
I should begin by noting that cover compositions like these were something of an obsession for me in 1977—the year I turned five. My fascination with images of gigantic, crackling, energy beings and cowering heroes likely originated with the similarly constructed cover for Fantastic Four #184 (July 1977), on which the Eliminator towers menacingly over the helpless FF. I had acquired this mysterious and thrilling item a few months earlier and had been reading and rereading it with quiet intensity ever since—with a little help from my mom and dad!
Together, these three covers form a sort of triptych of my early unconscious: Fantastic Four #184 is the central panel, flanked by Defenders #53 on the left and Avengers #176 on the right. What was it about this design in particular that made my hand reach out so instinctively and so decisively, again and again?

Once I discovered the Avengers, I was surprised to learn that the Defenders (in both concept and name) was “secondary,” a “sister” book to the former. As I later understood more explicitly, it was the “non-team” to the fully sanctioned, “official,” archetypal Marvel team. (De Beauvoir’s critique of woman as “other” in The Second Sex is perhaps not a frivolous touchstone for the distinctions I was beginning to make). That this difference was reflected through the implied gendering of the teams’ names—the more aggressively reactive, stereotypically masculine Avengers to the more passive, stereotypically feminine Defenders—was not lost on me. (This relation of original and repetition, Adam and Eve, was perhaps suggested as well by the large difference in the two series’ numeration—only at #53, The Defenders had obviously come along quite a bit later.)
What I saw in these two covers, then—what steered my hand to pluck them from the random assortment of other comics on the newsstand—were potent archetypes of male and female embodiment: what seemed, at the time, to be boiled down essences of gender difference—indeed, essences that still boiled in a cosmic soup of Kirby dots. These images became emblematic of these two Marvel series; these series, in turn, became the bearers of a kind of inarticulate affect—a feeling about gender difference—that stayed with me throughout childhood and even beyond. It was here, on the covers of Avengers #176 and Defenders #53 that I mapped most powerfully my early (and, at first, woefully simple) ideas about what it meant to be a boy or a girl. Korvac was my Adam, the Red Guardian my Eve. With the evocative precision of Tarot cards, these covers etched themselves deep into memory as icons of Emperor and Empress.
That the framing of gender in the titles and images of these two covers furnished a rather sexist model of difference (in that it saw the female half as secondary and passive) goes without saying. I’ll come back to this point in due course. There are complications coming that happily change the dynamics of this dubiously “symmetrical” or “complementary” dichotomy quite drastically. I have already written at length about Avengers #176 in a different but (as we shall see) not unrelated context, so I will focus instead on how the initially normative messages about gender difference were scrambled over the course of reading Defenders #53. What did it feel like to “read” this comic at the age of five? Why did it stick with me? And how do the strange power of this comic’s main and back-up stories help to subvert the normative messages about gender that I derived from the juxtaposition of the two titles and covers?
Atlantis: A Diagram of My Unconscious
At the same time that the cover of Defenders #53 was impressing some rather powerful images on my mind, the content of its main story—Part 1 of “The Power Principle,” entitled, “The Prince and the Presence”—was blowing it to smithereens. I mean…Jesus. What on earth was going on in Defenders #53?
I have already described the fantastic attraction that incomprehensible narratives held (and still hold) for me in my discussion of Avengers #176. But the twists and turns of that later comic cannot hold a candle to the bizarre, disjointed content of David Anthony Craft, Keith Giffen, Mike Golden, and Terry Austin’s wild, surrealist canoodling. I know that I can’t help but look at it through the veil of the very affect I am trying to describe here, but even so, this book still strikes me as a thing of unusual beauty and strangeness. Far more than Avengers #176, it was utterly incoherent to my five-year-old eyes—actually impossible to follow.



What I read in the fractured form of Defenders #53, I think, was a free space of almost but not quite random association—what the unconscious might look like if it were possible to represent: an open yet paradoxically claustrophobic plane, swept by strange conjunctions, ruptures, violence, abrupt breaks and changes in direction, a rush of electrifying non sequiturs. Above all: affect, but not meaning. “Cheese and crackers!”

