Wednesday 1 December 2021

The Monochromatic Superman of 1955




“Psychologically 
Superman undermines 
The Authority.”

— Frederick Wertham,
Seduction of The Innocent.



“During the years of the Second World War, the superhero concept spread like wildfire, but then died as rapidly and mysteriously as it had begun. Mass popular interest dwindled sharply after 1945, and superhero titles disappeared to be replaced by genre books that tripled the overall sales of the comics business between 1945 and 1954. Horror, Western, humor, romance, and war titles proliferated and made the kind of money that superheroes couldn’t match. With no more heroes left to hold back the tide, the streets of the American popular imagination filled with zombies, junkies, radioactive monsters, and sweating gunmen.


  What had made the superheroes so resonant and then so equally irrelevant? Was it only World War II that gave the supermen their urgent significance? The end of the war tipped Americans into a new age of plenty and paranoia. The United States had everything, but it shared with its enemies a superweapon capable of reducing even the sunniest suburban garden party to a fleshless, howling wasteland. Is it any wonder that gloomy existentialism captured so many imaginations in the 1950s? In the postwar West, having X-ray eyes would henceforth be a horror movie curse.


  We end the Golden Age as it began, with Superman —one of the last survivors of the initial brief expansion and rapid contraction of the DC universe. It had been too much too soon for the superheroes, but although many of them would lie dormant for decades, no potential trademark truly dies. The superheroes, like cockroaches or Terminators, are impossible to kill. 


But in 1954 a sinister scientist straight from the pages of the comics tried to wipe them all out and came close to succeeding.


  As the lights went out on the Golden Age, characters such as Superman, Batman, and Wonder Woman, who’d achieved a wider recognition thanks to serials and merchandising, survived the cull. Because of their status as backup strips in Adventure Comics, second stringers like Green Arrow and Aquaman weathered the storm—perhaps undeservedly—but the survivors did not always flourish.


  For instance, a popular TV series (1953’s The Adventures of Superman) had cemented Superman’s status as an American icon, but budgetary restrictions meant that its star, the likeable but ultimately troubled George Reeves, was rarely seen in the air. At best, he might jump in through a window at an angle that suggested methods of entry other than flight, possibly involving trampolines. The stories revolved around low-level criminal activity in Metropolis and ended when Superman burst through another flimsy wall to apprehend another gang of bank robbers or spies. Bullets would bounce from his monochrome chest (the series was shot and transmitted before color TV, so Reeves’s costume was actually rendered in grayscale, not red and blue, which wouldn’t have contrasted so well in black and white.)


  Reeves, at nearly forty, was a patrician Superman with a touch of gray around the temples and a physique that suggested middle-aged spread rather than six-pack, but he fit the mold of the fifties establishment figure: fatherly, conservative, and trustworthy


The problem with Superman was more obvious in the comic books. By aping the kitchen-sink scale of the Reeves show, Superman’s writers and artists squandered his epic potential on a parade of gangsters, pranksters, and thieves. The character born in a futurist blaze of color and motion had washed up on a black-and-white stage set, grounded by the turgid rules of a real world that kept his wings clipped and his rebel spirit chained. Superman was now locked into a death trap more devious than anything Lex Luthor could have devised. Here was Superman—even Superman—tamed and domesticated in a world where the ceiling, not the sky, was the limit.


  Fifties comics had taken a turn toward the dark, lurid, and horrific. The story of EC Comics, which replaced the popularity of the hero titles and brought about a nationwide moral panic, is a fascinating one and has been covered in depth elsewhere—David Hajdu’s The Ten-Cent Plague: The Great Comic-Book Scare and How It Changed America has a chilling fifteen-page roll call of artists and writers, many young and promising, who never worked again after the comic-book purges of the fifties. But this book is about superheroes, and for superheroes, times were especially tough.


