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  • Here's an idea: the recent flood of superhero films has to do a lot more than movie studios

  • that are out of ideas.

  • For as long as people have told stories, those stories have involved the feats of great and

  • powerful characters--

  • --Gilgamesh, Athena, Moses, Beowulf, Paul Bunyan, Dolly Parton--

  • but only since the early 20th century have we had SUPERHEROES.

  • In just a short time, they've become an inextricable part of the cultural landscape, especially

  • in Hollywood.

  • Superman, Thor, Captain America, Spiderman, Batman--if you don't draw a distinction between

  • Highly Trained Masked Vigilante and Superhero, which, who knows, maybe you do-- they are,

  • ready?, "HUGE", seemingly permanent features of modern media.

  • And here we'll pause to repeat a major sentiment from our Ms. Marvel video, which is that WHOA

  • THE WORLD OF SUPERHEROES IS FULL OF WHITE DUDES. Yes, there ARE female superheroes,

  • and superheroes of color--

  • --Blade, Captain Marvel, Falcon, The Invisible Woman, Luke Cage, Miss America, Ms. Marvel,

  • Spawn, Simon Baz, Wonder Woman, Storm, and War Machine, just to name a few, if mutant-ness

  • and a giant metal suit don't also exclude superheroism, which for you, maybe they do--

  • --but you could very fairly argue I think, that of the above, only Wonder Woman is anywhere

  • near as prevalent as the other most well-known superheroes and SHE. doesn't even have her

  • own MOVIE. Yet. So. I Just. Didn't want to leave this point unmade. That the popular

  • construction of both history and superheroes in the West... lots of white dudes. And that's

  • probably not a coincidence.

  • And now anyone who wants to accuse me of being a social justice warrior can spend the rest

  • of the video formulating their petulant comment. Just trying to make your lives easier!

  • Here for you!

  • ANYWAY! It's no wonder that people love superheroes: here are these great people, awarded with

  • incredible abilities, able to take matters into their own hands.

  • Fighting the good fight, dealing with power and responsibility as we all do, making sacrifices,

  • trying to do the right thing and succeeding occasionally on a grand scale.

  • They sometimes struggle with their authority, but ultimately--in our most popular conceptions

  • and expressions--they have it and do amazing things with it.

  • As Noah Berlatsky wrote for the Atlantic, by reading comic books and going to see super

  • hero movies we get "to see an authority put everything in order."

  • This, incidentally, is also one way to view the progression of HISTORY: authority figures

  • putting everything in order.

  • In keeping with the dude-centric nature of so many things, it's called The Great Man

  • Theory of History.

  • In "On Heroes, Hero-Worship and the Heroic in History", Thomas Carlyle describes this

  • idea, saying that it's only through the actions of great men--people like Napolean, William

  • the Conquerer, or Alexander the Great--that progress is ever achieved. He calls these

  • people ... "Heroes".

  • Carlyle was quickly challenged, because his idea is complete rubbish: Herbert Spencer

  • rightly pointed out that HEROES are the PRODUCTS of so many things--race, class, labor, gender,

  • social and political standing, LUCK--that it is ridiculous to give them all of the credit

  • for progress.

  • And, just on a personal note, a lot of the people that history has deemed heroic were

  • deemed so only because of the number of people that they killed or countries that they invaded

  • so that, also... a troubling rubric for heroism.

  • The main idea being that history makes people just as much as people make history.

  • But! That doesn't mean that Carlyle's Great Man Theory, or great person theory, suddenly

  • lost all of its meaning.

  • Our collective love of narrative and our tendency to view history through its lens means that

  • we also tend to privilege the accomplishments of "characters", or, "powerful leaders."

  • It's easy to view history as a Parade of Characters, reconfiguring the world using the power that

  • they've been granted, cultivated, or fought for:

  • Steve Jobs, Joan of Arc, Einstein, Nelson Mandela, Elvis, Marie Curie, Maya Angelou,

  • they all left their own indelible marks on the world.

