Adam Rogers, Wired; Stan Lee Unleashed the Heroic Power of the Outcast
"From the fantasy-pulp midden, Lee had excavated a gem of a truth: These 
tales about men and women in garish tights hitting each other were also 
about more. Superheroes had incredible abilities, yes, but they were 
also often the victims of prejudice themselves, or trapped in moral webs
 stronger than anything Spider-Man ever thwipped. So the comics 
appealed to people who felt the same, even before Lee and the other 
Marvel creators published the first African American heroes, the first 
popular Asian American heroes, and strong, leading-character women in 
numbers large enough to populate a dozen summer crossovers...
His death encouraged people to tell stories of Lee’s kindness and 
enthusiasm. But for every story that circulated after Lee’s death about 
how wonderful and caring he was, comics professionals tell other tales 
in which Lee is … not.
Every bit as complicated as the characters 
he helped bring into the world, Lee taught generations of nerds the 
concepts of responsibility, morality, and love. He waged a sometimes 
ham-fisted battle against prejudice, misunderstanding, and evil. This is
 what makes some of nerd-dom’s recent tack toward intolerance so 
painful; otherishness is engineered into comics’ radioactive, mutated 
DNA. Even if Lee wasn’t a super human, he was superhuman, empowering 
colleagues to leap creative obstacles and to give readers a sense of 
their own secret strengths."
The Paperback version of my Bloomsbury book "Ethics, Information, and Technology" will be published on Nov. 13, 2025; the Ebook on Dec. 11; and the Hardback and Cloth versions on Jan. 8, 2026. Preorders are available via Amazon and this Bloomsbury webpage: https://www.bloomsbury.com/us/ethics-information-and-technology-9781440856662/
Showing posts with label victims of prejudice themselves. Show all posts
Showing posts with label victims of prejudice themselves. Show all posts
Friday, December 21, 2018
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