Supergods Review
“We live in the stories we tell ourselves” (Morrison xvii).
“Are you a god?”
If you’re talking to Gozar the Gozarian, answer yes.
If Gozar questions you further, use sections of Grant
Morrison’s Supergods: What Masked
Vigilantes, Miraculous Mutants, and a Sun God from Smallville can Teach Us
about Being Human to provide some support for your hasty apotheosis. Although be warned that the divine powers which Morrison claims
humanity possess tend to be better suited for mundane matters rather than
celestial fisticuffs. If you still end up in a fight with Gozar, you might want
to make peace with your preferred deity. You also might want to resist the
urge to think of marshmallow icons.
Supergods, like
its topic, possesses a secret identity. It addresses what superheroes can teach
humanity, as promised in the title, by presenting its lecture through the structure
of Grant Morrison’s biography rather than a formal jargon-laden academic
treatise. While perhaps not living up to all the superlatives on the back
cover, the book is engaging and contains some worthwhile thought-provoking tenets
on superheroes and the nature of time and reality (these are the sections where the
book becomes rather odd).
The 480 page trade paperback, sporting the cover of a cut-out Batman
mask sized for a shrunken head, is divided into four parts: The Golden Age, The
Silver Age, The Dark Age and The Renaissance. Of the four sections, the
metallic partitions give a history of comics, focusing exclusively on the
superhero and contain perceptive and thoughtful readings of Action Comics #1 and Detective Comics #27 (where the Batman
first appeared…in case your inner fanboy momentarily forgot the issue number), and The Fantastic Four #1. Spider-Man’s
origin and Peter Parker’s woes, along with highlights from a young Grant
Morrison’s life, also haunt these initial veins of the book. The two parts historiography
shift almost exclusively to Grant Morrison’s personal experiences as he relays his
involvement with comics and the trends of comics from the 80’s to the recent
present[1].
Of superheroes, Morrison posits some probing ideas. He
readily acknowledges the limitations and repetitions inherent in reading comic-book
superhero titles, yet instead of denigrating this element of the genre, he presents
the repetition as “It’s not so much that history is cyclical, it seems to
progress via recursive, repeated fractal patters with minute variations” (294).
While noting and accepting how ultimately, nothing major really changes in a
superhero’s comic, Morrison also focuses on the limited alterations that brush
characters in their books through a span of time. These momentary shifts in how
a character is portrayed (like when Batman was paralyzed, or campy, or grim, or
insane) Morrison suggests can be used as a sign of the anxieties and desires of
the society that rendered this version of the superhero. Some variations in the
Superman stories also adhere to this pattern; Morrison notes how in the late fifties “The socialist power
fantasies, the jingoistic propaganda and gimmick adventures, gave way to
cataclysmic tales of love and loss, guilt, grief, friendship, judgment, terror,
and redemption, biblical in their scale and primal purity” (63). Morrison
describes a later depiction of Superman as “Freed of the baggage of the past,
eighties Superman was no longer your dad but your big sister’s horny beefcake
boyfriend. He snarled and got torn up a little” (215). This consideration of subtle
changes helps guide a reader to become a closer reader of superhero comics, or
at least to start asking questions of why certain elements of a hero’s mythos
are given greater emphasis while the hero’s core identity remains intact. Morrison’s
positive focus on one of the often lamented aspect of superhero books
(nothing changes) serves as a refreshing response, and nudges comic-book superheroes close to the pantheon of ancient gods. Myths of the ancient Greek gods (and the stories of Buddha, Shiva, Krishna, Jesus, Mohammad, God, Gozar the Gozarian, and
others) don’t regularly change on a monthly, annually, centennially, or millennially
schedule, so if the superhero is viewed as a society’s
mythology, why should readers expect the tales of superheroes to contain continual metamorphoses?
Morrison asserts superhero comics provide more than just
escapist fantasy[2].
They have some important work to do for humanity that goes beyond killing some
time with pretty colors; “It was time they [superheroes] got their act together
and gave us something to look up to” (294).
That “something” Morrison wants superheroes to model are
stories that “…emphasize our [humanity’s] glory, intelligence, grace,
generosity, discrimination, honesty, capacity for love, creativity, and native genius, those
qualities will be made manifest in our behavior and in our works. It should
give us hope that superhero stories are flourishing everywhere because they are
a bright flickering sign of our need to move on, imagine the better, the more
just, and more proactive people we can be” (414).
“This research consistently shows that fiction does mold us.…We are moved emotionally, and this seems to make us rubbery and easy to shape.…Fiction is often treated like a mere frill in human life, if not something worse. But the emerging science of story suggests that fiction is good for more than kicks. By enhancing empathy, fiction reduces social friction. At the same time, story exerts a kind of magnetic force, drawing us together around common values. In other words, most fiction, even the trashy stuff, appears to be in the public interest after all.”
Morrison’s view on heroes, giving them both the role to
mirror society and to model a superior society through encouraging and
empowering readers fits current studies in fiction. And while the static
elements of superhero comics often become vexing, Morrison’s work reminds
readers that there are variations (if only momentary) and creativity that occur
within the boundaries and parameters of a superhero’s chronicle. For a subgenre
of comics so often targeted for jokes and derision, these stories transcend the
immediate plot and empower readers an opportunity to contemplate their society
and adjust their views and behaviors so their souls can soar up up and away.
[1]
Somehow I missed reading Grant Morrison during
my initial deluge of comic books during the late eighties and early nineties.
When beginning to read I was a Marvelite feeding heavily on superhero fare (Thor, Ghost Rider, Punisher, X-Men, Namor, and (yes, although I cringe to admit it) even Alf). Obviously my reading sensitivity and
interest in comics weren’t up to the antics in Grant Morrison’s writing. After
a bowing out and return to comics a dozen years later, I somehow again missed
his work. From the ideas and explanations in Supergods (and thanks to my comic store’s stock of collected
trades) I’ve been reading his work on Doom
Patrol while eagerly awaiting All-Star
Superman. Surely an author’s book that causes a reader to buy more of that
author’s work has to count as some sort of literary success…or an unique form
of printed mind control….
[2]
Continually I ask myself why I read comics, especially superhero comics. While
at times, elements of escapism and nostalgia tinge my reading of the panels,
more often it’s the generation of a sense of wonder and imagination comics
(especially superhero and science comics…for me anyway) provide. Comics are
crucibles of creativity, banes to the mundane and routers of soul-wearying
routines. They contain sparks of the sublime. Comic books stand as pulp pills
for astonishment.
I'm a huge Morrison fan. I've read his old 2000AD stories, his Animal Man, most of his Vertigo titles and regular DCU books. After reading your post I honestly cannot wait to buy Supergods and read it.
ReplyDeleteBy the way, here's a link to my blog:
www.artbyarion.blogspot.com
It'd be great if you could stop by and leave me a comment and / or follow me (and I'll do the same, of course).
Cheers!
Dear Arion,
ReplyDeleteThank you for your comments and link to your blog. I hope that you enjoy *Supergods* when you get a chance to read it.
Your reading of Grant Morrison far exceeds mine, but I'm greatly enjoying the bizarre ideas and situations in volumes 3-4 of his *Doom Patrol* run. As far as one can quantify an author's work, do you have a favorite (or favorites) from Morrison's writings? What are your thoughts on his announcement that he will be leaving DC?