In
an October 31 post below regarding the first season of The Adventures of Superman, I repeated the oft-mentioned
observation that superhero stories are very much of a type with ancient tales of
heroes and demigods. In fact, the ancient heroes and gods turn up in modern
tales with some frequency, such as Ares in Wonder
Woman and most of the important characters in Percy Jackson & the Olympians.
That
observation prompted a revisit to the multi-volume The Golden Bough by James George Frazer. Originally published 1890,
it remains the single most important work on the origins and evolution of
mythology, not just in the West but around the world. That assessment is likely
to annoy a modern anthropologist, most of whom make a point of dismissing
Frazer as unscientific. Yet, though his sources are literary rather than
archeological and his analyses necessarily speculative, he more often than not
is convincing on the fundamental points. This is why he was such an outsized
influence on foremost members of the literary and intellectual scene of the
late 19th and early 20th century, including Robert Graves
(whose The White Goddess is another
essential tome on mythology), W.B. Yeats, Aleister Crowley, Ernest Hemingway,
Joseph Campbell, T.S. Eliot, Carl Jung, and many others. He still appeals
today. Camille Paglia commented that even though he might have been superseded
on details, he “will remain inspirational for enterprising students seeking
escape from today's sterile academic climate.”
Frazer
is definitely worth a visit on his own merits. His discussions of fertility
cults, resurrection myths, scapegoating, sacrifices, and more are endlessly
fascinating. (Single volume abridgements of The
Golden Bough are available, but if you have the time tackle the full set.)
However, revisiting his work proved a misstep with regard to considering modern
superheroes, who belong to a later stage of mythology. They are adventurers in
the mold of Theseus, Hercules, Perseus, and Bellerophon. Frazer doesn’t ignore
these completely, but the older and deeper entities such as Isis and Osiris
interested him more. While I don’t regret the diversion into Frazer, more
recent books on the modern superheroes themselves were, perhaps unsurprisingly,
more directly useful. There is a plethora of such books from which to choose,
but I went with The Avengers and
Philosophy, which contains contributions from 18 philosophers, and The Psychology of Superheroes with
contributions by a couple dozen psychologists. Are these authors overthinking
the subject? Well, yes and no. There really are ethical questions raised in the
context of comic book superhero tales, and the characters work only to the
extent they reflect something about the human condition. It’s important to note
that both books rely primarily on comic books as sources, not movies. The
storylines there differ from the screen versions substantially. Nonetheless
essential character traits are usually unchanged by the transition to screen.
Mark
White, who edited the collection of essays that make up The Avengers and Philosophy gets us started by contrasting the
ethical systems of Captain America (a deontologist), Iron Man (utilitarian),
and Thor (virtue ethicist). The classic example to contrast the first two is
the trolley car conundrum. A runaway trolley with 5 people aboard is headed for
a certain lethal crash; you can prevent it by throwing a switch that diverts it
onto a track where one person is standing and will definitely be killed. Do you
throw the switch? A deontologist says no; it is never right to choose to kill
an innocent person and that is that. A utilitarian says one death is better
than 5; throw the switch. This is why Iron Man and Captain America were on
opposite sides of the Civil War. Iron Man (Tony Stark) says look at the
outcome, which will be better if we cooperate with the Registration Act.
Captain America says forget the outcome: the Registration Act is wrong. Thor
has another approach altogether. He strives to be a virtuous person: loyal,
honest, brave, true, honorable and supportive of comrades even if that comrade
is Loki. He doesn’t much interest himself in other ethical minutia – and that
is the potential problem. One can have all those virtuous traits in a bad
cause.
Other
authors in the collection discuss responsibility for unintended consequences, ask
if might is right, ask when ends justify means in war, and ponder the
possibility of redemption. Several superheroes (e.g. Hawkeye and Scarlet Witch)
had stints as villains, after all, while others (notably Black Widow) are
ambiguous. Forgiveness is not much in fashion in the 21st century,
but in the comics, at least, it’s discussed. There is even a discussion of the
nature of reality with regard to She-Hulk who is aware she is a character in a
comic book. There also are discussions of love, which in the real modern world
all too often resembles something out of a comic book. You’ll never look at the
Avengers quite the same way again after this book, and that is all to the good.
The Psychology of
Superheroes
poses questions (and offers tentative answers) that are much more personal. For
example, Robin S. Rosenberg, who edited the collection, asks in her essay, “So
how different would Superman be if he had grown up in a different part of the
country?” Suppose Clark had grown up in Brooklyn with unsupportive parents?
What of Clark is nature and what is nurture? Robert Biswas-Diener in his essay
discusses Peter Parker. Yes, we all know the guilt trip over his uncle’s death that
led to his crime-fighting, but is that the reason he continues? Biswas-Diener
thinks not. After all, he has done more than his share taking down
supervillains, but he doesn’t retire. Biswas-Diener thinks he simply enjoys the
opportunity to use “the full range of his strengths.” Other authors discuss such
various topics as the effects of prejudice (Magneto), the deliberate
simplification of one’s public persona to reassure others (Superman), and the
employment of the dark side of one’s character (Batman) to positive ends. Chuck
Tate suggests, “Maybe this apparent contradiction explains why Superman and
Batman can’t get along. Superman knows that the Batman is closer in motivations
and behavior to the villains.” There is much more on the expression and
suppression of aggression and anger, on psychopathy, on the psychology of
readers of superhero comics, and on the inmates of Arkham Asylum.
The
reader can’t go wrong with either book. For those who feel a twinge of guilt at
“wasting” time on superficial superhero comics and movies, the books offer a
way to turn them into meaningful entertainment. By sharing our insights from
them with those in our company who just seek pure escapism, we thereby can be
supervillains. That prospect has an allure, which is something upon which Dr.
Rosenberg might have an opinion.
Suzi Quatro – Official Suburban Superman
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