It’s still remarkable that most of the
iconic comic characters that we all know and love were created in such a short
period of time, just seven decades ago. While it is now almost impossible to
imagine a world without Superman or Batman or Wonder Woman, they all blossomed
into life in the same short span of years, along with hundreds of other
characters who are still popping up in new comics, from Captain America
to Ma Hunkel’s Red Tornado.
There is undoubtedly a romantic streak in
those early days of American comics, moments that can be seen in Michael
Chabon’s Kavalier and Clay, and in Gerard Jones’ Men of Tomorrow, with young
men locking themselves up in overheated apartments and making comics for three
days straight, taking breaks only to go get some more beer and fried chicken.
All those comics are so crude, but set
templates that are still followed slavishly every week for the next seventy
years in a single weekend of frenzied activity. Young men facing a world war
dug into myth, pulps and their own imaginations to come up with new heroes for
an age that needed ‘em.
They can look old and dusty now, (and we
have to overlook the appalling racism and sexism that often crops up if we ever want to really appreciate them). These
comics were produced all those years ago on cheap paper, and the physical
objects are becoming yellower and more brittle every year. But the stories can
still be startlingly modern. For most of us on the planet, there has always
been superheroes like Batman and Namor, the Sub-Mariner, but there are also still
loads of people who lived in a time when these concepts didn’t even exist.
Super-heroes have dominated the comics medium for decades, but it really is
still a young medium.
This relative newness has been used for an
excuse for some shockingly poorly crafted comics over the past few years - as
creators intentionally break storytelling rules that have been built up for
years, only to discover there were actually really good reasons why these rules
existed in the first place - but that
doesn’t make it any less true. Stories evolve over years and decades and
centuries – they don’t stay still, and the superhero still has a long way to
go.
Not that they were thinking of this, back
in Manhattan, in those art studios, in the spark of creative innovation and
commercial ruthlessness in the late 1930s and early 1940s. They could never
have imagined that their characters would still be going strong in the 21st
century, in a bewildering variety of mediums.
It was still a troubling time in the good
ol’ days – terrible things were happening in Europe and Asia, and the world had only
just dug itself out of a horrible economic hole. There were still examples of
ridiculous prejudice and hatred, and millions were still suffering all over the
world.
But like Harry said in The Third Man,
centuries of Swiss peace gave the world the cuckoo clock, and the horrors of
WW2 gave us incredible innovations in medicine, engineering and all the basic
sciences, while also giving birth to the modern idea of the superhero.
This monolithic character had ancestors,
most recently in the pulps, but going all the way back to good ol’ Gilgamesh.
But it was also something big and bright and new, with a fictional vigour that
is still going strong.
All these young writers and artists of
comic’s golden age were running on pure enthusiasm and creative freedom, and
produced it in startling amounts – there are dozens and dozens of remarkable
and idiosyncratic creators like Fletcher Hanks out there, waiting for
re-appraisal with a twenty-first century eye.
The creators were screwed over in rotten
business deals that left them with nothing after they were responsible for some
of the most iconic figures of the twentieth century. You never learn anything
if you idealise the past, and the success of today’s biggest creators owe
everything to the men and women who spent their lives in anonymity.
But their deeds are etched in the bedrock
of history now, and the crooks who took advantage them are long gone and
forgotten. Everybody knows about Bill Finger and Jerry Robinson’s contribution
to proto-Batman, and while it’s a tragedy that Finger died without seeing his
credit come calling, we can still celebrate his achievements.
Golden Age superhero comics can now look
crude and clumsy, but they are also full of simple beauties and absolute
lunacy. All these stories and art, churned out over those immortal weekends of
the medium’s earliest days can still teach us something about storytelling and
build for the future.
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