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Who
Watches the Watchmen?
Geoff Klock, the author of the insightful 'How to Read Superhero
Comics and Why' asks some fascinating literary questions of a
genre whose main protagonists wear their underwear on the outside.
In this article, he looks at Alan Moore's revolutionary graphic novel,
Watchmen.
Alan
Moore’s revisionary superhero narrative Watchmen expresses
its anxieties about the recurrence of the fictional repressed in
terms of the return of the dead. Before looking closely at this
trope however, we must understand Watchmen’s rather different
stance on the superhero: its criticism.
It
begins questioning the assumptions of the superhero with its title,
which lures the comic-savvy reader into assuming that it is the
eponym of a superhero team around which the book revolves – not
in fact the case.
The last page of the work reveals that the title
is actually taken from the Juvinal epigraph "Quis custodiet
ipsos custodes?" ("Who watches the watchmen?"),
a phrase that occurs throughout the work in the form of graffiti.
The statement contains a kind of a priori destabilization
of the assumptions that make superhero comics work: that heroes
can simply look after a population without complications.
The understanding that the police require policemen
ad infinitum questions whether the very foundations of superhero
literature can in fact be maintained. Watchmen declares that
they cannot.
Moore takes on a more complex job than Miller.
Watchmen is an attempt to make sense of superhero history
is all its varied aspects rather than synthesize the history of
a single character. A sprawling work much longer than The Dark
Knight Returns, it engages comic book history through a number
of devices including epigraphs for all twelve issues culled from
sources as disparate as Jung, Blake, Shelley, Nietzsche, Einstein,
Bob Dylan, John Cale, and the Bible.
Each issue, with the exception of the last, is
also accompanied by a prose piece from the fictional world of Watchmen:
excerpts from the autobiography of a retired hero, right and left
wing newspapers articles, Sally Jupiter’s scrapbook, a psychological
profile on one of the heroes, a scientific article on Dr. Manhattan’s
powers, and an essay on bird watching by the alter ego of Night
Owl, Dan Dreiberg.
An analysis of Watchmen cannot simply reiterate
points made about The Dark Knight Returns. We will look at
a few key strains in Watchmen, paying attention to where
it differs from Miller’s work. Observations on The Dark Knight
Returns placed alongside an analysis of Watchmen, will
give a complete picture of the first phase of the revisionary superhero
narrative.
The first thing to note is the difference between
Miller’s realism and Alan Moore’s. As noted above Miller’s realism
revises by intensifying the superhero narrative, insisting on its
perspective as the answer to the "multiple choice" comic
book history in which it participates. Miller’s is a movement, in
Bloom’s terminology, of tessera: "A poet antithetically
‘completes’ his precursor, by so reading the parent-poem as to retain
its terms but to mean them in another sense, as though the precursor
had failed to go far enough."
Alan Moore’s realism, on the other hand, performs
a kenosis toward comic book history,
The later poet, apparently emptying himself
of his own afflatus, his imaginative godhood, seems to humble
himself as though he were ceasing to be a poet, but his ebbing
is so performed in relation to the precursor’s poem-of-ebbing
that the precursor is emptied out also, and so the latter poem
of deflation is not as absolute as it seems.
Moore’s realism does not ennoble and empower his
characters as Miller’s realism does for Batman. Rather it sends
a wave of disruption back through superhero history by asking, for
example, What would make a person dress up in a costume and fight
crime? Dan Dreiberg sees his own adoption of the Night Owl persona
as a childish fantasy: "Being a crimefighter … was just this
adolescent, romantic thing …
That’s why I sort of regretted the Crimebusters
falling through back in sixty-whenever-it-was. It would have been
like joining the Knights of the Round Table." He names his
airship after Merlin’s Owl from The Sword and the Stone.
While endearing, there is something distinctly sad for the comic
book reader confronting Dan’s realization that "it’s all crap
dressed up with a lot of flash and thunder. I mean, who needs all
this hardware to catch hookers and purse-snatchers?"
