Pulp Fiction PDF
Pulp Fiction PDF
Pulp Fiction PDF
JOHN M. TRUSHELL
R
EVIEWING
twentieth century, the critic Martin Williams identifies ‘‘mo-
tion picture drama, jazz, a special kind of musical theater and
its associated music and dance, the modern detective story, the comic
strip, to name only the most obvious’’ (3). No less obvious, and a
glaring omission from these claims, is science fiction, for ‘‘two genres
acquired their recognizable form in [American ‘‘pulp’’ fiction maga-
zines]: the detective noir and science fiction’’ (A. Boyer 92). Despite the
European/Old World antecedents of H. G. Wells, who wrote scientific
romances, and Jules Verne, who wrote merveilleux scientifique, the term
‘‘science fiction’’ was coined by Hugo Gernsback, editor of the Amer-
ican magazine Amazing Stories in the 1920s. From these pulp origins,
science fiction moved ‘‘inexorably towards the center of American cul-
ture’’ (Franklin 3), a movement marked by the detonation of an atomic
bomb at Hiroshima in 1945, when ‘‘thoughtful men and women rec-
ognized that [they] were living in a science fiction world’’ (Gunn 174).
And, as Bukatman remarks, there can be ‘‘no overstating the impor-
tance of science fiction to . . . a moment that sees itself as science
fiction’’ (Terminal Identity 3). Reviewing those opinions expressed by
critics and commentators in the 1950s, Edward James found accept-
ance that science fiction was a serious literature—although privileging
ideas over literary expression—concerned with mankind’s present
plight and problematic future (‘‘Before the Novum’’ 27).
149
150 John M. Trushell
The pulp fiction origins of science fiction and detective noir, James
observes, were shared by American comic books: ‘‘The pulps indeed
spawned the comic-strip heroes of the 1930s . . . the super-hero, in
fact, was one of the most prominent creations of the pulp era’’ (Science
Fiction 48).
The pulps of the 1930s featured such ‘‘men of mystery’’ as Doc
Savage, ‘‘The Man of Bronze,’’ and his Fabulous Five (Doc Savage Mag-
azine #1: March 1933), and ‘‘The Spider,’’ a caped vigilante (The Spider
#1: October 1933),1 while the comics introduced Superman, ‘‘The Man
of Steel’’ (Action Comics #1: June 1938), and Batman, ‘‘The Caped
Crusader’’ (Detective Comics #27: May 1939). The debuts of Superman
and Batman, the more successful and enduring superheroes, were fol-
lowed by those of The Human Torch and Namor the Sub-mariner
(Marvel Comics #1: October/November 1939) to establish a ‘‘golden
age’’ of comics. These superhero stories—produced, Bukatman alleges,
‘‘largely by young males for somewhat younger males’’ (‘‘X-bodies’’
95)—have been considered to be science fiction albeit, as James con-
tends, ‘‘shorn of all sophistication’’ (Science Fiction 83). But these stories
are more properly fantasies; the superheroes retained the mysticism of
their pulp predecessors (Lang and Trimble 165) and, although set in
plausible worlds where even ‘‘the irrational or the strange is still ex-
plicable in quasi-scientific or everyday terms’’ (Abercrombie, Lash, and
Longhurst 123), superhero stories used science as ‘‘an alibi for magic’’
(Reynolds 53). Both science fiction and fantasy are estranged genres—
possessing an ‘‘imaginative framework alternative to the author’s em-
pirical framework’’ (Suvin 60 – 61)—as opposed to naturalistic genres
(Parrinder 37), but separated by the notion of cognition inherent in ‘‘the
Gernsbackian idea of fiction with a scientific explanation’’ (Parrinder
37).