Two images haunted me. That they are splash pages that seemed to have nothing whatsoever to do with what came immediately before or after was no doubt a significant factor in their hold on me, but the images themselves are unquestionably arresting.

And this:


To what end? Hard to say. To me, it was a field of possibilities. A beautiful/frightening place. A place I recognized. Where things come apart…
And what was coming apart in particular? Looking back over the main story of Defenders #53 now, it is remarkable how dramatically it thematizes the breakdown of traditional gender roles.
When the Sub-Mariner officiously brings the antique Atlantean banquet (featuring female “acrobats” and “serving girls”) to a halt, clearing the Council Chambers to converse with the Defenders and the Council in private, “all his subjects…file from the vast chamber, all the performers…and all the women. All the women, that is, with the exception of the happy-go-lucky Hellcat!”—whose reply to the greasy eyeball she gets from the patriarchal Atlantean Council is an eloquent and succinct, “Er...gee! Don’t look at me, fellas. I’m just one of the gang!”



Clea: Defender/Avenger


Legible, yet anchored in mystery—indeed, passing through the latter—this story acted as a critical gloss on the transfixing cover image, deepening and complicating its vision of archetypal womanhood through a naughty and prurient, but nonetheless proto-feminist, rape-and-revenge tale.




Deconstruction for Five-Year-Olds: When Team Books Make Gender Difference, er…Dissassemble
Taken as a whole—cover, main story, and back-up—what has happened in this comic?
Well, for one thing, the childish contrast between “man” and “woman” implied by those Avengers and Defenders covers has gotten a lot more complicated. Somehow, in its passage through the chaotic flux of the main story, the cover image of a “female” Defender was (to borrow an Avengers term) “disassembled,” to be recomposed in a back-up story that sprouts from one of its very own subplots into a very different image of femininity: capable, resourceful, and avenging.
In fact, if we look closely, this was the intrinsic message of the cover’s representation of frighteningly “empowered” femininity all along, but with one very significant difference: the cover codes this empowerment as evil and dangerous, the equivalent of an atomic blast. In other words, the cover-image of Defenders #53 has at least two meanings, both of which confirm the adage that what superhero comics really “defend” is an embattled and regressive fantasy of male power. When read in conjunction with the crackling silhouette of Korvac on the cover of Avengers #176, the Red Guardian seems initially to embody the “femininized” secondary status of the Defenders themselves relative to the Avengers’ “masculine” norm (this was my personal experience of the cover). But even when taken in context, the raging Red Guardian is a villain precisely because she is “maculinized” and powerful. Thus, to the extent that we recognize her as a “powerful woman,” the cover also demands that we recognize her as monstrous and unlawful—an anti-feminist message if ever there was one. It is in this context that Clea’s transformation from “defender” to “avenger” (her claiming of the prerogative of “masculine” agency, even when she seems most conventionally “feminine”) is so thrilling. By the end of this comic female power has been recoded: the role of “powerful female” has passed from turncoat or villainess (Red Guardian) to heroine (Clea). The fact that this recoding is accomplished most decisively in a back-up story written by a woman is itself an exciting detail—as if the important changes are all happening in the margins, margins that end up (by virtue of the “back-up” story’s placement after the “main” tale) becoming conclusions, and thus unexpectedly usurp the priority of the “original” narrative out of which they spring, or beside which they appear merely parasitic. “Clea: The Mystic Maiden!” seemed to play the role of “Adam’s rib” to the Adamic main story—literally emerging from a subplot in the latter—only to reveal itself as an Avenging, agential Lilith.
How perfect, then, that the comic’s boy-attracting cover anxiously announces: “Now the Red Guardian Reborn! Will it be as Friend or Foe?” Such a hesitation in a story called “The Power Principle” whose cover implies the rebirth of an empowered female archetype, toys deliciously with male anxieties about the changing nature of female gender roles in the 1970s, when “the power principle” in relation to women was as much a political slogan as the title of a superhero story. In the context of the argument I have been developing here, the cover’s question—“Friend or Foe?”—lends this image precisely the ambivalence that pervades this entire issue’s treatment of gender.
