23.2.10

DC Comics With Popular Superheroes

Perhaps no one understands the concept of "heroes and villains" or "good versus bad" as well as Malcolm Wheeler-Nicholson. Malcolm was born into a highly regarded Portland family who entertained guests such as Teddy Roosevelt and Rudyard Kipling.

He found his calling as a young army officer, serving around the world in Japan and Russia. According to Wheeler-Nicholson, he "chased bandits on the Mexican border, fought fevers and played polo in the Philippines, led a battalion of infantry against the Bolsheviki in Siberia, helped straighten out the affairs of the army in France [and] commanded the headquarters cavalry of the American force in the Rhine."

It was only fitting then, that he would go on to found DC Comics, leaving behind a legacy of graphic novels that took a closer look at the struggle between heroes and villains.

Following the "Golden Age of comic books" came the "Silver Age" of the 1950s and 1960s, where DC Comics superheroes became a little more human. The Flash was the first DC character that wasn't created by supernatural or alien means.

He had been human, until a lab accident imbued him with superhero powers. While many more characters would follow this model, particularly by Marvel Comic Books, The Flash was the precursor and inspired an amalgamation of science fiction and superheroes that persists even today.

DC Comics may be the oldest of the "superhero" genre, although it's certainly not the only one. Its rival, Marvel Comics, has seen decades of illustrious success, picking up its steam in the 1960s, pushing comics graphic novels to new heights as a way to grapple with psychological issues and purge frustrations with oneself and society at large.

There will always be heroes and villains in the world so it's unlikely that this medium, which is often passed down from generation to generation, will ever die.

To read more DC Comics With Popular Superheroes

Add to Technorati Favorites

No comments: