Page Summary
Active Entries
- 1: Photo cross-post
- 2: Interesting Links for 28-11-2025
- 3: Interesting Links for 27-11-2025
- 4: Photo cross-post
- 5: Photo cross-post
- 6: Interesting Links for 21-11-2025
- 7: Interesting Links for 26-11-2025
- 8: Interesting Links for 20-11-2025
- 9: Interesting Links for 23-11-2025
- 10: Interesting Links for 25-11-2025
Style Credit
- Style: Neutral Good for Practicality by
Expand Cut Tags
No cut tags
no subject
Date: 2007-07-06 07:10 pm (UTC)My impression is that the idea of a single superhero (as distinct from a superior race) goes back to Wylie's Gladiator(1930).
no subject
Date: 2007-07-06 07:17 pm (UTC)http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Friedrich_Nietzsche
no subject
Date: 2007-07-06 07:23 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2007-07-06 07:34 pm (UTC)As I understand it though, Neitzsche's Ubermensch can be translated as either ultimate or over-man. In which case Prof. X / Magneto are merely different sides of the same coin. This motif of antagonists merely making different moral choices that lead them to 'good' and 'evil' is something that recurs again and again in popular fiction. I suppose one could argue that this popular trend could have been deliberately utilised rather than being a cultural influence...
no subject
Date: 2007-07-06 10:11 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2007-07-06 10:42 pm (UTC)The concept of the NIetzschian uber man is quite distinct - it is a human but a certain perfect quality of human, vamped up as it were... (=> Aryan super-man, etc etc)
no subject
Date: 2007-07-07 06:36 am (UTC)I'm not equating this with the Nietzschian Übermensch, but I would suggest that such heroes are for the most part more direct fore-runners of comic-book superheroes.