The 1920s and 1930s witnessed the rise of the American science
fiction short story, but the 1940s saw the science fiction story honed
by writers chosen by editor John W. Campbell for publication in
Astounding Science Fiction. Science fiction began appearing in ‘‘mass-
circulation magazines like Collier’s and the Saturday Evening Post’’
(P. Boyer 257), but many general readers continued to consider science
fiction as escapist or unrealistic, which contributed to a ‘‘ghetto’’ men-
tality among fans. This ‘‘ghettoizing’’ of science fiction was not entirely
imposed from without; many science fiction writers and readers re-
garded ‘‘the bulk of their own society as mistaken, ill-informed, and
American Dreams of Mutants 151
Mordecai Richler observes that the golden age superheroes had con-
stituted ‘‘invulnerable, all-conquering’’ champions for children, pro-
viding ‘‘revenge figures against what seemed a gratuitously cruel adult
world’’ (306, 300). The relevance of these superheroes for children was
epitomized by a young Billy Batson who, upon uttering the magic
word ‘‘SHAZAM’’ (an acronym of Solomon, Hercules, Atlas, Zeus,
Achilles, and Mercury), was transformed into the world’s mightiest
mature mortal, Captain Marvel (Whiz Comics #2: February 1940), ‘‘an
allegory of pubescent metamorphosis,’’ alleges Bukatman (‘‘X-bodies’’
100). Such golden age superheroes ‘‘were always adults, except when
followed by a xeroxed sidekick’’ (McCue 41); Batman was followed by
Robin (Detective Comics #38: April 1940) and The Human Torch by
Toro (The Human Torch Comic #2: Fall 1940). These sidekicks had
served ‘‘as a source of identification for young adolescents’’ (Brody 176).
Marvel Comics’ innovation was to ‘‘pioneer comics for the
adolescent’’ (Jacobs and Jones 129) that dealt with ‘‘titanic battles
between [teenaged superheroes] and middle-aged supervillains’’
(Mondello 233).
Numbered among the Fantastic Four, who were exposed to cosmic
rays in a near-earth orbiting spacecraft and transformed into superhe-
roes, was a new Human Torch who could burst into flames without
being consumed by fire. The Torch was an impulsive, literally hot-
headed high school student with a penchant for hot-rods. The wise-
cracking Spider-Man, whose superhuman powers were acquired by the
bite of a radioactive spider while visiting a science exhibition, was a
high school bookworm who, Bukatman observes, had a certain ‘‘nerdy
charm’’ (‘‘X-bodies’’ 95) and lived with his widowed aunt. There was a
mutual antagonism between the silver age Human Torch and Spider-
Man, begun when Spider-Man crashed a party held by the Human
American Dreams of Mutants 153
Such parallels are not far-fetched. Silver age comics had become
overtly political, ‘‘even radical, insisting on a ‘relevance’ in which even
the most escapist comics [involved] themselves with social issues’’
(Schmitt 155). And, ‘‘in an era demanding relevance, few magazines
were more topical or current than Lee’s [comic books]’’ (Mondello 236).
Lee’s Marvel Comics cultivated a literate readership by the introduction
of letters pages to encourage this readership to voice their preferences,
and Lee responded in an editorial column. ‘‘Stan’s Soapbox’’ was printed
in each Marvel comic book, through which ‘‘the editor held forth on
both comics and social issues’’ (Daniels 107). This cultivation of a
literate comic fandom recalls the creation of a science fiction fandom
credited to Gernsback, who published readers’ letters and responded in
the editor’s column of Amazing Stories.
The X-Men adopted a liberal political stance, ‘‘stressing cooperation
among individuals and minorities rather than conflict, moderation in
politics rather than extremism, and the right of each American to social
recognition and economic opportunity’’ (Mondello 238). This stance
was consistent with that adopted by some contemporary science fiction
literature, particularly Anne McCaffrey’s short stories ‘‘A Womanly
Talent’’ and ‘‘A Bridle for Pegasus.’’ These were published in Analog
(Astounding was retitled in October 1960) in February 1969 and July
1973, respectively.3 These stories concerned the foundation of the
North American Center for Parapsychic Talents (NACPT) which, like
Xavier’s academy, sought to recruit and train the gifted. The center
sought Talents gifted in psionics, intending to license and register
Talents and to provide this minority, by legislation, with professional
immunity in the exercise of their powers. The NACPT, which was
demonstrably multicultural, facilitated the resolution of violent inter-
ethnic quarrels to secure the rights of minorities. But these benefits
were achieved at a personal cost to the Talents, registered and resident
at the NACPT, who were ‘‘policed’’ by the center and whose right to
reproduce required approval by the center.
Yet, ‘‘despite having a lot going for it, The X-Men was not an
immediate hit with readers’’ (Sassienie 89). The X-Men may have
seemed juvenile to adolescent readers: ‘‘a class of super heroes in train-
ing,’’ all wearing ‘‘the same basic costume, as if it were a school uni-
form,’’ with ‘‘a teacher who ran them through tests . . . and graded
them’’ (Sanderson 209). The class graduated (#7: September 1964),
their uniforms were replaced with individual costumes (#39: December
156 John M. Trushell
1967), and their teacher was eliminated (#42: March 1968). But The
X-Men, a title that privileged public service over self gratification, did
not achieve the popularity of The Amazing Spider-Man or Fantastic Four.