I was born in the early 1970s, so my ideas about gender were being shaped by these profound and welcome changes as the decade drew to a close. Moreover, the disassembly and “rebirth” of the female archetype that I have been tracing in Defenders #53 was not without visible consequences for my understanding of the fluidity and contingency of masculinity as well. Broadcasting the story’s ironic twist, Clea knocks out her lascivious captor, announcing: “Positions have a tendency to reverse themselves Nicodemus!” And indeed they do—much more profoundly, even, than Clea realizes. Just as “defenceless” Clea borrows the stereotypically “male” power to avenge her own assault and reorganize the image of woman as either secondary and weak or powerful and monstrous, so Nicodemus embodies a suggestively effete version of masculine aggression. (He wears a fin-collared pirate shirt for heaven’s sake!) Significantly too, his very plan to steal Clea’s power already seems to hint at a patriarchal anxiety about powerful women that could only stem from uncertainty about the power of his own masculine prowess. Is the villainous (and impotent) Nicodemus perhaps Naomi Basner’s satiric comment on the crisis in the normative codes of masculinity that I’ve been describing?
What would it look like, I wonder, to imagine a new narrative of masculinity, a narrative that was the equivalent to the new narratives of femininity represented by Clea and (in inverted fashion) by the Red Guardian? Do we catch glimpses of such a narrative in elvish-eared Namor, Monarch of the Atlantean Unconscious, master of that most changeable element, the ocean? In “feminized” Batman knock-off Nighthawk, perhaps? Even the normally rampaging Hulk is subdued here, domesticated by his “fishbowl” helmet! Perhaps such a reimagining of gender inheres in the male superhero himself—in the changeability of his identity signified by (frequent changes to) his costume and the radical freedom of movement he enjoys. Are these power fantasies, or are they diagrams? Maybe both. Partly, at least, they are diagrams for some other way of being. Diagrams that bind themselves to consciousness before we’re fully formed, adhering with a bonding agent that is stronger than crazy-glue: the magnet of affect, pleasure, powerful emotion.

Why Team Books Matter: Some Tentative Conclusions
Did I pick up on the nuances of gender role “disassembly” at the tender age of five? It’s hard to say “yes,” but it’s even harder to say “no.” It would be almost impossible, I think, to overestimate the power of our formative texts. Of course we don’t fully understand their contents at the time, but that doesn’t mean that they don’t cut paths or grooves in the unconscious into which meanings will later pool. That is to say, these stories and images structure our ways of categorizing and seeing what is most basic and fundamental to us, and we don’t necessarily need to understand these structures consciously at the time to feel their effects later. I’m not claiming that these structures automatically produce subversive effects in every reader. Clearly, they don’t. Nor am I claiming that they are a necessary (much less a sufficient) cause for challenging normative binary oppositions of whatever sort. Nonetheless, it does seem that for some of us, such primary experiences of intuitive deconstruction create complex templates or diagrams that make us more prone to question the cultural scripts we are given.
Do all comics have at least the potential to produce this degree of deconstructive complexity? Perhaps. Though even those great Marvel comics of the 70s can be just as guilty of “assembling” and reinforcing normative codes of identity as “disassembling” and reconstituting them. But as I argued in the epic debate with Marc Singer, the mixed messages of pop culture forms are at least as much an opportunity as a liability because the contradictory, double-voiced messages of superhero books make them potential points of intervention into the normative cultural scripts they both echo and distort. Like Defenders #53, the best comics dangle the bait of normative pleasures before us, only to ensnare us; then they spring the trap: cultural scripts, Disassemble! (Gorjus, of Pretty Fakes, aptly dubs this phenomenon of trash culture that “trick[s] as many people as possible into self-reflection” trick candy.)
My own case offers at least an anecdotal confirmation of these claims. As anyone who knows me can attest, the normative set of masculine gender identifications can hardly be said to have taken. An ongoing aspect of the debate between myself and Marc Singer has been whether or not mainstream comics could be said to have genuinely “political” (or subversive) effects. Speaking only from my own experience—the archaeology of narcissism I’ve been wallowing in here—I would say that they can have such an effect, especially at the formative level of affect and identification. To be cute: the effect is in the affect. The question then becomes whether or not our psychoanalytic “objects” and identifications are properly “political.” It depends how you define that vexing word, politics. I think they are. Especially when you consider the profound (and sometimes profoundly disturbing) degree to which desire and affect appear to shape and even largely determine what we commonly refer to as the “political sphere.”
To put it slightly different terms: a friend of mine recently worried that her three-year-old son was becoming too preoccupied with superhero violence (I foisted my DVD of 1960s Spider-Man cartoons on them) and that he identified excessively with Batman (indeed, insists on being addressed as “Batman”!). But then she said that she and her husband were reassured by the fact that most of the comic-reading men they knew were anything but the thuggish rednecks a mother might worry about her impressionable young superhero growing into. (I believe “gentle” is the euphemism she used to characterize the comic-reading guys of her acquaintance.) And so, only the old chicken-and-egg question remains: does our choice of objects reveal who we “are” already? Even at age 5? Do we disclose our identities by the comics we read? Or do the comics we read actually change who we become? And do superhero comics provide an unusually fertile ground for broadening the possibilities of what it is possible to imagine becoming? If the answer to these latter questions is a self-congratulatory “yes,” then we will have to stop believing that superhero comics are just the male power fantasies for which they are popularly mistaken.
Hi plok - Thanks--it's reassuring to hear that my impressions of Nighthawk are not entirely projections of my own neuroses! I actually don't know the character all that well (when I was a kid, I only knew two issues of the old Defenders series: this one and #51, in which Nighthawk battles the Ringer, which I will write about some day too). Still, whenever I see this character pop up, I like him instantly, so there must be some connection there!
ReplyDeleteHellcat too is one of those amazing Marvel characters--one just likes her instantly, especially as written by Kraft. (Again, I don't know the character very well, but she always struck me as having no powers at all--just that fact that she was this cool girl who was "one of the gang" was awesome. She was definitely the point-of-view character in the main story for me, though in issue #51 it was probably Nighthawk.) Man, I just can't adequately convey how special these issues of the Defenders were to me back then. Even the ones I bought later from around this era (especially the "Who Is Scorpio?" storyline that precedes these issues) hold up as dizzying, astounding work. Sniff!
Cheese and crackers, Jim! I seriously wandered over here to chastise you for not writing much lately. Um.
ReplyDeleteAn extraordinary post and, like plok, I need some digestion time before I might respond. In one post, you not only dissect & critique (much more gently than you could've) Keith Giffen's emerging use of the 12-panel page and dynamics (I adore his "Five Years Later" Legion art), but inferences of feminism and otherness in 70's Marvel. Magnificent.
It's also noteworth how you bring up that we have no control over what gets to us as children--the trick candy. I am absolutely floored by your notion of Kitty Pryde as the most identifiable X-Man to many teens; I've never though of that before, but I must revisit it soon.
It is Kitty, of course, who is the youngest; the one who has the crush on the (literally) dense older person who seems out of reach, and who finally betrays her for nothing more than physicality (a la Secret Wars). It is also Kitty who--incredibly!--becomes a samuari-level martial arts master (as a 16-year old Jewish kid from Chicago!), earns perhaps the greatest deference of any other X-Man from Wolverine, and has a pet dragon and a soul-sister who is a demon sorceress??
I might ask if Kitty was just as much a wishfully-young Chris Claremont as she was you, or me.
Too much to think about, especially what with you throwing DeBeavouir in; I'd also like a splash of Irigaray, for the idea that defending is no less paramount or worthy simply because it is not avenging (i.e., vagina v. penis in This Sex Which Is Not One; the penis does not gain some sort of greater power simply because its possible use as a pentrative instrument).