Here, Moore de-values one of the basic superhero
convention by placing his masked crimefighters in a realistic world
where flashy masked villains – albeit with a few pathetic exceptions
– simply don’t exist. Superheroes only make sense in a world where
masked opponents support their fantasy, and masked opponents only
exist to fight superheroes.
The fictionality of a genre which might appear
to have some elements of social relevance because its setting is
contemporary urban America rather than medieval times or outer space,
is exposed in a particularly tragic way. Moore’s kenosis
is a powerful strategy: to defeat comic book history with superheroes
is to take your place at the head of the tradition.
Moore connects the decision to dress up as a masked
crimefighter, not only with childhood fantasies and mid-life crises
of the idle rich, but also with the more disturbing and interesting
issue of sexual fetish. Dan Dreiberg (Night Owl) keeps a picture
of an old costumed villain, The Twilight Lady – posed on a bed,
dressed in leather, and sporting a riding crop.
He fails to perform sexually with Laurie Juspeczyk
(the second Silk Specter) until they embrace in costume after a
night adventuring. Laurie asks, "Did the costumes make it good?
Dan…?" To which he replies "Yeah. Yeah, I guess the costumes
had something to do with it. It just feels strange, you know? To
come out and admit that to somebody. To come out of the closet."
The public is fully aware of the sexual dimension
of these self-styled heroes. An interview with Sally Jupiter (the
first Silk Specter), asks "how much would you say that it’s
a sex thing, putting on a costume?" This only makes for all
the more disturbing a setting in which to take up crimefighting.
Another prose piece, the autobiography of Hollis
Mason, the original Night Owl, includes his observation that "[s]ome
of us [became costumed crimefighters] out of a sense of childish
excitement and some of us, I think, did it for a kind of excitement
that was altogether more adult if perhaps less healthy."
We are told one villain dressed up because he took
sexual/masochistic enjoyment in being assaulted; Hooded Justice
and The Silhouette are revealed as homosexuals, and Rorschach’s
interaction with Night Owl suggests homoerotic tendencies.
Clearly the suggestion of sexual fetish and homosexuality
has a strong reverberation with the accusations of Frederic Wertham,
discussed above. Moore’s exploration of the motives for costumed
crimefighting sheds a disturbing light on past superhero stories,
and forces the reader to re-evaluate – to re-vision – her understanding
of every superhero in terms of Moore’s kenosis – his emptying
out of the tradition. Miller’s Batman is a powerful but realistic
figure in his costume.
Dan Dreiberg’s informing Laurie that the first
time he used his prototype exoskeleton suit it broke his arm summarizes
Moore’s position. "That sounds like the sort of costume that
could really mess you up," she says. "Is there any other
sort," he replies. Dave Gibbons’s illustration is an underrated
part of this project of demystification, but Watchmen cannot
be appreciated without taking it into account.
Miller’s moody shadows, reminiscent of noir, are
very romantic and invoke a world as tough and gritty as it is operatic.
Gibbons’s characters, on the other hand, all have a distinct sadness,
and his frumpy characters stand in stark contrast to Miller’s very
"cool" Batman. Moore’s realism does not empower, as Miller’s
does, but empties out the power of previous superhero narratives
to ensure the primacy of Watchmen in the tradition.
The price he pays for this success, however, is
accounted for in Watchmen’s anxiety over the return of the
dead, the return of the past he has stolen inspiration from, in
a sense almost literally deflating. In order to understand this,
the reader must be made aware of exactly where comic book history,
though submerged, breaks through.
Unlike Miller, who comes to a Batman already written
by many authors, Moore’s characters appear, at first glance, to
have a clean slate and in this respect should be able to offer little,
outside of marginal commentary, on established heroes. As noted
in most academic discussions of Watchmen, however, Moore’s
characters resonate certain comic book archetypes in such a way
as to suggest other established superheroes.
Adrian Veidt’s (Ozymandias’s) optimism, confidence,
and Antarctic headquarters invoke Superman and his Fortress of Solitude.
His wealth, intelligence, birthday (1939) and perfected human physical
prowess recall Batman. His role in his corporation suggests Bruce
Wayne and Wayne-corp. Night Owl’s wealth, gadgets, costume, mode
of transportation, and basement equipment room – and the fact that
his predecessor, Hollis Mason, began fighting crime in 1939 – also
suggest Batman and the Batcave, but equally invoke the Blue Beetle.
The second Night Owl’s alter ego, Dan Dreiberg,
visually suggests an impotent, middle-aged Clark Kent. The Comedian,
in one of Moore’s more powerful tropes, is a kind of Captain America
if Captain America had gone to Vietnam. Rorschach’s reactionary,
violent, obsessive-loner personality and refusal to compromise suggests
the same Batman picked up on by Frank Miller, or Marvel Comics’
Wolverine, or the Punisher.
Dr. Manhattan, as the only super-powered being,
aloof, almost alien, and never aging, suggests Superman. The reference
to "Wally Weaver … Dr. Manhattan’s Buddy" reminds the
reader of "Jimmy Olson, Superman’s Pal" and indeed, in
the graphic for the military complex in which Dr. Manhattan lives
is embedded the Superman shield.
This move of referencing in order to shed light
on established heroes by invoking certain archetypal comic book
signifiers is common to the revisionary superhero narrative’s investigation
of its own history. The current character, though obviously in debt
to her source, can often act as a powerful misprision of that original
character, while the fact that it is not actually the original frees
the writer from the constraints of copyright and continuity. This
is the superhero narrative’s revisionary referencing, an
idea central to understanding this emerging literature.
Watchmen’s revisionary referencing is used
to ask questions about the history it absorbs. Is Adrian Veidt a
hero? Is his massive hoax, which killed three million people but
prevented a nuclear world war, where Batman’s foresight and intelligence
must lead? Or, is Batman more accurately reflected in Rorschach,
a violent psychopath whose refusal to compromise will be his downfall?
To what degree are Wertham’s observations of homoeroticism
actually reflected in comic books themselves? How can Superman retain
his humanity in light of his power? How can readers accept that
Marvel Comic’s Captain America still retains his optimism after
Vietnam and Watergate? Is the cynical Comedian what he should look
like?
These last two questions are a perfect example
of the strategy employed in the revisionary reference. Alan Moore’s
Comedian performs in relation to Captain America Bloom’s clinamatic
swerve: "a corrective movement in [the latter] poem, which
implies that the precursor poem went accurately up to a certain
point, but then should have swerved, precisely in the direction
that the new poem moves."
The Comedian is this swerve. This strategy of revisionary
referencing must be kept in mind throughout this exploration of
the revisionary superhero narrative, as it is one of its most common
and interesting moves.
In this context of intertextuality Watchmen’s
scene juxtaposition is crucial. Again and again two seemingly unrelated
scenes are juxtaposed and the dialogue from one is a running commentary
on the other. In one exchange for example (to select one from scores)
Dr. Manhattan is being interviewed while, elsewhere, Dan and Laurie
battle a street gang.
The host selects an audience member to ask a question
and says "Now how about you over there. Yes, you, sir. And
please [cut to Dan and Laurie attacking] lets try and keep
it snappy." A reporter claims Dr. Manhattan’s friend died of
cancer in 1971 and, as the next panel shows Dan striking a thug
in the face, says "I believe it was quite sudden and quite
painful."
The reporter goes on the mention a villain Dr.
Manhattan encountered "during the Sixties in battles, conflicts
[cut back to Dan and Laurie’s brawl] whatever it is you super-people
do." Throughout Watchmen it can be seen that meaning
is elsewhere, deferred, and very often unaware of its relevancy.
Within the text this takes the form of spatial juxtaposition, but
this method also illustrates Watchmen’s place among the texts
that inform it, and which it informs.
It is entirely appropriate in this context that
Rorschach’s psychological report shows that he has witnessed at
a young age his mother engaging in a sexual act; only later could
he understand what it was he was seeing. This structure of deferred
action, as it is known in psychology, powerfully informs the reader’s
understanding of Watchmen. The superhero stories read as
a child must be entirely re-evaluated in light of such later knowledge
as the revisionary superhero narrative provides.
Like The Killing Joke, Watchmen also
has many moments of reflexivity, not concerned with the contradictory
history of any one character but rather with the difficulty of absorbing
such a dense tradition as superhero comic book literature. Watchmen
betrays an intense anxiety over the return of the dead, the return
of the comic book history Moore’s kenosis disabled, rising
for revenge.
To situate our thought around the return of the
dead and the status of tradition I would
like to quote theorist Slavoj Žižek, from Looking Awry:
An Introduction to Jacques Lacan through Popular Culture. He
writes,
The return of the dead is a sign of a disturbance
in the symbolic rite, in the process of symbolization; the dead
return as collectors of some unpaid symbolic debt. …
… It is precisely for this reason that the
funeral rite exemplifies symbolization at its purest: through
it, the dead are inscribed in the text of symbolic tradition.
… The "return of the living dead" is, on the other
hand, the reverse of the proper funeral rite. While the later
implies a simple reconciliation, an acceptance of loss, the
return of the dead signifies that they cannot find their proper
place in the text of tradition.
One recalls, when reading Watchmen,
that the gravestone marker Rest In Peace (R.I.P.) does not mean
“sleep well” but “do not return to disturb us.” Žižek captures
Watchmen’s anxieties exactly. To a large degree Watchmen
is an attempt to provide the dead a proper burial, making sure its
predecessors find their proper place in the text of tradition, and
ensuring that Watchmen incurs, in spite of its obvious poetic
inheritance, no unpaid symbolic debt which the dead will return
to collect. The horror comic, the broken tradition of comic book
history within Watchmen, allows the reader to see the anxiety
of influence in operation.
Watchmen invokes its own history as a superhero
narrative, but also makes reference to a host of apocryphal comic
book literature: the horror comic books shut down by Wertham, Sally
Jupiter’s "Tijuana Bible," and Adrian Veidt’s "Veidt
Method [for body building]" for which appears in the back of
Watchmen as a prose insert, and recalls the Charles Atlas
self-improvement advertising featured in the backs of early comic
books.
The most noticeable item of comic book apocrypha,
however, is the horror/pirate comic book. Throughout issues 3 to
11 the reader continually returns to a boy reading "Tales of
the Black Freighter," a story within a story that we read along
with him. As a warning for heroes, the plot of "The Black Freighter"
clearly juxtaposes itself against the plot of Watchmen as
a whole – a man attempting to save his family and home from destruction,
becomes, in his obsession, the very instrument for the force he
was trying to stop.
It is the story’s imagery, however, which betrays
a different reading, in terms of Watchmen’s interaction with
its own history. In "The Black Freighter" the dead become
an emblem of Watchmen’s submerged past which informs, supports,
and threatens Moore’s narrative.
A weighted summary is necessary to gather key images
from the various issues throughout which this mini-narrative is
spread: our nameless protagonist buries his fallen shipmates after
"several of the beached corpses had become inflated by gas,"
attempts "matching odd limbs as best [he] could" and finally
sleeps upon the grave; when he wakes he "conceived of building
a raft, although inwardly [he] doubted it would float."
The trees are not buoyant enough for a raft so
he exhumes the gas bloated corpses he has buried and dreamt upon
– pausing in his work, "entranced by the startling beauty of
a tattoo or the enigma of an old scar," – and makes a craft
of their bodies. "By afternoon, I’d felled enough young palms
to build the deck of my conveyance, affixing it to the human float
beneath."
The craft is a disturbing and powerful emblem of
Watchmen, sailing on the gas filled – literally "inspired"
– dead history of old comic book literature ("in-spired,"
from the Latin "to fill with wind"). After dreaming upon
their bodies, Watchmen (and our narrator as an emblem of
the revisionist) finds a way to utilize, to hijack, their inspiration,
rather than toss another body, its own, on the heap – and cobbles
together their ruins, stopping to appreciate unique moments of beauty
or question old markings.
The utilization of tradition and influence is
not an idle game of tongue-in-cheek allusions but is actually necessary
for the narrative’s survival. Music critic Perry Meisel’s remark
on a "tradition sufficiently dense with precedent to cause
the kinds of self consciousness and anxiety with which we are familiar,"
(quoted above) takes on a particularly literal twist here. If our
"revisionary narrator" or "revisionary (anti-) hero"
of "The Black Freighter" is not supported by a certain
number of "inspired," gas-bloated bodies his craft – the
revisionary narrative – will sink.
Watchmen does not stop there if this allegory
is to be understood as such. Absorbing more dead, our protagonist
consumes a seagull he plucks out of the air and eats raw, but cannot
contain it, and vomits. (Note the bird as an especially poignant
symbol of poetic inspiration, e.g. Keats’s Nightingale, Hardy’s
Darkling Thrush.)
The absorption of the dead, of tradition, requires
a certain process or methodology (in this case gastrointestinal)
in order for the corpses of tradition to be properly "incorporated."
This failure to incorporate is juxtaposed against
the false confidence of the news vendor whose voice often breaks
over the kid during his reading of "The Black Freighter":
"I absorb information. I miss nothing. … The weight o’ the
world’s on [the newsvendor], but does he quit? Nah! He’s like Atlas!
He can take it!"
Watchmen is very concerned with being able
to handle all of the dead it attempts to ingest and fears being
a regurgitation, rather than an organization, of superhero tradition.
It fears that the dead it attempts to handle will overwhelm it,
and failing control it will perish, sinking down among them to be
judged by a stronger vision above the waves, above Miller’s "endless
spring right beneath," above chaotic comic book tradition.
The eighth issue of Watchmen takes place
on Halloween and aligns masked crimefighters with the children in
costume on the street. The epigraph, "On Hallowe’en the old
ghosts come about us, and they speak to some; to others they are
dumb," emphasizes that Halloween is the day when the dead tread
closest to the living, and that Watchmen is a text trying
to contain a mass of dead souls. Our Black Freighter narrator is
disturbingly close to the dead who literally keep him afloat: "it
seemed I conversed with my perished shipmates.
Their voices spoke from beneath the raft; thick;
bubbling" Rorschach’s past comes to claim him in the prison
riot: "You’re alone in the valley of the shadow, Rorschach,"
says one of his antagonists – referring both to the Biblical shadow
of death and meta-textually to Bloom’s shadow of influence – "where
your past has a long reach and between you and it there’s only one
crummy lock. Think about it… Halloween, when the dead things return."
Watchmen is the "one crummy lock"
which can hold back and organize the past, keeping the dead from
rising while floating on their inspiration. References to the dead
abound in Watchmen. Rorschach remarks of the Egyptian decor
in Veidt’s office, "Whole culture death-fixated, obsessively
securing their tombs against intruders … Didn’t like the thought
of corpses interfered with. [Superheroes/Watchmen] can’t
afford to be so squeamish. Disturbing dead our job."
He continues to note that the Pharaohs "believed
cadavers would rise … Understand now why always mistrusted fascination
with relics and dead kings. In final analysis, it’s us or them,"
a very revealing remark in terms of literature’s interaction with
its own tradition.
Adrian Veidt modeled his life on Alexander the
Great and reminds us that "He entered Egypt through Memphis,
where they proclaimed him son of Amon, Judge of the Dead."
In a drug-induced vision the resurrected dead inspire him. Veidt’s
perfume, Nostalgia, and its advertisements ("Oh, how the ghost
of you clings,") reinforces the connection between the dead
and the resurrected influence of the past.