  • These people changed the world. But that they could change the world means that the world

  • was in need of, and able to, change.

  • Great People change history but their presence, indicates that Science, Technology, Art, Politics,

  • Economics,--are all capable of and have, IN FACT, changed.

  • And often, as I think all of these people would admit, with the hard work and equal

  • sacrifice of countless people alongside them. Einstein did not *singlehandedly* change science

  • nor Elvis music. Batman will never singlehandedly change Gotham, nor Superman Metropolis.

  • Which, and maybe this goes without saying but I'll say it anyway, means that locally

  • concentrated groups of great figures throughout history--

  • --Greece in ancient times, Florence in the Renaissance, Paris in the 20s, New York basically

  • whenever..

  • AAYYYYEEEEEE--

  • (We're in New York)

  • --indicates a pre-existing willing- or readi-ness for change at that time, in those places,

  • marked by the attitudes of not just one person, but many.

  • And maybe we ask, with a knowing wink and nod, if the same is not true for the growing

  • concentration of superheroes?

  • Since X-Men in 2000 there've been an average of 6 super-hero films every year. Ricky Anderson

  • ran the numbers and let me know there've been 64 major American Superhero films in the last

  • ten years.

  • Thats more superhero films than the 26 years PREVIOUS to THAT. So. An uptick, you could

  • say. Or you could just look at this infographic Doug Dooling sent me. It's pretty ace.

  • Now, it's easy to see all of this as some kind of Adventure in Late Capitalism: movie

  • studios are lazy, out of ideas or both and so they recycle all of the stuff that already

  • has a following and hope that it doesn't tank TOO HARD.

  • And maybe that's exactly right! But maybe, like all great figures, and concentrations

  • of great figures, this says something about our moment in history. A culture's myths always

  • indicate what they hope and fear and if superheroes aren't our myths... I don't know what is.

  • Maybe Bill Murray?

  • For instance, in the Studies in Comics journal, Chris Murray writes about how our superheroes

  • reflect changing attitudes about LIBERTY.

  • First, Murray describes the difference between positive and negative liberty, first developed

  • by political theorist Isaiah Berlin.

  • In "Two Concepts of Liberty", Berlin describes negative liberty as "the area within which

  • the subject ... is left to do or be what he is able to do or be, without interference

  • by other persons."

  • Positive liberty is "the source of control or interference that can determine someone

  • to do, or be, this rather than that." It "comes to light if we try to answer the question...'By

  • whom am I ruled?'"

  • Murray writes that superheroes used to be "champions of the oppressed". They were expressions

  • of "positive liberty". They were all of the good parts of Carlyle's GREAT MEN. But after

  • the start of World War II, they started to change.

  • "The superhero," he writes "...went from being an icon of positive liberty, reflecting the

  • frontier myth and rebellious spirit that marked American political thinking, to a policeman

  • for negative liberty, suspicious of difference or change, and fundamentally invested in the

  • maintenance of the status quo."

  • Where their powers once meant superheroes were free from societal conventions, and could

  • act as revolutionaries--their powers would eventually be used to reinforce those conventions,

  • especially as they were written during American war times.

  • Our blockbuster superheroes seem to exhibit both liberties: they are authorities, but

  • they also question the effectiveness of authority. Sometimes they question the effectiveness

  • of THEIR OWN authority.

  • They sometimes fight the status quo in their world--like in V for Vendetta, Batman Begins,

  • or Days of Future Past *if* you consider those characters "superheroes"-- and they sometimes

  • fight the status quo in OUR OWN world, as is the case with Michael B Jordan being cast

  • as The Human Torch.

  • But mostly, they seem content to maintain or simply ignore it: swooping in to eradicate

  • some sudden, external threat and then returning to their superhero perches until they're needed

  • again, or are themselves threatened.

  • What all this says about us, and OUR TIME... probably a lot. And maybe some day we'll REALLY

  • upset the status quo... and make a GOOD HULK MOVIE?

  • We can only hope.