  Imagine the response at a dinner party this evening if you whipped out your rouged nipples and proudly announced a passion for hard-core pedophile pornography. As difficult as it may be to believe today, in 1955 the kind of outrage that would reasonably greet your twisted confession was directed toward artists, writers, editors, and anyone else involved in the business of comic books. Comic books and their creators were painted as cunning corrupters of children, as monstrous artifacts crafted by experts to twist young and impressionable minds in the direction of crime, drug addiction, and perversion.


  At the heart of this attempt to annihilate an art form was an elderly psychiatrist named Fredric Wertham who would throw his considerable weight and expertise behind a sustained hate campaign aimed at comic books. His 1954 best-seller Seduction of the Innocent blamed the comics and their creators for every social ill to afflict America’s children.


  However, it wasn’t just EC’s often tasteless horror stories that fired Dr. Wertham’s rage; almost inexplicably, it was the innocent, floundering superhero titles that really got him foaming. Like any good predator, he could sense their weakness and knew that no articulate voice was likely to speak up as comic books’ advocate. If an “expert” like Wertham said they were pornography, then they were pornography. With little to offend anyone in the content of these comics, Wertham was forced to dig deep into an ever-fertile loam of subtext in order to justify a fevered one-handed attack that was conducted with the same brutish, ignorant disregard for the truth that was said to characterize America’s enemies.


  For example, in Batman’s living arrangements with ward Dick Grayson (Robin) and Alfred the butler, the good doctor was certain that he discerned the “wish-dream of two homosexuals living together.” Perhaps it was the wish-dream of two homosexuals. Only those particular two homosexuals could tell us for certain.

  Yes, it’s all too easy from a knowing adult perspective to infer Bruce Wayne’s epicene qualities. It wouldn’t take much pressure to gently dial up all the familiar elements of a Batman story until the fetishistic homosexual undercurrent implicit in the basic scenario of three generations of men living together in luxury and lawlessness stood revealed in all its black rubber glory. Director Joel Schumacher walked some way down that road in his universally reviled 1997 film Batman and Robin, with George Clooney, Chris O’Donnell, and Michael Gough occupying the central roles. There’s a case to be made for the satanic and even sexually transgressive appeal of Batman to adults: wealthy, literally Plutonian, and of the underworld, Batman inhabits a subterranean secret lair, dresses in badass black leather, enjoys the company of a small boy in tights, and has no steady girlfriend. Perhaps there remains to be written the great gay Batman story where he and Robin, and potentially Alfred too, are going at it like trip hammers between Batmobile cruising scenes, but the hollow specter of Dr. Wertham can take it from me that the young readers of Batman saw only a wish-dream of freedom and high adventure. It is Wertham whose name belongs in the annals of perversity, not Batman’s.


  Unsurprisingly, Wertham’s blue-movie take on Wonder Woman cast her as an outrageous lesbian, representing an island of perverse militant dykes with a taste for ritual bondage and domination. Astonishingly, he seemed almost oblivious to the more candid kinks of his rival pop psychologist Marston’s lifestyle, gnawing instead at the blatant lesbian shout-out in Wonder Woman’s oft-repeated oath, “SUFFERING SAPPHO!” which no doubt conjured predictable images in the good doctor’s strobe-lit imagination.


  But it was Superman—benign Superman—who bore the brunt of Wertham’s hatred. Describing the Man of Steel as a fascistic distortion of truth designed to make children feel inadequate and inclined toward delinquency, he opined obliquely:


  How can they respect the hard-working mother, father, or teacher who is so pedestrian, trying to teach the common rules of conduct, wanting you to keep your feet on the ground and unable even figuratively speaking to fly through the air? 


Psychologically Superman undermines The Authority and Dignity of the ordinary man and woman in the minds of children.”


  In Wertham’s diagnosis, then, children were too underdeveloped to separate the outlandish fantasy in their comic books from everyday reality, and this made them vulnerable to barely concealed homosexual and antisocial content.


  I tend to believe the reverse is true: that it’s adults who have the most trouble separating fact from fiction. A child knows that real crabs on the beach do not sing or talk like the cartoon crabs in The Little Mermaid. A child can accept all kinds of weird-looking creatures and bizarre occurrences in a story because the child understands that stories have different rules that allow for pretty much anything to happen.


  Adults, on the other hand, struggle desperately with fiction, demanding constantly that it conform to the rules of everyday life. Adults foolishly demand to know how Superman can possibly fly, or how Batman can possibly run a multibillion-dollar business empire during the day and fight crime at night, when the answer is obvious even to the smallest child: because it’s not real.


  Wertham’s assault made comics the focus of a nationwide hate campaign. Good Americans who had grown up with the inoffensive adventures of Superman and Batman gathered in howling mobs to burn superhero comics in mountainous heaps upon which the colorful, optimistic dream-people were turned to flame and ash, smoke and soot. (Within ten years, packs of goons just like these would be hurling Beatles albums on similar bonfires with equal brainless fervor.)


  In 1954 congressional hearings left horror publisher EC Comics wounded beyond repair. Purged of outlaw content, the remaining publishers banded together for survival and drafted a draconian Comics Code that would ensure child-friendly content. In its mean-spirited, machinelike thoroughness, its precise articulation of dos and don’ts, it was almost—to use the language of the day—Soviet in tone. In many ways, born from similar circumstances, the Comics Code mirrored the Hays Motion Picture Production Code of 1930, which aimed to transform the racy, intoxicated Hollywood movies into inoffensive, sexless fairy tales. The Thought Police were marching proudly in the Land of the Free :


  Policemen, judges, government officials, and respected institutions shall never be presented in such a way as to create disrespect for established Authority.


  Scenes dealing with, or instruments associated with, walking dead, torture, vampires and vampirism, ghouls, cannibalism, and werewolfism are prohibited.


  Respect for parents, the moral code, and for honorable behavior shall be fostered.


  And so on. Comics that conformed to code standards were published with a little “Approved by the Comics Code Authority” stamp in the top right corner. Comic books that didn’t carry the code were unlikely to be distributed or given space on newsstands and therefore faced extinction, so it was in the interests of publishers to comply. It seemed now that even the form that had conceived the superheroes, the 2-D universe in which they lived, was in peril.


  The Golden Age was over. But the world in which the heroes were dying was a world that needed them like never before. Fifties America was a land of edginess and prowling paranoia hovering as it did on the verge of thermonuclear annihilation. Alone at night, in the midst of unprecedented luxury after a successfully won world war, Americans were more frightened than ever before; there was fear of the Bomb, the Communist, the Homo, the Negro, the Teenager, the Id, the Flying Saucers, the Existential Void. There was the space race, with its launch into the limitless unknown, and Kinsey’s groundbreaking surveys into the sexual habits of Americans, opening the dripping treasure chest of a buttoned-up country’s inner life, revealing a sleep world of polychromatic polymorphous perversity acted out behind a camouflage of pipe-smoking patriarchs and Stepford wives. There were as many different kinds of fear as there were brands of gum.


  And as America turned its gaze inward in search of solutions to its sunlit terrors, it found The Shadow, and the multiheaded thing in the cellar emerged blinking in the light : Survival cultists, split personalities, UFO contactees like George Adamski were all admitted to the discourse, and people were willing to listen


The Dharma Bums and the beatniks had begun to crystallize from the margins into A Movement. The queer, the criminal, the deranged, and the inspired emerged like Morlocks from subterranean nightclub cellars spitting poetry. The spread of psychedelics and marijuana through the jazz underground into the arts schools and the emergent culture of rock ’n’ roll hastened the rise of this fringe. The urge to control and tame the American subconscious was now spawning new things to attempt to control, newer and weirder ideas to understand and explain away.


  By the middle of the twentieth century, then, history was happening too fast, at an increasingly heightened pitch, and the tide of futurity seemed unstoppable. Nothing was stable after all. Not the war, not the peace, not the Self. Perhaps only the superheroes could have made sense of an accelerated, mediated world like this, but to a man, to a woman, they were gone, banished beyond the outer dark by their fearful adversaries.