The image of the Nostalgia bottle shattering, its
contents spilling, takes on heightened relevance in this context:
nostalgia, clinging ghosts unable to be contained. Watchmen
exposes again and again its position as a receptacle for the dead,
as being supported on a raft of the dead, and as judging the dead
that it receives.
As Harold Bloom notes one powerful defense against
the return of the dead is the rhetorical trope of metalepsis or
transumption. It should only be mentioned here, as Watchmen
only hints at it, and held in mind in case it is of interest in
the context of other superhero narratives. Two moments are of primary
interest. The first is Adrian Veidt’s drug trip in which he communes
with the dead while following his pilgrimage in honor of Alexander
the Great. He notes:
The ensuing vision transformed me. Wading through
powdered history, [Cf. "the burnt remains of a crime fighter…"]
I heard dead kings walking, underground; heard fanfares sound
through human skulls. Alexander had merely resurrected an age
of pharaohs. Their wisdom, truly immortal, now inspired me!
Here Veidt finds his way through the trope of Alexander
to an early-ness, a freshness when no ghost or anxiety could have
been, to a fantastic fiction of a period before influence. Secondly
he adopts Ramses the Second’s Greek name, Ozymandias, resolving
to apply antiquity’s teachings to today’s world. Like Joyce’s titling
his great novel Ulysses rather than Odysseus, Veidt
tropes on a trope, and as Bloom argues "Transumption murders
time, for by troping on a trope, you enforce a state of retoricity
or word-consciousness, and you negate fallen history."
Thus, as in his drug trip, Veidt is "remarkably
freed of the burden of anteriority," because he "himself
is already one with the future, which he introjects," in the
form of his utopia to be. This is why his Nostalgia perfume advertisement
becomes Millennium perfume after his master plan succeeds.
As The Killing Joke suggests, there is often
a connection to be made between the metaphysics espoused in philosophical
speeches in a superhero narrative and the construction of the revisionary
superhero narrative itself.
Alan Moore’s use of the revisionary ratio kenosis,
discussed above, reaches its height in Dr. Manhattan’s musings on
the universe and its depths in Rorschach’s understanding of the
world. Rorschach takes his name from the psychological "ink
blot" test because it reflects his personal metaphysical views,
which a reader may find familiar after our discussion of The
Dark Knight Returns. It is an example of what Bloom would refer
to as a moment of negative transcendence:
Looked at sky through smoke heavy with human
fat and God was not there. The cold suffocating dark goes on
forever, and we are alone. Live our lives, lacking anything
better to do. Devise reason later. Born from oblivion; bear
children, hell-bound as ourselves; go into oblivion. There is
nothing else. Existence is random.
Has no pattern save what we imagine after staring
at it for too long. No meaning save what we chose to impose.
This rudderless world is not shaped by vague metaphysical forces.
It is not God who kills the children. Not fate who butchers
them or destiny that feeds them to the dogs. It’s us. Only us.
Streets stank of fire.
The void breathed hard on my heart, turning
its illusions to ice, shattering them. Was reborn then. Free
to scrawl own design on this morally blank world. Was Rorschach.
Jon’s (Dr. Manhattan’s) aloof consciousness of
the universe as a giant clockwork machine affords him a similar
point of view. Indeed, the issue featuring the bulk of his metaphysical
musings ends with a powerful epigraph from Jung, which reiterates
Rorschach’s observations, though in a friendlier tone. "As
far as we can discern, the sole purpose of human existence is to
kindle a light of meaning in the darkness of mere being."
This is Moore’s most powerful act of kenosis,
his most thorough emptying out of the precursor by insisting on
total meaninglessness, total malleability.
Moore protects Watchmen from the return
of the dead which threaten to break their bonds by viewing all reality
– past and present – as violently empty for interpretation, subjugation
and misprision (though again, Moore’s metaphors, as opposed to Miller’s,
are textual rather than violent: "free to scrawl design on
morally blank world").
Bloom writes "The poet has, in regard to the
precursor’s heterocosm, a a shuddering sense of the arbitrary –
of the equality, or equal haphazardness, of all objects." There
can be nothing wrong with looking at human bodies and seeing a raft,
or putting the entire history of superhero comic book literature
into Watchmen’s broad misprision. Moore’s "inspiration"
is preceded by his kenosis-exhalation which "breathes
hard … turning illusions to ice, shattering them."
(This study will conclude with the birth of
superhero comic books that will be the successor to the Silver Age.
Here we can see the stirrings of a ubiquitous aspect of those narratives,
their high level of horrific (sometimes almost comic) violence,
and use of horror tropes: the severing of Voodoo’s legs by a super-powered
serial killer in Joe Casey’s "Serial Boxes" (Wildcats
14–19), the grotesque medical experiments of City Zero in Ellis’s
"The Day the Earth Turned Slower" (Planetary 8),
and the almost ridiculous slaughter of Stormwatch by Ridley Scott’s
Aliens – the transition to The Authority – in the WildC.A.T.s/Aliens
crossover.
As a genre, horror is the superhero narrative’s
diametric opposite: the former portrays the terror of helplessness
while the latter describes a power fantasy, par excellence.
Moore revives the horror comic book, excised from its production
alongside the superhero narrative by Fredric Wertham’s Seduction
of the Innocent, within the superhero comic book.
Its appearance in Watchmen is merely the
"face-hugger" from Ridley Scott’s Alien. By the
time the revisionary superhero narrative outgrows the Silver Age
and finds itself heralding a whole new generation of superheroes
the Alien’s monstrous birth will have taken place and the horror
comic will be running around as an integral part of the superhero
landscape (literally in one instance: see chapter 4).
As horror teaches us – and Freud and Derrida emphasize
– the repressed and excised find ways of making its presence felt
and nothing is ever fully or simply erased.)
It is important now to look at Moore’s metaphors
for the unification of this shattering, his metaphors of misprision.
The reader is familiar with Rorschach’s metaphor of unification
from our discussion of Batman: violence and fascism. Adrian Veidt’s
understanding is perhaps the most interesting. Like Commissioner
Gordon’s anecdote about Rosevelt, meant to invoke Batman, Veidt
will not unite the world through violence but through trickery.
As in The Killing Joke’s flashlight joke,
this unification will be a trick of the light. Facing his wall of
television screens Veidt gives a glimpse of the chaos of the superhero
narrative: "Meanings coalesce from semiotic chaos before reverting
to incoherence." Like Alan Moore’s kenosis he must destroy
and then reconstruct in order to build "a unity which would
survive him." He succeeds but – like the unity created by The
Dark Knight Returns which is disrupted by Year One, "revert[ing]
to incoherence," – Jon must ultimately remind him when he asks,
"I did the right thing, didn’t I? It all worked out in the
end?" that "Nothing ends, Adrian. Nothing ever ends."
Bloom’s definition of kenosis understands
that "the latter poem of deflation is not as absolute as it
seems." Here Veidt the revisionist confronts the man who has
seen the machinery of the universe exposed to him as his father
had looked at the inside of watches, and faces the realization of
comic book continuity: the chain of revision can never end. One
misprision will follow upon another, each as arbitrary an organization
as the one that came before.
At this point the reader may find the continual
pointing out of narrative microcosms as a whole tedious, but should
bear in mind the superhero narrative’s high level of interaction
with psychoanalysis and the common psychoanalytic theory that every
element of the dream represents the dreamer.
An entry from Rorschach’s journal makes up the
opening lines of Watchmen, and the journal is thus a synecdoche
for it; the journal is ultimately delivered to the New Frontiersman,
"delivered at last into the hands of a higher judgment."
In an example of the textual juxtaposition discussed above, this
line is intended to refer back to our Black Freighter narrator,
to Rorschach’s Journal as an emblem of Watchmen, and to its
judgment by the tradition and the reader.
