Professional Documents
Culture Documents
SUPERMAN CREATED BY
IDW PUBLISHING
San Diego
DC COMICS
[Although no records have been uncovered that specify which stories were written by Siegel, a reading of the text reveal hallmarks of his style in all stories except the Supermans Service to Servicemen sequence, which corresponds to his induction into the army on July 4, 1943.]
Bruce Canwell INTRODUCTION Mark Waid COVERS Pete Poplaski MARKETING DIRECTOR Beau Smith
STRIP RESTORATION BY
IDW Publishing, a Division of Idea and Design Works, LLC 5080 Santa Fe Street, San Diego, CA 92109 www.idwpublishing.com LibraryofAmericanComics.com
Ted Adams, Chief Executive Officer/Publisher Greg Goldstein, Chief Operating Officer/President Robbie Robbins, EVP/Sr. Graphic Artist Chris Ryall, Chief Creative Officer/Editor-in-Chief Matthew Ruzicka, CPA, Chief Financial Officer Alan Payne, VP of Sales Dirk Wood, VP of Marketing Lorelei Bunjes, VP of Digital Services
LibraryofAmericanComics.com
Superman and 2013 DC Comics. All rights reserved. The Library of American Comics is a trademark of The Library of American Comics LLC. All rights reserved. With the exception of artwork used for review purposes, none of the comic strips in this publication may be reprinted without the permission of DC Comics. No part of this book may be reproduced or transmitted in any form, electronic or mechanical, including photocopying, recording, or by any information and retrieval system, without permission in writing from DC Comics. Printed in Korea.
The strips reprinted in this volume were produced in a time when racial and social caricatures played a larger role in society and popular culture. They are reprinted without alteration for historical reference.
An Introduction
by MARK WAID
debut on the front page of their Saturday edition. By the time America entered the Second World War, Superman was featured in nearly two hundred fifty papers nationwide, with a combined circulation of twenty-five million readers. Along the way, his powersand the evils he faced had continued to evolve as Siegel, Shuster, and their assistants churned out as many adventures as they humanly could to feed the readerships voracious demand for more. Initially, Superman could run faster than an express train, leap a twenty-story building, and lift automobiles. By the war years, he was flying across continents in less time than it takes to tell, shrugging off grenade blasts and artillery fire, and in general doing anything his creators could imagine except enter the European Theater. Once you link the ideas Superman and World War Two, you quickly see the problem. If the mightiest hero in comics applies his vast super-powers to ending all hostilities, which he could do in a day, the world of his fantastic exploits ceases to resemble the real world of his readers. But if he sits the war out, what kind of manwhat kind of Superman, what kind of Americanis he? His editors and writers approached this in the obvious manner: they had it both ways. Superman would do anything for the armed servicesshort of joining up. And he always stayed out of the actual fightingexcept when he didnt. In the stories, the Man of Steels failure to enlist was explained away by a comical mishap involving x-ray vision (shown in strips 259 and 260 herein). But an earlier strip (212) put into Supermans dialog a more authentic, more genuinely moving explanation than has been proffered anywhere else: How can you beat soldiers with that sort of spiritthe spirit that makes Americans fight against any sort of odds! For me to interfere would bewell, presumptuous! Underscoring this touching sense of a hero apart, Superman comic books rarely addressed the war directly. Instead they supplied steady escapist entertainment to servicemen and women overseas, to whom copies were bulk-shipped. The covers
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were another matter. They became reliable monthly propaganda posters in which Superman rode missiles to their targets, punched German tanks, physically dominated Hitler and Tojo, and waved the American flag. The newspaper strips spoke more directly to the home frontto friends and loved ones who worried and prayed but were powerless to protect the young soldiers plucked from their lives. Perhaps sensing an appetite for wish fulfillment, the creators of this eras Sunday strips (believed written by Siegel and DC editor Whitney Ellsworth, drawn by former Shuster apprentice Wayne Boring) began in the summer of 1943 a series called Supermans Service for Servicemen. Ostensibly inspired by a real-life sergeant who wished Superman