Marvel Studio's blockbuster Avengers series, banks on the superhero genre conceived in the early 1930s by two Cleveland Jewish high school students: Jerry Siegel and Joe Shuster.
Superman actualized the adolescent power fantasies of these two Depression-era kids, who craved liberation them from the social and economic impoverishment of their lives and, in the tradition of the Golem of Prague, to fight antisemites.
The narrative is rich in Jewish symbolism. Superman’s parents sent him to Earth in a tiny rocket ship, reminiscent of baby Moses being set adrift in a basket. In the context of the 1930s, the story also reflected the Kindertransports – the evacuation of hundreds of Jewish children from Nazi-occupied Europe to the British Commonwealth.
With America’s entry into World War II, Superman, Batman, and other superheroes were pressed into action. “As comic writers,” says Stan Lee (born Stanley Martin Lieber), “we had to have villains in our stories. And once World War II started, the Nazis gave us the greatest villains in the world to fight against.”
Jewish illustrators and writers entered the emerging comic book field because other areas of illustration were closed to them. “We couldn’t get into newspaper strips or advertising; ad agencies wouldn’t hire a Jew,” explains MAD magazine cartoonist Al Jaffee. “One of the reasons we Jews drifted into the comic book business is that most of the comic book publishers were Jewish. So there was no discrimination there.”
Most of the first-wave comic book artists and writers never emerged from poverty. They were underpaid and received no rights or royalties; the characters they created were owned and trademarked by the comic book publishers. Even Siegel and Shuster earned a paltry $130 for the first Superman story and had to negotiate for meager financial and creative participation in subsequent Superman strips and spinoffs.
In 1961, Lee was tired of being perceived as being at “the bottom of the cultural totem pole,” so he decided to consider a career change. Before he made his move, his boss called Lee into his office and asked him to come up with a new superhero concept that would outperform DC Comics’ "The Justice League of America" (which combined the revamped Flash and Green Lantern with mainstays like Superman, Batman, and Wonder Woman to form a team of superheroes). Lee took up the challenge and, quite possibly, saved the comic book industry.
Lee and artist Jack Kirby (born Jacob Kurzberg) unveiled Fantastic Four #1, a new crime fighting series featuring four heroes who, for the first time in comic book history, exhibited a broad range of human emotions. Readers could empathize with such characters as Benjamin Grimm (who’d been transformed by cosmic rays into a monstrous pile of orange rocks) despite – or, perhaps, because of – their flaws. To his fellow superheroes, Ben could be a hotheaded jerk, but comics fans attributed his distemper to his being trapped in repulsive orange skin and could feel compassion for him.
Like many Marvel characters, the emotionally challenged Ben became a metaphor for Jews and other minority outsiders who faced discrimination because of their skin color or ethnic roots.
The Fantastic Four quickly built up a large readership, and Marvel Comics soon introduced titles featuring physically and emotionally challenged heroes, such as Daredevil, Thor, and The Incredible Hulk. Thus began the Marvel Age of Comics, marked by Lee and Kirby’s brilliant seven-year collaboration.
The next major breakthrough for Marvel came in September 1963, when Lee and Kirby introduced The X-Men, a superhero team of five men and women born with an extra “mutant” gene that endowed each with a different superpower (telepathy, strength, flight, and the ability to emit deadly optic blasts). From their base at Professor Charles Xavier’s “School for Gifted Youngsters” in Westchester, N.Y., the five set out to fight injustice. The X-Men was a hit among college students active in the civil rights struggle of the 1960s, who may have viewed Professor X’s battle against the Magneto as a metaphor for the divergent ideologies of Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. and Malcolm X.
The Jews who pioneered this art form are superheroes in their own right, for they created enduring icons of popular culture. And they did so with an eye toward Jewish values.
Stan Lee summed it up like this: “To me you can wrap all of Judaism up in one sentence, and that is, ‘Do unto others.’ All I tried to do in my stories was show that there’s some innate goodness in the human condition. And there’s always going to be evil; we should always be fighting evil.”