"I leave it entirely in your hands,"
is the final line of Watchmen, as Seymour ("see more")
reaches toward a pile of articles for publication on top of which
Rorschach’s journal sits. (Once again Watchmen is supported
by a stack of texts.) As the first phase of the revisionary superhero
narrative Watchmen will be judged; later phases of superhero
narratives – the watchers of the Watchmen – will be this
judgment.
In Hollis Mason’s fictional autobiography he says he enjoyed
the move from the pulps to Superman because "Here was something
that presented the basic morality of the pulps without all their
darkness and ambiguity."
As in The Dark Knight Returns, poetic tradition is grasped
through allusions: like Bruce Wayne and Zorro, Hollis Mason (the
first Night Owl) admits to being inspired to be a crimefighter by
reading The Shadow and Doc Savage -- the literature
out of which the superhero narrative emerged. Batman: The Dark
Knight Returns and Watchmen return superheroes to their
pulp roots, to darkness and ambiguity; and while the second phase
of the revisionary superhero narrative will find this atmosphere
too dark, never again will the superhero narrative be able to return
to the simplicity from which it came without coming to terms with
Watchmen and The Dark Knight Returns.
Geoff Klock
(Ed's note: this article is based on an extract from Geoff's excellently
intelligent book, How to Read Superhero Comics and Why).
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OTHER CONTENT - April 2003
Agents of Imagination They can make - or break - a writer's career, and every serious author needs to have one. The most powerful agents in the SFF business speak out about the genre publishing world in this roundtable. This panel includes Andrew Zack, Lucienne Diver, Shawna McCarthy, Donald Maass, Joshua Bilmes, Jack Byrne, Eleanor Wood and Nanci McCloskey. (PUBLISHING SPOTLIGHT)
Star Wars and the Rise of Troy Author Troy Denning interviewed about his new Star Wars universe novel Tatooine Ghost. It's set before Chewbacca's death, so fans might come to terms with their grief with this book. (AUTHOR INTERVIEWS)
Anne Sudworth Interviewed Pastels are an awkward, difficult to control medium, but from magic landscapes to fairies, fantasy illustrator Anne Sudworth has proven she has the technique well under control. (ARTIST INTERVIEWS)
Offworld Report: March 2003 This month's offworld report looks at the secret history of TV series Red Dwarf, DNA computers, an interview with Betsy Mitchell of Del Rey, has Robert Silverberg reflecting on the Columbia shuttle disaster, and looks at the shocking real life of a Dalek. (NEWS)
Paul
Barnett to Leave Paper Tiger
Paul Barnett, who has been Commissioning Editor of Paper Tiger since 1997, has
decided to give up his role as of the end of March 2003.
(NEWS)
Who
Watches the Watchmen?
Geoff Klock, the author of 'How to Read Superhero Comics and Why' asks some fascinating literary questions of a genre whose main protagonists wear their underwear on the outside. (ARTICLES)
Cease Fire (Star Trek Enterprise) Andorian commander Shran calls upon Archer to mediate a dispute between the Andorians and the Vulcans. (TV REVIEWS)
Stigma (Star Trek Enterprise) T'Pol becomes seriously ill with a disease condemned by most parts of Vulcan society. (TV REVIEWS)
The Film Without Fear - or Shame. In Daredevil, Mark R Leeper finds an uninspired comic book superhero film that borrows everything, while inventing and contributing almost nothing. An uninspiring actor plays an uninspired idea for a superhero in a familiar setting … one that feels like it was stamped out at a factory. (FILM REVIEWS)
The Second Coming Rod looks at the controversial BBC TV drama that posits the question, what would the world do if the Son of God returned as a video store assistant in the North of England? (TV REVIEWS)
Building a Better Battlestar Yep it's time for Galacticon 2003, announcing the fans' 25th anniversary salute to the stars, producers, writers and crew of the original Battlestar Galactica TV series. (CONVENTIONS)
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