Posted: 01 July 2015 at 7:20pm | IP Logged | 11
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I think most people miss the point that the early sixties where a time of effervescent ideas: the civil rights movement, the eastern-western political polarization, the space race, the materialization of technology which people only read about in science fiction magazines.
The return of the superhero was, what, in 1956 with the Barry Allen Flash? Batman nearly ceasing publication and being saved by the campy TV show.
Weird anthology series like the Twilight Zone, the Outer Limits, Science Fiction Theatre, and One Step Beyond are remarkably suggestive of the types of stories Lee, Kirby & Ditko were coming up with.
Not the least of which was taking part in a world war: Kirby's WWII experiences alone could probably fuel enough stories for a long lasting TV series.
The book Chariots of the Gods inspired Kirby to create the Eternals -- as far as I know -- a valuable Marvel property.
The Depression left its mark on Lee, Kirby & Ditko -- it seems poverty was a pattern in Ditko's youth -- so we see Spider-Man broke most of the time and having to sew his own suit.
Kirby grew up on on the lower east side of New York in a setting of street gangs and he himself was often drawn into actual brawls, throwing punches and kicks: it's little wonder he could draw such spectacular battles.
My point is that the founders of the Marvel age received narrative inspiration from a number of streams that are probably dried up today. It was fashionable to speculate about life on Mars in the 60s but today we know through Nasa's probe programs that Dejah Thoris never lived there.
Who creates comics today that has had personal adventures and experiences not unlike those of the heroes they depict? Kirby certainly did and to a large extent so did Lee and Ditko.
And we expect the same kind of comics produced today, by a wave of what -- dilettantes that could work in other mediums? Kirby had to work as he had a family of 6 to support -- he didn't have other revenue streams and this was decades before comic books and their creators were elevated as a genuine form of literature in the eyes of the public.
The well is dry ladies and gentlemen. We live in a era that is sterile to the imagination, where our biggest challenge is figuring out how much salary increase we are going to get after last weeks annual review, where wars have moved from the battlefield to the stock exchanges.
Witness how even mighty Russia is arrested in its plans to conquer the Ukraine by economic levers that didn't affect Hitler one bit when 75 years earlier he decided Germany needed more living room.
When was the last time you inspected a bomb shelter before deciding on buying a home? Or have your kids tell you how they practiced a bomb drill at school today? People did 60 years ago.
The 21st century, the dawn of the age of the commoditized (sterilized) imagination.
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