Lorendiac
02-26-2007, 02:40 PM
Why do they choose to do it in the first place? Why do they keep at it, week after week and year after year? (Always bearing in mind that some would-be heroes don't keep at it -- they die, or retire to get married, or lose their powers, or just fade away into comic book limbo for some reason without any clear follow-up being provided to the readers for the next several years!)
I'm not just talking about why our beloved superheroes often pull on masks and invent new names for themselves. The desire to have a "secret identity" and thus maintain some sort of "private life" is understandable, but I see the problem of choosing whether to have one as a secondary decision. The primary decision is whether to jump into the superhero lifestyle in the first place! If you decide you aren't going to do that, then the problems associated with a "secret identity" (or the lack of one) will remain purely academic points, right?
I asked myself those questions, and I pondered many superhero origin stories, and I came up with the following list of basic Motives. Of course, some superheroes change a great deal as the years roll past (and as one writer replaces another and imposes his own tastes upon the hapless hero he's writing about), so that a hero's Motive today may not be the Motive he had when he started. And -- human beings (and sentients of other species) being the complicated creatures that they are -- sometimes there may be several motives all tangled up inside a hero's head, whether or not he is consciously aware of each and every one!
14 Motives for Becoming a Superhero
01. Seeking Revenge/Justice
02. Family Tradition
03. Greed
04. Atonement
05. Self-Defense
06. Spokesperson
07. Patriotic Duty
08. Action Junkie
09. Rebellion
10. One Mission
11. The Power Goes With the Job
12. Glory
13. Public Service
14. Phony Heroism
01. Seeking Revenge/Justice
"It's payback time, you scum! Your kind has caused me a great deal of grief, over the years!"
or
"Actually, buster, it doesn't matter whether I personally am angry at you; it just matters that you be stopped and pay society's penalties for your offenses against civilized law and order!"
I combined those two concepts into one tangled Motive because it can be very hard to judge where one ends and the other begins in the mind of a hero who's clearly motivated by memories of personal tragedy and a desire to prevent such things from happening again.
Example: Batman has often been presented as a classic case of one or the other of those variations. Some writers have stated or hinted that Bruce Wayne was so scarred by the utterly unfair deaths of his parents that he grew up to be profoundly dedicated to the abstract concept of Justice; doing all he can to not let other civilians get butchered as his parents were, and if some fool actually does commit murder in Gotham and thinks he can get away with it, Batman is bound and determined to track the offender down and teach him that he can't!
On the other hand! Some writers have stated or hinted that Bruce Wayne, even after all these years since the original trauma, constantly seeks Revenge on the killer of his parents, and every time he finds a "reasonable excuse" to beat up another violent criminal he's basically treating the guy as a convenient proxy for Joe Chill. From that perspective, the fact that catching these guys logically prevents the violent crimes they otherwise would have committed in the near future -- and the fact that the criminal justice system will "punish" them for whatever crimes they had previously committed against society before Batman got his hands on them -- are only "fortunate fringe benefits" and not serious motivating factors! The significant point is that he does what he does because, so many years after he was orphaned, he is still seeking to satisfy a traumatized little boy's endless craving for Revenge. Everything else is just window dressing!
(And, of course, other writers have toyed with other rationales for what "normally" goes on inside Batman's head as he continues his one-man crusade against violent crime in Gotham City!)
02. Family Tradition
"Daddy was a superhero and I intend to continue the tradition! That's all that needs to be said!"
In real life, there are people who sign up with the local police force, or the army, or the navy, or some other police or military organization, because that's what Dad did . .. and quite possibly his father before him, and his father before him! By the time the kid is a legal adult and old enough to enlist, he's been indoctrinated to the point where it would feel very peculiar to him if he didn't try to follow in Dad's footsteps! Sometimes it works that way with superheroes as well.
In the 1980s, Roy Thomas's "Infinity Inc." included several young characters who were basically just following in the footsteps of a parent or other influential role model. Using "GA" as an abbreviation for Golden Age:
Huntress was the GA Batman's daughter, Power Girl was the GA Superman's much younger cousin, the new Hourman was the GA Hourman's son, Fury was the GA Wonder Woman's daughter, Silver Scarab was the GA Hawkman's and GA Hawkgirl's son, Jade and Obsidian were the GA Green Lantern's long-lost twin children whom he'd never realized he had, Atom Smasher was the GA Atom's godson . . . you get the idea. (Some of those family trees were soon torn to shreds by the retcons that followed Crisis on Infinite Earths, of course, although recently Infinite Crisis retconned the retcon of Power Girl's origins and put her right back where she was in the late 70s and early 80s!)
03. Greed
"I've got special abilities and I aim to use them to make money! But to show what a great guy I am, I'll let honest citizens bid for my services instead of just using my strength to rob armored cars!"
