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When one looks in the box, whatever remains, however improbable, must be the cat.

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“All of this philosophical stuff makes my hair hurt,” remarked veteran superhero scribe and former Marvel Editor-in-Chief Tom DeFalco; “That’s why I lost mine,” affirmed educator and comics scholar Geoff Klock. We all know baldness is the superpower of the smartest characters on both sides of comics’ crisp line between good and evil, from Charles Xavier to Lex Luthor, and serious study was the mark of a sincere love of this simple artform at the panel discussion “What is a Superhero?” at the Tribeca location of New York City’s influential cultural institution 92Y last week.

The good-humored and well-considered panel was the kind of event worth skipping retailers’ weekly New Comic Day for. DeFalco and Klock—two contributors to the book What is a Superhero?and Dr. Robin S. Rosenberg—the book’s co-editor—discussed the social and psychological underpinnings of this strange and uniquely modern form of fantasy, and what it means to differing generations of enthusiasts.

DeFalco drew a distinction between the superhero, who traditionally does good whether it rewards him or herself or not and sticks to standards that distance these figures from the forces they’re fighting, and the pulp hero, who is so deep in the battle with wrongdoers that this contrast is blurred: “Have you read the Shadow novels? The villain kills four or five people, and then the Shadow kills about 45 people.”

DeFalco, Klock, and Rosenberg lamented this trend of bullying and recklessness in movies like Man of Steel (though I think that point is more complex, too), and Klock qualified that “It’s difficult to determine where to set the boundaries” between genres because the pop melting-pot makes so many of them overlap—“comics come out of pulps, samurai movies were turned into Westerns,” and Westerns supplied the pattern for a lot of formative sci-fi.

92y What is a Superhero

Klock theorized that the superhero was the urban icon of masculinity, while the cowboy was the rural one—though both these mythic worlds and the hyper-gender roles they represent are the stuff of bygone eras rather than an idealized future. Asked by Rosenberg about the place of superheroines, DeFalco suggested that male readers traditionally favored combat while female fans related to the kind of conflict-resolution that defined his own Spider-Girl (which, modesty aside, was an uncommonly humanistic super-saga that lasted 100-plus issues).

This was a contentious distinction to some women in the audience, including one follower of writer Kelly Sue DeConnick’s popular (and conventionally kickass) current Carol Danvers/Captain Marvel series, whose success neither DeFalco nor Klock offered an explanation for (though the recent admission of women to combat in the U.S. military, and both the character’s and the writer’s background in that world, may have something to do with it).

In general, though, Klock and DeFalco felt that these are difficult days for heroes of any kind. “Once you get past [age] 14 or 15, you have a hard time accepting heroes in real life,” remarked DeFalco, and Klock noted that “all prestige television is about antiheroes”—from Mad Men to Breaking Bad—with “alpha males struggling against a collapsing patriarchy.” Still, DeFalco said, “When I sit down to write, it’s my job to dive into that fantasy [of heroes doing the right thing for its own sake], and believe it, and embrace it and convince all of you guys that this is possible.”

He went on to assert that most of the “dark” hero movies (with the considerable exception of the three most recent Bat-flicks and Man of Steel) have proven nowhere near as commercially successful as the generally upbeat (and multiplex-ruling) Marvel franchises—though Klock pointed out the subtle incorporation of this vigilante/paragon tension into the Avengers movie, in which we first see a demoralized and troubled Captain America, hiding from the modern world, who “has to be talked into being a hero—probably because he heard about Vietnam and saw the Dark Knight trilogy.”

What is a Superhero

While the two speakers agreed, in answer to  Rosenberg’s question about the role of physical aggression in the superhero archetype, that “comics are built for colorful action” (DeFalco) and that vigilante heroism provides necessary ingredients of the genre—“not playing by the rules ups the drama” (Klock)—they also insist that a sense of consequence is what humanizes superhumans. “It has to cost them something to go out and do this,” DeFalco offered, with Peter Parker’s crushing family commitments and personal conflicts as an example. “That’s why Green Lantern is terrible,” added Klock. “He’s this golden-boy pilot, whose girlfriend is a millionaire, and he already has everything, PLUS a magic ring—it’s terrible storytelling.”

We regular humans need to strive and probably want our role models to have to as well, a verisimilitude in even this fanciful artform that may have prompted an audience question to Rosenberg, a professional psychologist, about how accurate she finds the psychological subtext of superhero motivations. She explained, “any good fiction has two important elements: the writer was a really good observer of human behavior, and they’re able to communicate it in a perceptive way,” which makes pop writers with good instincts and mass insight a kind of “lay psychologist.”

At the start of the evening Rosenberg showed a series of slides and asked the audience which figures were or were not superheroes. Opinion was emphatic that Buffy was and the Shadow wasn’t, and that Kick-Ass-esque real-life vigilantes weren’t but doctors volunteering in disaster-ravaged Haiti were. But the crowd seemed split on some people doing their everyday jobs in extraordinary circumstances, from the 9/11 firefighters to Sully Sullenberger. Perhaps because we prefer our fantasy figures to be the epitome of what we wish for, while thoughtful studies like Rosenberg’s allow for our fallibility, and work at defining what makes us the humans we can truly hope to be.


Adam McGovern’s dad taught comics to college classes and served as a project manager in the U.S. government’s UFO-investigating operation in the 1950s; the rest is made up. There is material proof, however, that Adam has written comicbooks for Image (The Next issue Project), Trip City.com, the acclaimed indie broadsheets POOD and Magic Bullet, and GG Studios, blogs regularly for HiLoBrow.com and ComicCritique and posts at his own risk on the personal site Fanchild. He lectures on pop culture in forums like The NY Comics & Picture-story Symposium and interviewed time-traveling author Glen Gold at the back of his novel Sunnyside (and at this link). Adam proofreads graphic novels for First Second and Holt, has official dabblings in produced plays, recorded songs and published poetry, and is available for commitment ceremonies and intergalactic resistance movements. His future self will be back to correct egregious typos and word substitutions in this bio any minute now. And then he’ll kill Hitler, he promises.

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