  Soon, though, they would return to soar higher, faster, and farther than ever before. So high, so far, and so fast, in fact, that they had to start up a whole new age just to contain them…..”

 

Can You get A Human to Love Them BACK?




"No Fate". 

"No Fate, but What We Make" —
My FATHER Told Her This











Those were the years after the ice caps had melted..


Amsterdam, Venice, New York... forever lost.

Millions of people were displaced.

Climates became chaotic.


Hundreds of millions of people starved in poorer countries.


Elsewhere, a high degree of prosperity survived, when most Governments in The Developed Worldintroduced legal sanctions to strictly license pregnancies, which was why Robots, who are never hungry and who did not consume resources beyond those of their first manufacture, were so essential an economic link... in the chain mail of Society.



To create an artificial being has been the dream of man... since the birth of science Not merely the beginning of the modern age... when our forbearers astonished the world with the first thinking machines... primitive monsters that could play chess How far we have come

The artificial being is a reality... of perfect simulacrum... articulated in limb articulate in speech... and not lacking in human response

And even pain-memory response

How did that make you feel? Angry? Shocked?

I don't understand. What did I do to your feelings?

You did it to my hand All right There's the rub Undress. At Cybertronics of New Jersey the artificial being has reached its highest form The universally-adopted Mecha… the basis for hundreds of models serving the human race... in all the multiplicity of daily life That's far enough But we have no reason to congratulate ourselves We are rightly proud of it but what does it amount to?

Sheila, open

A sensory toy... with intelligent behavioral circuits... using neurone-sequencing technology... as old as I am

I believe that my work on mapping the impulse pathways in a single neurone... can enable us to construct... a Mecha of a qualitatively different order

I propose... that we build a robot... who can love. Love?

But we ship thousands of lover models every month. Of course You're your own best customer, Syatyoo-Sama.

Quality control is very important.

Tell me. What is love?

Love is first widening my eyes a little bit... and quickening my breathing a little... and warming my skin and touching my...

And so on. Exactly so. Thank you, Sheila

But I wasn't referring to sensuality simulators The word that I used was love.


Love like The Love of A Child for its Parents….


I propose that we build A Robot Child, who can LOVE


A robot child who will genuinely Love, The Parent or Parents it imprints on, with A Love that will never end….


A child-substitute Mecha?


But a Mecha with a MIND, with neuronal feedback….



You see, what I'm suggesting is that Love will be The Key, by which They acquire a kind of subconscious never before achieved 


An Inner World of metaphor

of intuition of self-motivated reasoning of dreams. 


A robot that dreams?

Yes. How exactly do we pull this off?



You know, it occurs to me... 

With all this animus existing against Mechas today, it isn't simply A Question of Creating A Robot who can Love


Isn't the real conundrum —

Can You get A Human to Love Them BACK?



Ours will be a perfect child caught in a freeze-frame...

Always loving, never ill, never changing —


With all the childless couples yearning in vain for A License, our little Mecha will not only open up a completely new market but it will fill a great Human Need.


But you haven't answered My Question — 


If A Robot could genuinely Love A Person — What responsibility does that person hold toward that Mecha in return?


….it's a moral question, isn't it?”


“….The Oldest One 

of All.

But in The Beginning, 


Didn't God create Adam 

to Love Him…?



No.





He created Adam to BE (as) Him, 

a Living IMAGE of Him,

and to Love 

His Creation


The World.




Rama-Kandra

You do not understand.


Neo:  

I just have never…


Rama-Kandra:

...heard A Program Speak of Love?


Neo:  

It’s a… human emotion.


Rama-Kandra:  

No, it is a word.

What matters is the connection the word implies

I see that You are In Love. 

Can you tell me what you would give to hold on to that connection?


Neo

Anything.


Rama-Kandra:  

Then perhaps the reason you’re Here 

is not so different from the reason I’m Here.

Beauty

Abashed The Devil stood,
And felt how awful Goodness is…





"....and Beauty is just absolutely 
Terrifying to People -- because 
Beauty highlights What's Ugly."