Cheese and crackers AGAIN! I gotta go walk around.
Helluva post, Jim! I wonder if Hellcat is working towards the kind of complication of gender binaries by her very inclusion in the comic: superhero comics are supposedly a "masculine" genre, yet Hellcat, as Patsy Walker, had her origins in Marvel's romance comics, right? A supposedly "feminine" genre. So just her being in the "mainstream" MU in the first place constitutes a blending that is not just generic but gendered.
ReplyDeleteHey gorjus, hey Prof. Fury, thanks for the nice comments! I love Giffen's "Five Years Later" Legion art too--that period was the high point of the series for me, both story-wise and artistically. And Kitty Pryde...much more to be said about her for sure. Definitely a Claremont fantasy, I think, but also a point-of-view character that really worked for both boys and girls. I'm not sure that there's any other X-character from that era who quite achieved the life-likeness of Kitty--perhaps that had as much to do with reader involvement as with Claremont's own enthusiasm for her. Perhaps it'll inspire a post at Pretty Fakes? (hint, hint)
ReplyDeleteAs for Irigaray, I'm so with you. The original draft of the parenthetical de Beauvoir comment read as follows: "(DeBeauvoir’s definition of woman as “the second sex” and of Luce Irigaray’s updated paradoxical version, “the sex which is not one,” are serendipitous but not frivolous comparisons—sexism, it seems, starts early.)" I kid you not!! I took it out, only because I was too lazy to work out the implications of that particular name-drop fully--so thank you for your thoughts about this. I can only add that the masculine/feminine avenger/defender oppositions throughout the essay gave me quite a bit of anxiety. It was very much a case of trying to describe a deconstructive process through the language and categories of childhood. A crude business at best! It is, as you point out, preposterous to equate "avenging" with power or agency. Ah, language.
As for Hellcat's romance comic origins, Prof. Fury, I honestly had no idea. But is that ever cool! More food for thought, and of course, I like her even more now. :)
Jim, check out this Wikipedia entry on Hellcat for more.
ReplyDeletehttp://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hellcat_(comics)
Now I've gotta go dig out a lot of Kitty Pryde comics. Fantastic! Lots more to say, still, about this subject.
Jim --
ReplyDeleteYou bring up some interesting points, but I feel compelled to bring up a counter-point: namely, that David Anthony Kraft is terrible story-teller. He was the first comic book author I made a point of avoiding because I found his work so dreadful on a simple, technical level. (I need only point to the massive confusion you admit to upon first reading the story.) Which leads me to wonder whether this may be an instance when you are reading too much into Defenders #53.
I don't doubt that any creator brings some contemporary issues to the table while they're working -- that strikes me as nearly inevitable. But it seems to me that a writer trying to work in those issues consciously will either A) drop them in clumsily if s/he is not talented enough, or B) weave them in gracefully and subversively so as not to appear "preachy" if s/he is talented. Given Kraft's bad technical form throughout his comic writing career, I have a great deal of difficulty believing that he was indeed trying to weave deconstruction of gender roles into Defenders. I would suggest that it's more likely he was simply laying down relatively base characterization, based on the more involved and complex work of those before him. Indeed, he didn't create any of the characters in those issues; any of the deconstructivist notions you're seeing are shadows of the work of Stan Lee, Roy Thomas, and Steve Englehart.
As to whether we choose comics based on our personalities versus whether our personalities are shaped by the comics we read, I would point out that this is effectively the classic nature vs. nurture arguement. My understanding is that the general consensus on that point is that both play critical factors -- that a person's baseline psychological makeup is pre-determined, but his/her environment (in this case, which comics s/he stumbles upon) re-inforces particular aspects of that baseline. So if you're friend's son is emulating Batman, that could easily just be an identification with the character's independence and/or detective skills, both aspects of a character that are likely too nuanced for a three-year-old to cognitively grasp. If he continues reading Batman, I'm sure you're as well aware as I am that that could help focus him on critical thinking or self-reliance moreso than any number of episodes of Seasame Street.
