the 1940s had her as a secretary, and Kanigher was himself even more sexist than most comics writers.

The consequence is that, where Superman generally maintains a supporting cast of Lois, Perry, and Jimmy (with of course some additional standbys like Lana, Pete Ross, Cat Grant, Supergirl), Wonder Woman has had no consistent supporting cast, with Steve Trevor lasting the longest, and still migrating from love interest to father figure to general friend and disappearing for long stretches. Etta Candy, Holliday College itself and all its elements Wonder Woman was involved in, Baroness Dr. Paula von Gunther, that is to say, all of the elements from the Marston era of comics, disappeared under Kanigher and have reappeared generally only briefly and in contexts outside of being supporting cast to Wonder Woman.

Another consequence is that Wonder Woman has no real center as a character. There's this kind of absurd literalism where people say that because she has magic bondage gear that forces submission and thus truth-telling, she obviously represents truth, usually capitalized "Truth". Then, of course, she goes and represents truth by replicating a scene from Greek mythology or fighting Lex Luthor, only for cosmetics. There's also this thing where she became a feminist icon in the 1960s and 70s (after herself being inspired by feminist icons) and so there's these half-baked and often offensive attempts to make her have feminist adventures. I remember one particular attempt to justify modern Wonder Woman saying "Dr. Psycho can be the living incarnation of rape" or words to that effect, years back. I will admit to the possibility of someone wanting to read I Spit On Your Grave: Themyscira Edition without being a complete creep. I do not, myself, want to read any such thing or consider it feminist except in the crudest possible way.

For a more lighthearted failure, witness the attempt in the 1970s to make her Emma Peel from The Avengers, which provoked a storm of outcry that frankly baffled DC at the time. Then, too, all the attempts to pair her up with Batman or Superman, on the logic that Barbie has to be married to Ken. (At least that's marginally better than Terry Long and Donna Troy.) Then, too, all the fan attempts that conclude the problem is the costume, that she needs to ditch the femdom stuff and/or the sexuality.

Even when you've had at least a decent effort at making the character have some kind of workable status quo to play off of, the problem is that it doesn't last. The next person to come along has their own designs, and nothing that actually gives them restraint beyond editorial. So in order to have a workable Wonder Woman that isn't totally dependent on who's writing, who's on art, that has a certain minimum level of quality, you need either some kind of top-down editorial dictate (which almost certainly will be counterproductive, given that DC feels the need to remind people that she is officially/canonically a virgin) or having some maniac write all the Wonder Woman comics, with near-total creative control, for about a decade or so.

Or having a successful movie. We can only hope.
 
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