Even though You have been raised 
as a Human Being, 
You are Not One of Them.

They can be A Great People, Kal-El,
They Wish to Be --
They only lack The Light to 
Show The Way

For This Reason,
Above All Others --
Their Capacity for Good...

I Have Sent Them You --
My Only Son.



“At nineteen when I first saw the already-dead Bill Hicks 
I felt A Bodily Transference — 

I felt Empowered and 
Inspired by him. 

‘Inspired’ – 
He put BREATH into Me…
And Breath is Life

It is curious to me that in early life My Mentors were remote Famous or Dead or both.”

Mentors
Russell Brand














Jordan Peterson on Why Beauty Is Terrifying | w/ Theo Von










"....and Beauty is just absolutely 
Terrifying to People -- because 
Beauty highlights What's Ugly."


See, it has taken me a long time
 to finally figure out, now 
(at an intellectual level)
quite WHY it has never bothered me 
that The Lady Ghostbusters hire a 
Regulation Standard-Hottie, 
HimBo Stud-Muffin
(Kevin, God of Sandwiches)
to Answer Their Phone for them
and Run The Office for them 
that they do not have --




Abashed The Devil stood,
And felt how awful Goodness is, 
and saw Virtue in her shape how lovely; 
saw, and pined His loss.



There are Heroes on Both Sides : Evil is Everywhere













What do you do when 
You're Not Sure

That's The Topic of 
My Sermon today. 

Last year when President Kennedy was assassinated, 
who among us did not experience 
the most profound 
Disorientation? Despair? 
Which way? 
What now? 

What do I say to my kids
What do I tell myself? 

It was a time of people sitting together, 
bound together by a common feeling of Hopelessness

But THINK of that — 

Your Bond with 
Your Fellow Being 
was Your Despair

It was a public experience,
it was awful
but We were in it together

How much worse is it then for the lone man, 
the lone woman, stricken by a private calamity? 

"No one knows I'm sick. " 

"No one knows I've lost my last real friend. " 

"No one knows I've done something wrong. " 

Imagine the isolation. 

Now you see The World as through A Window. 
On one side of the glass, happy untroubled people
and on the other side, you

God bless you, Sister.

Thank you. 

I wanna Tell You A Story. 

A cargo ship sank one night. 
It caught fire and went down, 
and only this one sailor survived. 

He found a lifeboat, rigged a sail, 
and being of a nautical discipline 
turned His Eyes to The Heavens 
and Read The Stars. 

He set a course for His Home, 
and, exhausted, fell asleep. 

Just keeps going on. 

Clouds rolled in, and for the next 20 nights, 
he could no longer see the stars. 

He thought he was on course, 
but there was 
no way to be certain

And as the days rolled on, 
and The Sailor wasted away, 
he began to have 
doubts

He just keeps on going. 

Had he set His Course right? 

Was he still going on towards His Home? 

Or was he horribly lost 
and doomed to 
a terrible death? 

No way to know. 

The message of the constellations, 
had he imagined it because of his desperate circumstance…? 

Or had he seen Truth once... 
Straighten up! 
... and now had to hold on to it 
without further reassurance? 

There are those of you in Church today
who know EXACTLY 
The Crisis of Faith I describe
and I wanna say to you, 
Doubt can be A Bond 
as powerful and sustaining as Certainty

When you are Lost, 
You are Not Alone. 




Feed The Wolf Inside












Holo Security Officer : 
Our scans picked you out right away. 
A rigorous debrief is protocol for Terrans. 

Holo Security Officer 2 : 
We also know You're a Murderer in at least TWO Universes. 
Don't look at Him. Look at Us. 

Holo Security Officer :
So, this will be your second universe, your third timeline. 
Depends on how you look at it. 


Evil Georgiou :
I like to look at it like this -- 

Holo Security Officer 2 :
Why are you blinking? 

Evil Georgiou :
Why aren't you

Holo Security Officer :
What was Your Connection to Control? 

Evil Georgiou :
We Dated. 

Holo Security Officer 2 :
All Terrans are Duplicitous by Their Biology. 