could whisk him to his distant home and back on his meager one-day leave, the strips editors staked out a simple format. Real servicemen would send their real wishes to the real newspaper, and the Man of Steel would use his powers to grant them on the page. Breaking the fourth wall, Superman himself invited soldiers, sailors and marinesand that includes you women in service, too to submit any particularly tough problems youd like me to help you solve. For the next two years of Sundays, the Man of Steel delivered mail (by air), did soldiers chores (at super-speed), and interfered in romantic problems (with a grudging reluctance). He delivered a fresh cake to a lucky birthday boy, flew a busload of showgirls to a military base dance party, tamed a horse, and whisked an expectant father home just ahead of the stork. He undertook most of these feats at the urging of Lois Lane, who read all the incoming requests with a special eye toward uniting sweethearts. Superman also seemed to be dramatizing pleas from the War Department, as when he influenced one town to write letters to its lonely soldiers and another to evict a gang of gremlins whispering temptations that would weaken wartime morale. This Man of Steel anticipates later interpretations. He is welcomed everywhere by law-abiding people, like the Christopher Reeve Superman who delivers a sputtering Gene Hackman to appreciative prison guards, due process be damned. He rubs elbows with the highest rungs of authority, like the Silver Age Superman who arranges for President John F. Kennedy to preserve his secret identity by impersonating Clark Kent. Even the wartime enemy looks up to him...and thats
where things get ugly, and not at all like the latter-day Metropolis Marvel. In a storyline beginning April 23, 1944, a Japanese army commander invites Superman to a Pacific island to provide entertainment for his weary troops. Pretending to honor the request, the Man of Steel cheerfully sets them up for a lethal ambush by allied forces. But thats not the ugly part; this is war, after all. This is where we should warn readers of Asian descent and/or nervous dispositions and/or a speck of human decency that these were different times, a period of American history where patriotism and outright racism were too often, too easily conflated in popular culture. Most entertainment of the day trafficked heavily in mocking Americas enemiesparticularly the Japaneseand the funny pages was no exception. That such treatment makes an enemy seem less human and therefore easier to kill is an unsettling idea all these decades later, and it makes you wonder how we apply it in our wars today. But the really upsetting thing is seeing Supermanthe friendly cop, the gentle older brother, the very symbol of power merged with kindnessbuy into this trope as the war wears on, culminating in a scene where he pulls off a gleefully nasty impersonation (strip 307). We can say in the Man of Steels defense only that he and his writers and artists knew theyd gone too far; after the war and to this day, Superman has appeared in dozens of public service announcements preaching brotherhood and tolerance for all races, and today the character is practically synonymous with fairness and equality. World War Two ends before this volume does, and we get to cleanse our palates with a retelling of the origin. This is a compact version that faithfully merges all of the agreed-upon elements up to this point, even revisiting the Jack Kennedy (that name again!) murder case from Jerry Siegel and Joe Shusters very first Superman story. From there the mood lightens considerably. Superman watches over Lois Lane as she embarks in an experimental rocket on a space exploration that ends up on an advanced planet ruled by a tyrannical queen. After that, its off to the circus, where a sad clown risks his life for the love of a glamorous acrobat. With the wars lasting consequences yet to be felt, we gaze at the Man of Steels feats under the big top with amazement and relief.
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The Superman Sunday page began on November 5, 1939 and the first 183 Sundays were reprinted in a handsome horizontal edition by DC Comics and Kitchen Sink Press. Our series begins with Strip #184 from May 1943 and will continue until the series ended in May 1966. At that time, we will return to the first 183 Sundays and present them in a vertical format that matches the rest of the series. We invite you to enjoy these marvelous Sunday pages that have never been previously reprinted. Dean Mullaney, Editor
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