Various super-powered individuals have worked as bounty hunters, private investigators, bodyguards, etc., charging the customers whatever they think their unusual powers and abilities are worth on the open market. Luke Cage and Danny Rand used to be the Heroes for Hire. Back in the early 1990s, Amanda Waller's Suicide Squad shifted from being an official (but secretive) federal program to a group of freelance troubleshooters-for-hire, as I recall. On a similar note, and more recently, Kurt Busiek offered us the Power Company. I'm not saying that all of the characters involved in those various enterprises were only interested in making money, but I am pointing out that the chance to cash in on their unusual abilities was definitely a motivating factor in their decisions to keep wearing the costumes and risking their necks fighting supervillains and other riffraff!
04. Atonement
"I made a very bad mistake. Maybe I didn't mean for anyone to get hurt or killed -- but it happened anyway, and I could've prevented it if I'd been wiser. All I can do now is make sure I don't 'look the other way' again when there's nasty stuff going on!"
I mentioned Greed just above. When Peter Parker first created a costume and started calling himself Spider-Man, that was his motive -- but I didn't list him as an example of the Greed Motive for Becoming a Superhero, because he wasn't calling himself a superhero in the early days! He just wanted to make it big in the entertainment industry and take home lots of loot from the ticket sales!
The 2002 movie did a good job in showing why he shifted his emphasis from "How can I make money with my powers?" to "How can I use my powers responsibly to stop bad guys?" The movie actually gave him a somewhat better excuse for letting a robber get past him than Stan Lee had originally provided, but the results were just as tragic: the robber later killed Uncle Ben, and when Peter got a good look at the killer's face the realization of his own share of the guilt (because he'd chosen to let an obvious "menace to society" run loose) was devastating. Hence his mantra "with great power comes great responsibility" and his determination to not commit that particular sin of omission again.
(Incidentally: if you can find a copy at a reasonable price, I highly recommend "What if? #17" (first series), which explored in a logical and entertaining way the question of what would have happened if young Peter had nabbed that runaway crook on impulse when he had the chance; just because it suddenly looked like a good way to get some extra publicity
as a "hero" and thereby advance his fledgling career in Show Biz! On the upside, his Uncle Ben would have stayed alive and well. On the downside, without the Atonement Motive to change his attitude when he was still reveling in the unusual feeling of power and popularity, Peter would have moved out to Hollywood to become a vain, self-indulgent movie star who was prepared to intimidate or viciously smear anyone (such as J. Jonah Jameson) who dared to loudly criticize him!Although he eventually learned some hard lessons, later on . . .)
I'm not just talking about why our beloved superheroes often pull on masks and invent new names for themselves. The desire to have a "secret identity" and thus maintain some sort of "private life" is understandable, but I see the problem of choosing whether to have one as a secondary decision. The primary decision is whether to jump into the superhero lifestyle in the first place! If you decide you aren't going to do that, then the problems associated with a "secret identity" (or the lack of one) will remain purely academic points, right?
I asked myself those questions, and I pondered many superhero origin stories, and I came up with the following list of basic Motives. Of course, some superheroes change a great deal as the years roll past (and as one writer replaces another and imposes his own tastes upon the hapless hero he's writing about), so that a hero's Motive today may not be the Motive he had when he started. And -- human beings (and sentients of other species) being the complicated creatures that they are -- sometimes there may be several motives all tangled up inside a hero's head, whether or not he is consciously aware of each and every one!
14 Motives for Becoming a Superhero
01. Seeking Revenge/Justice
02. Family Tradition
03. Greed
04. Atonement
05. Self-Defense
06. Spokesperson
07. Patriotic Duty
08. Action Junkie
09. Rebellion
10. One Mission
11. The Power Goes With the Job
12. Glory
13. Public Service
14. Phony Heroism
01. Seeking Revenge/Justice
"It's payback time, you scum! Your kind has caused me a great deal of grief, over the years!"
or
"Actually, buster, it doesn't matter whether I personally am angry at you; it just matters that you be stopped and pay society's penalties for your offenses against civilized law and order!"
I combined those two concepts into one tangled Motive because it can be very hard to judge where one ends and the other begins in the mind of a hero who's clearly motivated by memories of personal tragedy and a desire to prevent such things from happening again.
Example: Batman has often been presented as a classic case of one or the other of those variations. Some writers have stated or hinted that Bruce Wayne was so scarred by the utterly unfair deaths of his parents that he grew up to be profoundly dedicated to the abstract concept of Justice; doing all he can to not let other civilians get butchered as his parents were, and if some fool actually does commit murder in Gotham and thinks he can get away with it, Batman is bound and determined to track the offender down and teach him that he can't!