Evil Georgiou :
Or Biplicitous by Our Duology. 

Holo Security Officer :
Neither "ology" has anything to do with it. 
You may not be aware, but in the past hundred years, 
We've discovered a chimeric strain on the subatomic level in The Terran stem cell. 

Evil Georgiou :
Silly Holo. You cannot rattle me 
by introducing a completely fabricated biological component 
to My Nastiness and Inherently Bad Behavior. 
I'm Extremely WICKED, even for a Terran. 

Holo Security Officer :
Who are you? 

Evil Georgiou :
What if You're NOT A Holo? 

Make her stop. 

Evil Georgiou :
What if You're A Human programmed 
to THINK He's A Holo? 


( Chuckles

Big Glasses :
You broke My Holos. 

Evil Georgiou :
Blinking at their harmonic rate disrupts the holo protocols, 
creating a reference loop that shuts them down. 
Upgrade Your Programs and Stop Wasting My Time.
 
Why are You Wearing Glasses? 

Big Glasses :
Um, they make me look smarter
I Like 'em

Evil Georgiou :
....I MIGHT Decide to Like You -- 
Debrief as You Will. 



Big Glasses :
You're Curious about My Badge. 

Evil Georgiou :
I'm Bored. 
I Thought I could break it down for parts. 


Big Glasses :
Play with it. 

He removes his badge and rank insignia 
from his uniform, tossing it over and across the desk -- 
She CRUSHES it in her fist, 
letting it drop onto the desk and roll onto the floor, 
as a tight ball of twisted metal.

Big Glasses :
It's clear, Emperor, what you're capable of. 
What's NOT Clear to Me is 
Why You chose to come here. 

Evil Georgiou :
I Have a Curious Nature. 

Big Glasses :
Really? April 5 is My Birthday. 
A Terran Holy Day. April 5, 2063... 
first-ever contact between Terrans and a Vulcan survey ship. 
But then, Your People slaughtered everybody on board. 

Evil Georgiou :
Vulcans need to learn to stay in Their Lane sometimes. 
And it's not like it's a HIGH Holy Day. 

Big Glasses :
I've been fascinated by 
Terran History and Methodology
since I was a boy.
 
There are VERY FEW species 
that DO Things simply to DO them. 

Evil Georgiou :
We're mostly untroubled by pesky motivations. 
Except for Revenge. We Do Like That One. 

Big Glasses :
It seems you've created An Empire 
based on The Maxim, 
"Because We FEEL Like It." 

So WHY would you EVER join a Starfleet Crew? 
If you simply wanted 
to butcher them, You would have. 

Evil Georgiou :
Much as I enjoy being fetishized... and I Do... 
I'll Answer Your Questions if You Answer Mine first. 

Big Glasses :
No, You won't really do that. 

Evil Georgiou :
Correct. 

Big Glasses :
And even if You Did, You'd Lie
So the only way I'll glean ANY Information 
is via The Questions You Ask ME. 
So, please : -- 

Evil Georgiou :
Who's REALLY in Charge now? 
The Burn appeared to have been 
quite the humbling experience for The Federation. 
Who was responsible? 

Big Glasses :
That's Two Questions. 
Pick one. 

.....There are conflicting theories, 
but no hard proof pointing at any one particular Bad Guy. 

Evil Georgiou :
Sounds like The Federation lost a step. Or five. 


Big Glasses :
And yet it endures. Unlike The Terran Empire, which fell centuries ago. 

Were you aware that the distance between our two universes 
started expanding sometime after your departure? 
There hasn't been a single crossing in over 500 years. 
You didn't know that, did you? You're all alone now

Evil Georgiou :
I think... You and The Federation are afraid. 
Because whoever DID this must be Merciless
A Threat to Whatever or Whomever you hold Dear. 
The Weakness of People is generally Other People... isn't it

Big Glasses :
You're Not Wrong. 
But that could also explain 
Why You'd fall in line with Discovery. 
There's A Person on The Crew... 
You Care About, isn't there?