Which leads me to wonder whether this may be an instance when you are reading too much into Defenders #53...
ReplyDeleteHi Sean - Guilty as charged! In fact, to clarify: I'm reading everything into Defenders #53--or nearly everything. I should probably have been clearer about this in the post, but this is an instance of (almost) pure "reader response"--more self-analysis than comic criticism. The main thing I was trying to do here was describe my own five-year-old experience of reading (and, if I'm being really honest, my subsequent rereading from ages 5-10 or so).
That said, there are two elements of the "interpretation" I'd be willing to defend as "actually there" in the comic as a whole (not just Kraft's script but the cover and back-up too):
1. The contradictory structures themselves (which were, as you say, almost certainly unintended). (I.e., even if only by accident, Kraft & Giffen & even the DC editors who included a back up story created structures related to gender difference that were contradictory enough that they stuck with me a screwed with the simpler binary oppositions that culture tends to give us about gender difference. The fact that this was all a big accident didn't make the effects of it any less real for five- or six- or seven-year-old me! In fact, it is precisely because the script/breakdowns are so incoherent that the whole comic became a sort of free-association excerise for me. In other words, as a narcissist who likes to see myself reflected everywhere, I actually like "bad" writers--sometimes even better than good ones. That's a terrible admission though, so please don't tell anybody.)
2. The other aspect of the reading I would defend is the second-wave feminism, which is indisputably part of Kraft's characterization of the women. This becomes even more insistent in the Clea back-up story by Naomi Basner, which I'd be even more willing to defend as "intentionally" proto-feminist--albeit in the usual mixed way of this type of vaguely exploitive sex-kitten feminism.
Oh--and about the nature/nurture baseline, I agree...I think! Things are rarely either/or, but I can't resist the rhetorical flourish at the end. It always gets me into trouble.
Thanks for the Hellcat-Wiki, gorjus. Too crazy! And here's another one:
ReplyDeletehttp://www.toonopedia.com/patsy.htm
So, the overall conclusion that we're looking at here is that, ultimately, the messages coming from comic books (and by obvious extension, fiction in general) are generated as much by the audience as they are by the creators. The audience is an active participant in the creation process by developing their own interpretation(s) of a work based on their own prior biases and experiences.
ReplyDeleteFurther, one could argue, that a comic book (and, again, by obvious extension, art in general) is not complete until and unless it is read and interpretted by a third party, unrelated to the "traditional" creation roles. A comic that is never published is not incomplete because it has yet to be printed -- it is incomplete because it has yet to be read and interpretted!
A question, then -- if a comic book is published/distributed/read in a single country, does it qualify as art in a different country who has never seen it?
Even as a lover of comic books and a believer in the ability of art to influence reader’s real lives and political views, I find it hard to swallow an argument for the medium as being progressive towards gender issues.
ReplyDeleteI’m a bit younger that Roeg, so I’m part of the generation who grew up reading the Image comics of the 90’s, rather than the Bronze Age comics that Jim immersed himself in. As such, I guess I missed out on the second wave feminism of those books which he discusses here. I have found examples of progressive approaches to gender politics in superhero comics few and far between over the last fifteen years.
Lately, I’ve had a few occasions where I actually found myself embarrassed to be reading a comic. For example, my girlfriend glanced over while I was on the notorious “Vicky Vale gets dressed” pages of All Star Batman #1. She asked, “What is ARE you reading?” and I had to answer honestly, “Honey, this is what we call a terrible comic book.”
Similarly, at Chapters the other day, I thought I would flip through the latest issue of New Avengers. As I approached the comic rack, I saw that the cover of the latest issue was a drawing of Spider-woman that so sexualized that I was unable to pick it up. I’d feel as comfortable reading that in public as I would the latest issue of Playboy.
Again, I felt quite ridiculous reading a recent issues of Ultimate Spider-man, because its cover image was basically just Silver Sable’s boobs falling out of her top.