The X-Men achieved sixty-six issues (#66: March 1970), then fea-
tured five years of reprints (#12 to #45) before closing in 1975 (#93:
April). Marvel Comics may have continued to reprint The X-Men, but
for a general decline in sales. This decline was a not only because of
distribution problems with conventional comics (newsstands and small
grocery stores were reluctant to carry comic books because of the small
profit margin [McCue 60; Parsons 75]) but also because of the coun-
tercultural ‘‘cottage industry of underground comics’’ (Brown 21).
These comics, not bound by the Comic Code, ‘‘began making real
inroads into . . . readership’’ (McCue 55). Instead of reprinting old
issues, Marvel Comics published a radically revised X-Men, which
attracted a new readership.
The silver age X-Men were revived, in the ‘‘Bronze Age’’ of the 1970s,
ostensibly for one special issue, Giant Size X-Men (#1: Summer 1975),
which proclaimed, ‘‘From the ashes of the past there grow the fires
of the future. The grandeur and the glory begin anew with Second
Genesis!’’
This ‘‘second genesis’’ was caused by the capture of the original X-
Men, requiring Professor Xavier to mount a rescue with new recruits,
including former foes Banshee (The X-Men #28: January 1967) and
Sunfire (The X-Men #64: January 1970). Other characters new to The
X-Men were recruited: Wolverine, who had debuted in another Marvel
Comics title (The Incredible Hulk #180 and #181: October and
November 1974), and Colossus, Nightcrawler, Storm, and Thunder-
bird, who all debuted in Giant Size X-Men.
The original X-Men had been teenaged American superheroes, but
the recruited X-Men were international and multicultural (Wright
263), and with greater individuality and maturity. Sunfire, Night-
crawler, and Colossus were, respectively, Japanese, German, and
Russian youths; Thunderbird was a male Native American, and Storm
an African American woman; and the Canadian Wolverine and Irish
Banshee were middle-aged men.
American Dreams of Mutants 157
generated by the Vietnam War, Watergate, and the reaction against the
rights revolution of the 1960s as an assault on individualism. The
libertarian belief that ‘‘even well-intentioned government social pro-
grams did more harm than good’’ (Foner 317) was discernible in a two-
issue story, ‘‘Days of Future Past,’’ that began in the issue in which the
title changed from The X-Men to The Uncanny X-Men (#141: January
1981).4
The story envisioned a bleak future in which the United States had
been subjugated by titanic Sentinel robots (debut The X-Men #14:
April 1965) programmed to locate, capture, and neutralize mutants.
These Sentinels had been unleashed by the government after the as-
sassination, by the Brotherhood of Evil Mutants, of Senator Robert
Kelly, who had proposed a Mutant Registration Act. The surviving
X-Men of this future were incarcerated in internment camps. Aided by
Wolverine, who had remained at liberty, the mind of one of these
X-Men, Shadowcat, was transferred to her earlier incarnation (a recent
recruit to the X-Men) to prevent the assassination that created this
bleak future.
The recruitment of the younger and more innocent Shadowcat
served both to counter the bleakness of Wolverine (he even became her
unlikely mentor) and to reaffirm Professor Xavier’s mission to teach
young mutants to control their powers. A new intake of teenage
mutants to Xavier’s academy subsequently debuted in the title New
Mutants (#1: March 1983).
The original X-Men reformed as X-Factor (#1: February 1986), who
supposedly captured mutant ‘‘menaces’’ but actually trained their cap-
tives to control their powers. X-Factor became bleak with the trans-
formation of Angel; his avian wings were replaced with razor-sharp
prosthetics by Apocalypse, an immortal mutant intent on fomenting
conflict between homo sapiens and homo superior (debut #6: July
1986). Apocalypse intended Angel to personify Death in his mutant
team, the Four Horseman (#24 and #25: January and February 1988).
The teenage intake of New Mutants was transformed from students to
warriors under the tutelage of Cable (debut #87: May 1990), a cyborg
freedom fighter who had traveled in time from a distant future tyr-
annized by Apocalypse in order to prepare mutants for the coming
conflict (X-Force #1: June 1991).
