|
Saturday, April 12,
2003
From Newsarama,
reprinted with permission
http://newsarama.com
JIC: WAR COMICS, THEN AND...?
by Mike San Giacomo
It was "The Good War."
American soldiers fighting overseas never doubted the support of the folks back
home.
The Nazis, the Japanese and to a less extent, Mussolini's fascists, presented a
threat to the world that was so obvious, so frightening, that there seemed no
other choice than resistance.
Comic books, being a mirror for society of the times, reflected that belief.
Adolph Hitler was as much a comic book villain as any mad scientist. Nazis and
Japanese soldiers were the featured villains on cover after cover of Superman,
Captain America and a host of lesser lights like Thrilling Comics, Blue
Bolt and Zip Comics.
Comics sold by the millions each month as people were drawn to the colorful,
caustic covers that promised them a few pages of victory. In 1941, more then 10
million copies of Superman Comics were sold.
Ten. Million.
Comic publishers would never again latch onto a war like they did in World War
II. Korea, Vietnam, the Gulf War and its sequel, "Gulf War II: The Search
for Saddam," go largely unrecorded in the comics.
Today, comic publishers are far more circumspect than they were 60 years ago.
They see the news. They see the thousands of protesters in the streets that
oppose the war. They fear that there is no way to represent the war without
angering some group somewhere, so they just don't do it.
That means we're not likely to see the Fantastic Four or Spider-Man battling
Saddam Hussein's Republican Guard. Marvel President Bill Jemas said there is no
absolute rule against it,
but it would be a tough sell.
"If a writer wants to send The Avengers to Iraq, and he has a great story
to tell, we would allow it," said Jemas. "If I thought we were able to
go out and do a story objectively, with humanity, and one that touches on all
sides, we would do it."
But it's unlikely. After the tragedy of Sept. 11, a few superheroes hunted down
generic terrorists, but no links were made to actual people or countries. For
better or worse, no one wanted to take the risk of pointing a finger at a
specific person, country, religion, or other motivating factor for the terrorist
action.
"The truth is, we are fantasy writers, not journalists," Jemas said.
"We write stories, we are not qualified to write about the war, even if
they are only in comic books."
"We struggle with the issue," Jemas said. "There are some of our
creators who support what the Bush Administration is doing and other who oppose
it.”
In 411, Marvel's series of stories about peaceful alternatives to war
which goes on sale this week there were some writers who wanted to make direct
attacks on George Bush, Jemas said. "Even though I may personally agree
with those sentiments, I chose not to publish those stories for the same reason
I would not publish pro-war books," Jemas continued. "It's not a comic
book's place to run propaganda anymore."
It was a different world back in the 1940s.
Those were the days when newsstands carried hundreds of comics each week that
showed German and Japanese soldiers as monsters. Hitler, Hirohito and Mussolini
got their tails kicked in everything from Action to Zip comics and
all titles in between. Along with the main bad guys themselves, heroes in the
early ‘40s were always busting Nazi or Japanese spy rings that were sending
sensitive information to America’s enemies.
Heck, even Look Magazine got in on the game, commissioning a two-page
spread entitled, “How Would Superman End World War II?” wherein Superman
bashed tanks, swatted Nazi planes out of the sky, plucked Hitler out of his
retreat, grabbed Stalin off of a Moscow balcony, and took them to Geneva, where
the League of Nations found them guilty for unprovoked aggression against
defenseless countries.
Michael Silberkleit, president of Archie Comics and son of the co-founder of the
company (then called MLJ Comics) said readers won't be seeing Archie and Jughead
wearing battle fatigues.
"We did our share of war stories in the 1940s when my father ran the
company," he said, though with superheroes, not with the Riverdale crew.
"And back in the 1991 Gulf War we distributed thousands of free Archie
Comics to remind the soldiers of America, home and apple pie. We're getting
ready to ship out thousands more to do it again.
"But that's about the extent of it," he said. "Comics are
escapist literature."
MLJ Comics gave the world its first star-spangled superhero, The Shield, in Pep
Comics #1 in the spring of 1940, more than a year before Captain America hit
the stands and a year and a half before the U.S. entered the war on that day of
infamy, Dec. 7, 1941. Cap worked for Timely Comics, which later became Atlas
Comics and finally, Marvel Comics.
"We called the Nazis, ‘The Nordics’ for a while until America got used
to the war," Silberkleit said.
MLJ's Shield spawned a veritable platoon of patriotic heroes from dozens of
comic book companies, with costumes that looked like Betsy Ross designed them.
The patriotic power parade continued unabated through the 1940s with heroes
like: Minute Man; the Star-Spangled Kid and Stripesy; the Fighting Yank; Captain
Flag; Mr. America; Miss America; Spysmasher; Yank and Doodle; Yankee Doodle
Jones; Uncle Sam; Wonder Woman; Major Victory; Citizen V; Captain Courageous;
Captain Freedom; The Patriot; Yankee Boy; Flag Man and The Flag, to name but a
few.
Even got the relatively gentle Captain Marvel once fought a villain called
"Nippo the Nipponese."
Okay, release your cringe - subtlety was not a big commodity in those days.
But after the war, audiences were tired of Germans and Japanese comics took a
lighter turn with teen titles, romance stories and crime comics. Most of those
patriotic heroes, like old soldiers, just faded away.
In the 1950's Timely Comics (then called Atlas) had a mini-revival of its
superhero trinity; Captain America, Human Torch and Sub-Mariner. Instead of
Nazis, they fought Communists. But comics had fallen on tough times in the 1950s
and the revival lasted about a year.
And even in the 1960s, communism was viewed as a threat to democracy as Iron
Man, Giant-Man and the Avengers fought Russian spies and Soviet superheroes.