This industry constantly claims that it is trying to get people to take this medium seriously, to draw in new younger readers, and to reach a female audience, yet look at what they are putting on the cover of their books. I’m not some uber-feminist anti-porn lobbyist by any means, but at the same time, I’d like to be able to read a superhero comic book while sitting next to my girlfriend without feeling embarrassed.
I don’t know, maybe I’m just getting old. I remember reading J. Scoot Campbell’s Gen13 for no other reason than his depiction of sexy super gals. Maybe my frustration is just a reflection of the fact that I am still reading comics that are aimed at a 16 year old, not a 26 year old. I’m sure I would have had no problem with any of these covers back in early high school.
Qusada recently said that if Marvel puts out another gay Rawhide Kid comic, it would have to be under the MAX division regardless of the content, due to the current conservative climate in America. Yet there is no problem with Greg Horn’s pin-up girls gracing the cover of half of Marvel’s line. That’s the industry we are talking about here.
As much as I love Roeg’s celebration of the medium at Double Articulation, I feel that when it comes to gender politics, mainstream Superhero creators should be taken to task for what they have done in the past and for what they continue to publish today, not praised.
I don't know that I'd put that much emphasis on the "natural" organization tendencies of a genre. I think that a lot of the superhero genre's so-called organization tendencies are simply conventions based on the work of Siegel/Shuster/Finger/Kane, but they're not necessarily indicative of the genre.
ReplyDeleteExplanation by way of examples (in no particular order)... Watchmen - a book largely written to prove that the existing conventions were just a lazy way to avoid expanding the genre. The old Atlas stories about Venus - clearly steeped in the superhero genre, but with a huge crossover into the romance genre. Fantastic Four #1-3 - These are more monster books than superhero ones; we only think of them as superhero books because of the 500-some issues that followed. Scott McCloud's Destroy! - a book that's SO steeped in the superhero genre as to become a parody of itself. Hellboy - argueably a superhero book, but it bears little resemblance thematically to anything Marvel or DC is doing. Planetary - Using the superhero genre to comment on itself and related genres and media. And that's not even going outside the American market; what about Asterix, Astro Boy, and Miracle Man?
I agree that there's a lot of superhero books that have similar elements and themes along the lines of what I think you're talking about, but those seem to me more like conventions that are easy because they've been done before, not because it's more natural.
As far as the triptych goes, I can only go as far as to say that they suggest to me an inherent power. Those three figures are effectively just standing there, and they evoke a huge amount of raw power. I get a similar sensation if I'm driving with one hand clenched at the top of the steering wheel. Something about the way the muscles in the back of my hand shift as I tighten my grip on the wheel seems to evoke a latent power -- the kind of power that Jack Kirby could regularly tap into with his drawings.
Had to step away from the blog for a bit this week and so have unfortunately dropped the ball on the fascinating conversation unfolding in the comments section here...
ReplyDeleteJust a couple of personal things to add, for what it's worth:
Thomas - I agree that “mainstream Superhero creators should be taken to task for what they have done in the past and for what they continue to publish today, not praised.” I’d only add that—aesthete and pig that I am—my objections are as much aesthetic as political. Simply put, most of the cheesecake that dominates the comic market these days just isn’t sexy for anyone over the age of 16. (Personally, I think that Marvel has a worse scorecard on this issue than DC; I don’t count Power Girl because, as with The Bulleteer, there’s more going on with her cleavage than meets the eye).
plok - This comment gave me an involuntary shudder of horror:
Jim’s triptych would look awfully peculiar with a bunch of 90s Liefeld creations standing in for the older Marvel creations, I think...maybe those vapidly hypersexual dysmorpho-figurines of his are just not made to carry on the sort of dialogue with the reader we’ve been discussing.