On the other hand! Some writers have stated or hinted that Bruce Wayne, even after all these years since the original trauma, constantly seeks Revenge on the killer of his parents, and every time he finds a "reasonable excuse" to beat up another violent criminal he's basically treating the guy as a convenient proxy for Joe Chill. From that perspective, the fact that catching these guys logically prevents the violent crimes they otherwise would have committed in the near future -- and the fact that the criminal justice system will "punish" them for whatever crimes they had previously committed against society before Batman got his hands on them -- are only "fortunate fringe benefits" and not serious motivating factors! The significant point is that he does what he does because, so many years after he was orphaned, he is still seeking to satisfy a traumatized little boy's endless craving for Revenge. Everything else is just window dressing!
(And, of course, other writers have toyed with other rationales for what "normally" goes on inside Batman's head as he continues his one-man crusade against violent crime in Gotham City!)
02. Family Tradition
"Daddy was a superhero and I intend to continue the tradition! That's all that needs to be said!"
In real life, there are people who sign up with the local police force, or the army, or the navy, or some other police or military organization, because that's what Dad did . .. and quite possibly his father before him, and his father before him! By the time the kid is a legal adult and old enough to enlist, he's been indoctrinated to the point where it would feel very peculiar to him if he didn't try to follow in Dad's footsteps! Sometimes it works that way with superheroes as well.
In the 1980s, Roy Thomas's "Infinity Inc." included several young characters who were basically just following in the footsteps of a parent or other influential role model. Using "GA" as an abbreviation for Golden Age:
Huntress was the GA Batman's daughter, Power Girl was the GA Superman's much younger cousin, the new Hourman was the GA Hourman's son, Fury was the GA Wonder Woman's daughter, Silver Scarab was the GA Hawkman's and GA Hawkgirl's son, Jade and Obsidian were the GA Green Lantern's long-lost twin children whom he'd never realized he had, Atom Smasher was the GA Atom's godson . . . you get the idea. (Some of those family trees were soon torn to shreds by the retcons that followed Crisis on Infinite Earths, of course, although recently Infinite Crisis retconned the retcon of Power Girl's origins and put her right back where she was in the late 70s and early 80s!)
03. Greed
"I've got special abilities and I aim to use them to make money! But to show what a great guy I am, I'll let honest citizens bid for my services instead of just using my strength to rob armored cars!"
Various super-powered individuals have worked as bounty hunters, private investigators, bodyguards, etc., charging the customers whatever they think their unusual powers and abilities are worth on the open market. Luke Cage and Danny Rand used to be the Heroes for Hire. Back in the early 1990s, Amanda Waller's Suicide Squad shifted from being an official (but secretive) federal program to a group of freelance troubleshooters-for-hire, as I recall. On a similar note, and more recently, Kurt Busiek offered us the Power Company. I'm not saying that all of the characters involved in those various enterprises were only interested in making money, but I am pointing out that the chance to cash in on their unusual abilities was definitely a motivating factor in their decisions to keep wearing the costumes and risking their necks fighting supervillains and other riffraff!
04. Atonement
"I made a very bad mistake. Maybe I didn't mean for anyone to get hurt or killed -- but it happened anyway, and I could've prevented it if I'd been wiser. All I can do now is make sure I don't 'look the other way' again when there's nasty stuff going on!"
I mentioned Greed just above. When Peter Parker first created a costume and started calling himself Spider-Man, that was his motive -- but I didn't list him as an example of the Greed Motive for Becoming a Superhero, because he wasn't calling himself a superhero in the early days! He just wanted to make it big in the entertainment industry and take home lots of loot from the ticket sales!
The 2002 movie did a good job in showing why he shifted his emphasis from "How can I make money with my powers?" to "How can I use my powers responsibly to stop bad guys?" The movie actually gave him a somewhat better excuse for letting a robber get past him than Stan Lee had originally provided, but the results were just as tragic: the robber later killed Uncle Ben, and when Peter got a good look at the killer's face the realization of his own share of the guilt (because he'd chosen to let an obvious "menace to society" run loose) was devastating. Hence his mantra "with great power comes great responsibility" and his determination to not commit that particular sin of omission again.
(Incidentally: if you can find a copy at a reasonable price, I highly recommend "What if? #17" (first series), which explored in a logical and entertaining way the question of what would have happened if young Peter had nabbed that runaway crook on impulse when he had the chance; just because it suddenly looked like a good way to get some extra publicity
as a "hero" and thereby advance his fledgling career in Show Biz! On the upside, his Uncle Ben would have stayed alive and well. On the downside, without the Atonement Motive to change his attitude when he was still reveling in the unusual feeling of power and popularity, Peter would have moved out to Hollywood to become a vain, self-indulgent movie star who was prepared to intimidate or viciously smear anyone (such as J. Jonah Jameson) who dared to loudly criticize him!Although he eventually learned some hard lessons, later on . . .)