Then there were those wonderful early 1970s issues where Captain America, so
disheartened by American political corruption, gave up his identity to become
"Nomad, the man without a country." Then of course, there was also a The
‘Nam a pretty bold series for Marvel which told true-to-life stories about
soldiers adventures in that unpopular war.
While Marvel and MLJ did their part, DC that got the most mileage of the World
War II with a half-dozen comics set in that war which were published
continuously from the early 1950s until the early 1980s. Heck, even the Justice
Society, which still has monthly adventures in JSA can (depending upon
which continuity you choose) trace its roots back to World War II, as the team
was tracking down foreign saboteurs and spies on behalf of the FBI by their
second issue as an official team (All-Star Comics #4). In later stories,
it was revealed that many of the team’s members met regularly with FDR for
marching orders.
When the big guns of the heroes scene in the ‘40s joined the service in their
civilian identities (following the models set for them by movie stars of the
time), FDR charged those who remained on the home front to form the All-Star
Squadron, which, as a series, lasted from 1981-1987, and was set during World
War II. Technically, the Squadron pre-dated the Justice Society, but again,
that’s up to your own interpretation of continuity.
In perhaps one of the bolder retroactive continuity stories dealing with DC
heroes and politics, it was revealed that the JSA disbanded in 1951 after
refusing to unmask during an investigation of the House Un-American Affairs
Committee.
But – the days of DC characters taking any role in wars and politics may be
limited. When contacted recently, officials at DC Comics, flatly declined to
discuss their role in wars; past, present or future.
While some of their heroes can trace their origins and glory days back to WWII,
it should be noted that by and large, even back in the 1940s, DC was far less
adventurous in dealing the with the Axis than Timely and MLJ.
With the exception of Joe Simon and Jack Kirby's Boy Commandos, DC was
content to show their heroes fighting the war on the cover, which was plastered
with patriotic slogans, making the images pop-culture propaganda of a sort, but
- the bravado stopped there.
The stories inside usually dealt with the typical mobsters and evil scientists.
The covers urged readers to "Buy war bonds and stamps" to support the
battle against the "Japanazis," a word that conveniently gave the
enemies a single face.
The dramatic covers would show a patriotic Superman ripping the periscopes off
German submarines, or sitting astride the cannons of an American battleship with
Batman and Robin on the cover of World's Finest Comics #7 in 1941, but
the stories would have nothing to do with the covers.
Still, the covers always were the best thing about Golden Age comics.
Alvin Schwartz, who wrote the Superman daily newspaper strip and numerous comics
for DC, was asked to write a Superman comic putting the Man of Steel against the
Nazis and the Japanese.
"I said no," said Schwartz, now 86, from his home in Chesterville,
Ontario. "I was Jewish and obviously opposed to Hitler. But what could
Superman do? He could just fly in there and clean the whole war up. It didn't
seem right to involve him when so many real men were fighting and dying."
In later years, DC writers would explain the lack of superhero intervention by
revealing that Hitler possessed "the Spear of Destiny" a magical
instrument, which would have put superheroes under his control if they got too
close. Convenient.
Schwartz said he had a problem with the typical depiction of the Japanese in
comics, which was meant to be comical, but in today’s view was beyond
offensive. Yet, the depictions served a propaganda purpose – dehumanize the
enemy. It’s a standard psychological trick in any war. These aren’t people
we’re fighting after all – they’re caricatures of humans. "I could
not stand seeing Japanese people shown as yellow-skinned, with huge buckteeth
and thick glasses," he said.
But over at Timely (Marvel), they couldn't get enough.
Hitler was the prime villain in the first 10 issues of Captain America Comics
at Timely Comics. Nazis, along with Asian (called Orientals back then) were
depicted as almost sub-humans at best, and of course, out and out monsters at
worst. Before the Red Skull became a James Bondian style villain in more recent
decades, he was the ‘40s equivalent of a movie monster.
Of course, there was a story where Cap dressed as a woman to sneak into Berlin
and Buck dressed as “her” grandson, and no one questioned that the symbol of
America could pass as a woman…but…let’s not talk about that here.
Back to wartime action, the Human Torch, The Sub-Mariner and an assortment of
"B" class superheroes spent issue after issue thwarting one Nazi or
Japanese scheme after another. In fact, the Human Torch is credited with killing
Hitler by burning him to death. If you didn't know that it's because with his
dying words Hitler told an aide to tell the world he killed himself to avoid the
posthumous humiliation. Now you know.
But comics today are different, no longer throwaway fodder for 10-year-olds;
adults buy most comics these days.
And even legendary artist Joe Simon, now approaching 90, said he would be
reluctant to draw the kinds of covers he did in the 1940s.
"After Sept. 11 I redrew the cover of Captain America #1 but put
Osama Bin Laden in place of Hitler," he said. "But I just did it for
myself, not for anyone else to see. War is too sensitive a topic for comics to
deal with today, things are far more complex than they war in the days when
Captain America could punch Hitler in the jaw."
Joe Simon has a lot to say about the war, comics and the people who made them in
The Comic Book Makers, a comics history he co-wrote with his son, Jim,
that is scheduled for release next month from Vanguard Press.
But for now, in this different world with this different war, the past is the
only place superheroes will deal with world politics and conflicts.
Date: Sunday, January 11, 2004 9:29:28 AM
Subject: Re: Mighty Crusaders
Go
right ahead.
M
-------Original Message-------
Date: Sunday, January 11, 2004 8:45:40 AM
Subject: Mighty Crusaders
Mike,
I would like permission to reprint your Mighty
Crusaders section of Journey into Comics at www.mightycrusaders.net
Rik
|