  • What do you guys think? What does the current resurgence of superhero films say about our

  • moment in history, related to liberty or otherwise?

  • Let us know in the comments and I'm sorry, but it would be SUPER... if you subscribed.

  • Uh... let's see what you guys had to say about E-K-AH? I don't know, it just sounds so weird

  • to me. E-K-AH. Let's also see what you had to say about IKEA.

  • First and of course foremost, I had an amazing time last week at the Phoenix Comicon thanks

  • to everybody who came up and said hi who I met, who came to the panels that I sat on,

  • it was awesome to meet you, I had a great time at my first Comicon.

  • Ya'll are so nice! Everybody was just so nice and Phoenix was cool. I had a great time.

  • The end.

  • Maymaylingling says that Marx would have loved the episode because IKEA furniture allows

  • people to work on something from start to finish, something that industrialization took

  • away from the worker and, I don't know, that means you have to look at "Start" as picking

  • something off the shelf and "finish" as building it in your living room, but I will see he

  • probably would appreciate the creativity of IKEA. He said that Capitalism is a very creative

  • system, and IKEA has effectively figured out how to make its customers work for them so,

  • very creative. Good problem solving, IKEA...E-K-AH.

  • InMaTeofDeath and a bunch of other people asked about my pronouncement that you must

  • respect all ideas, even the ones that are stupid and dangerous and challenged it, and

  • rightfully so. Thank you for challenging.

  • MiRobin22 actually writes something remarkably close to how I feel, that the respect of an

  • idea has to be independent of your agreement or emotional reaction to it, and that getting

  • those ideas to change, especially the ones that you don't like, respect is the first

  • step towards changing them. You respect some ideas the way that you respect your parents,

  • but you respect other ideas the way that you respect weapons. They are dangerous things

  • that are deserving of your respect because of the danger and the harm that they can do.

  • So applying this to things that Ian Petrie brings up, these are things that are wrong

  • but I think disregarding them can be just as dangerous as allowing them to happen and

  • I think that that is what I mean by respect. I will agree that maybe my use of 'dogmatism'

  • was un-nuanced,or unsubstantiated so...fair. Fair criticism there.

  • And that being said, Thomas Staalesen writes a really good, kind of meditation on the idea

  • of dogmatism. You should check it out. Thanks for writing this, Thomas.

  • David Salazar brings up the famous example of the one egg you need to add to Betty Crocker

  • cake mix to make people feel as though they have a competence. This is one of my favorite

  • things. You know, they could make the Betty Crocker cake mix so that you didn't have to

  • add an egg, but it didn't sell as well, I think is the story? Because people felt like

  • it was too easy? I only say that anecdotally. I've never actually looked that up but, I'm

  • gonna keep telling that story because I like it.

  • Jkebab1 applies theories of alienation and social stratification to the IKEA instruction

  • manuals that come with your furniture. It's very funny.

  • Nice work Jkebab1.

  • Jennyburger07 has some stern words of criticism for the IKEA Effect paper and says that the

  • overall human condition is affected by IKEA's constant suggestion that we just need more

  • IKEA. More IKEA...

  • Now that I'm thinking about it, I think I need more IKEA...

  • E-K-Ah.

  • Logical Phallacies provides a breakdown of all of the ways that the human condition is

  • sated in IKEA using Maslow's hierarchy of needs. This is a very good comment. A link

  • to this and all of the others in the doobly-doo.

  • And finally, this is a thing that happened!...

  • This week's episode was brought to you by the hard work of these caped crusaders. We

  • have a Facebook, an IRC, and a subreddit, links in the doobly-doo. And the Tweet of

  • the Week comes from Jonathan Ore, who points out that the character select music in Street

  • Fighter 3 Alpha is called, "Who'll Be Your Double?"

  • And for this week's record swap we will be replacing Arcade Fire with Wendy Carlos's

  • Sonic Seasonings.

  • Alright, so adios Arcade Fire, and welcome, Wendy Carlos.

Here's an idea: the recent flood of superhero films has to do a lot more than movie studios

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