The X-titles, including The Uncanny X-Men, X-Factor, and X-Force,
depicted a present plight and problematic future for both homo sapiens
American Dreams of Mutants 159
and homo superior. Such stories as ‘‘Days of Future Past’’ earned praise
for comics in the 1980s for ‘‘their speculation, their inferences, and
their predictions’’ as seeming ‘‘closer to science fiction than to the
Golden Age predecessors’’ (Skidmore and Skidmore 84). These X-titles
drew upon contemporary sophisticated and unsophisticated science
fiction materials. The titles traced themes that had become standard in
science fiction stories of the 1950s and popularized through television
in the 1960s. Temporal displacement, for instance, had become a staple
of television series such as Irwin Allen’s Time Tunnel (1966 – 67). ‘‘Days
of Future Past’’ had greater similarities to two episodes of Leslie
Stevens’s television series The Outer Limits (1963 – 65): ‘‘Soldier’’ (1964)
and ‘‘Demon with a Glass Hand’’ (1964), scripted by Harlan Ellison.
The titles also traced contemporary science fiction cinema. For in-
stance, the student Shadowcat, alone in Professor Xavier’s academy,
singlehandedly defeats a predatory demon (The Uncanny X-Men #143:
March 1981) in a pastiche of the film Alien (1979), particularly in the
de´nouement, when the demon is incinerated in the ignition thrust of a jet
engine. However, the X-titles were merely closer to science fiction; the
titles did not draw solely upon science fiction (rather than an alien,
Shadowcat’s adversary was a demon), but also on fantasy materials.
Magneto and his Brotherhood of Evil Mutants; Cable and his X-Force;
and Apocalypse and his Four Horsemen. The bands of outcasts frag-
mented and X-titles proliferated in the early 1990s. The X-Men di-
vided into two teams: Gold in The Uncanny X-Men and Blue in the
revived The X-Men (Vol. 2/2nd Series #1: October 1991), and a further
intake to Xavier’s academy made a debut in Generation X (#1: No-
vember 1994). This proliferation placed Marvel Comics in double
jeopardy. First, X-titles became ‘‘a very detailed, intricate soap opera,’’
and, as such, inaccessible to new readers (McCue 82).5 Second, Marvel
Comics gained a reputation for foisting X-titles and crossover stories
on readers, while leaving critical acclaim to independent publishers
(Haley 8). Independent titles were inclined to parody X-titles; for
example, Image Comics’ Freak Force, operating as bounty hunters and
superheroes-for-hire, parodied X-Factor and X-Force (Freak Force #1:
December 1993).
The predicament of the X-titles became most evident in 1995 with
the publication of a story, ‘‘The Age of Apocalypse,’’ that had parallels
with ‘‘Days of Future Past’’ (The X-Men #141 – 142: January – February
1981). The eponymous ‘‘Age of Apocalypse’’ was a bleak alternate
present created by the assassination of Professor Xavier prior to his
foundation of the X-Men (The X-Men #41: February 1995). Reper-
cussions of this assassination were the foundation of the X-Men by
Magneto and the subjugation of the United States by Apocalypse.
Homo superior slaughtered homo sapiens, with survivors either
incarcerated in internment camps or evacuated by Sentinel robots to
‘‘United Europe.’’
Consistent with this alternate present, each X-title was renamed
for the duration of the story (March – June 1995). For example, The
Uncanny X-Men became The Astonishing X-Men (#1: March 1995);
X-Factor became Factor X (#1: March 1995); and Generation X became
Generation Next (#1: March 1995). The core story occupied thirty-four
issues of nine monthly or bimonthly X-titles before Apocalypse was
overthrown by Magneto and his X-Men. Past events were rectified, and
Professor Xavier was restored to lead his X-Men in the original
X-titles.
The commercial merit of such X-title crossover stories was that
Marvel was sustained when comic sales—which had been, in part,
inflated by speculators buying comics in bulk for later resale to col-
lectors—generally declined in the mid-1990s. When, in 1996, Marvel
American Dreams of Mutants 161
April 2002) and paramilitary activists for a mutant rights charter (New
X-Men #122: March 2002).
NOTES
1. Doc Savage and his Fabulous Five were created by Kenneth Robeson (the pen-name of Lester
Dent), while The Spider was developed by Grant Stockbridge (the pen-name of Norvell Page).
2. Formerly ‘‘Timely Comics,’’ the product line was retitled ‘‘Marvel Comics’’ in May 1963.
3. Anne McCaffrey, ‘‘A Womanly Talent’’ and ‘‘A Bridle for Pegasus’’ were collected in To Ride
Pegasus (London: Dent, 1974).
4. Written by Chris Claremont and illustrated by John Byrne, these issues were published as a
graphic novel, X-Men: Days of Future Past (New York: Marvel Comics, 1989).
5. Tom DeFalco, editor-in-chief at Marvel Comics, in interview.
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