Yikes! No kidding. The wonderful thing about what I like to think of as “1970s bodies” is that although they are, in a sense, idealized, they still obey some minimal requirements of realism. How I wish that this style of comic art would make a comeback! (My slavish worship of Perez has clearly got something to do with the fact that he still draws bodies in this style.) I’m inclined to agree that these (now almost quaint) 1970s bodies are in a sense necessary for the kind of reader-dialogue I had with them. I’d almost go so far as to say that their “idealized realism” is what gave them traction as potential sites of identification. On the other hand, though, everything’s relative. I would be fascinated to hear if anyone born in the 80s, for instance, does have a Liefield-triptych lurking somewhere in their make-up! On second thought, maybe not. (I kid.)
Sean - Your comments about how "a comic that is never published is not incomplete because it has yet to be printed -- it is incomplete because it has yet to be read and interpretted!" are spot-in in my view. As literary theories go, this type of phenomenological or "reader response" theory seems to be out of fashion in the academy these days (though feminist critics gave it some new life). Secretly, I still really like Wolfgang Iser's account of the production of literary meaning. Here is a snippet from his wonderful essay, “The Reading Process: A Phenomenological Approach” (the references are to David H. Richter’s anthology of literary theory, The Critical Tradition:
“The text as such offers different ‘schematized views’ through which the subject matter of the work can come to light, but the actual brining to light is an action of Konkretization [realization]. If this is so, then the literary work has two poles, which we might call the artistic and the esthetic: the artistic refers to the text created by the author, and the esthetic to the realization accomplished by the reader. From this polarity, it follows that the literary work cannot be completely identical with the text, or with the realization of the text, but in fact must lie half-way between the two…The convergence of text and reader brings the literary work into existence, and this convergence can never be precisely pinpointed, but must always remain virtual….It is the virtuality of the work that gives rise to its dynamic nature, and this in turn is the precondition for the effects that the work calls forth. As the reader uses the various perspectives offered him by the text in order to relate the patterns and the ‘schematized views’ to one another, he sets the work in motion, and this very process results ultimately in his awakening of responses within himself.”
My own little pseudo-psychoanalystic forays into self-analysis take matters further than I think Iser intends for us to take them as he ultimately holds to a liberal humanistic ethic of being educated and transformed by our encounters with the “difference” or “otherness” represented by the text. In a very general sense, I like his ethics of reading, so I have no problem acknowledging that my various childhood reading experiences go too far in the direction of imposing meaning and are not sufficiently dialogic. Still, his thoughts about the degree to which readers can “fill in the gaps” left by the text in order to participate in the “realization” of textual meaning are notoriously unclear, and I find the following passage from that essay very suggestive as a model for what I think I’m attempting here:
“The unwritten aspects of apparently trivial scenes and the unspoken dialogue within the ‘turns and twists’ not only draw the reader into the action but also lead him to shade in the many outlines suggested by given situations, so that these take on a reality of their own. But as the reader’s imagination animates these ‘outlines,’ they in turn will influence the effect of the written part of the text. Thus begins a whole dynamic process: the written text imposes certain limits on its unwritten implications in order to prevent these from becoming too blurred and hazy, but at the same time these implications, worked out by the reader’s imagination, set the whole given situation against a background which endows it with far greater significance than it might have seemed to possess on its own. In this way, trivial scenes suddenly take on the shape of ‘an enduring form of life.’”
Oh, and as for plok's question about whether we all get extra credit for this...? I certainly hope so!
"What I saw in these two covers, then—what steered my hand to pluck them from the random assortment of other comics on the newsstand—were potent archetypes of male and female embodiment: what seemed, at the time, to be boiled down essences of gender difference—indeed, essences that still boiled in a cosmic soup of Kirby dots."
ReplyDeleteThat somatized essence, along with the "map of the unconscious" provided by the interaction of panels and gutters, may be the most truly radical thing about the superhero genre and the comics form. Or maybe I should say "potentially radical," in light of our earlier discussion--but I see it as the most potentially radical, certainly moreso than any putative thematic correspondence between genre conventions and political ideologies.
Great post, Jim!
Thanks Marc! As I was writing this, I realized that what began as a very personal unpacking of a childhood reading experience was morphing into a sort of addendum to our earlier discussion. I just can't let a good thing go, it seems!
ReplyDelete