Superheroes and alternate history are two subgenres of science fiction that have always appeared to compliment one another but very few writers ever dared to combine and exploit to its fullest. One reason for this is continuity, the holy grail of all comic book geeks. Ever since the debut of Superman in 1938 and the Fantastic Four in 1961, the Big Two of the comic book industry more or less on a floating timeline that prevents their characters from aging (though continuity is far murkier for DC after two major reboots and countless smaller retcons.) Superman could be BFFs with Joseph Kennedy in 1963 then be shaking hands with Ronald Reagan twenty years later without aging a single day. Another reason is because both companies, especially Marvel, pride themselves on verisimilitude by making their universe superficially similar to ours so neither company has fully addressed the social and geopolitical implications of the effective demigods in their midst until recent years with Marvel’s Civil War and DC’s 52.
However, one can
consider Marvel’s “What If?” titles and DC’s Elseworlds line alternate history
to some extent. These titles largely centered on the individual histories of
their characters like “What if Spider-Man Joined the Fantastic Four?” or “What
if Sgt. Nick Fury Fought World War II in Space?”
rather than historical events from our world. Some scenarios such as “What if
Captain America Were Revived Today?” from What If? (vol. 1) #44 possesses some trappings of alternate history. For
example, Namor the Sub-Mariner took a different route when the Avengers pursued
him in Avengers (vol. 1)
#4 so he never discovered the group
of Inuit who worshipped a frozen Steve Rogers and thus never hurled Captain
America into the ocean for the Avengers to find. The Avengers eventually
disbanded without Captain America, but more disturbingly, a janitor working at
a government facility awakened the mentally unstable 1950s Captain America and
Bucky from suspended animation and convinced them that the United States was in
danger from subversive elements. As such, the impostor Captain America and
Bucky became involved with a political movement that transformed the United
States into a police state until a crew of American sailors found the true Cap
in the Arctic.
Marvel, aside
from a dalliance with a robot
Stalin, waited almost twenty years to dip their toe into the alternate
history ocean with Neil Gaiman’s 1602. While not technically a What If? issue, the mini-series has a point of divergence (a
Captain America from a potential future goes back in time to the failed Roanoke
colony and aids in their survival) that causes various Marvel characters to
appear nearly four hundred years before they should have. Instead of being the
director of S.H.I.E.L.D. Nick Fury is Elizabeth I’s chief intelligence officer
whose apprentice is Peter Parquagh, an ersatz version of a nameless friendly
neighborhood webslinger. However, one of the more intriguing elements of Marvel
1602 is Gaiman weaved themes from X-Men into late Elizabethan history, particularly James
I’s persecution of the “witchbreed” or mutants and how Magneto is ostensibly a
grand inquisitor for the Spanish Inquisition but hides his illicit activities
behind his position.
This fascination
with alternate history continued with the fourth volume of What If? in late 2005. Unlike most issues of the title, which
were largely self-contained worlds, this volume of the series took place within
in a single timeline
where Captain America’s genesis occurs in the American Civil War as opposed to
World War II and the Fantastic Four were Russian cosmonauts. Being more of an
aficionado of American history, I prefer the Captain America one and appreciate
how Cap because more of a physical manifestation of the American spirit during
one the nation’s most troubled periods rather than symbol. Because of this
Cap’s presence shortens the Civil War, prevents Abraham Lincoln’s
assassination, and his origins in Native American mysticism sparked a cultural
craze that prevented the Indian Wars of the 1870s. Out of the six What If? (Vol. 4) one-shots,
only Captain America and Fantastic
Four address the broader strokes of
alternate history whereas the other four are more character-focused.
Unfortunately, Marvel did not revisit this timeline as they did Marvel
1602, but they are well worth the effort of
searching through the odd long box for.
Meanwhile, DC,
like their marvelous competition, has only dabbled in the realm of alternate
history with its Elseworlds line but
there are a few notable examples such as Batman: Holy Terror
written by Alan Brennert and illustrated by
Norm Breyfogle. The point of divergence for this story is that Oliver Cromwell
lived ten years longer and the United States became a totalitarian, theocratic
state. While I have never read the issue on account that it has been out of
print for over twenty years, a cursory glance of the synopsis on Wikipedia was
enough to pique my interest and should do the same for other alternate history enthusiasts.
DC’s Tangent imprint,
introduced in 1997, operates under a similar premise where there are not only
vastly different versions of Superman, the Flash, the Atom, and even obscure
characters like the Sea Devils but the presence of superpowered beings
radically altered history from what we know. The central premise behind the
imprint is that an alternate version of the Atom intervened in the Cuban
Missile Crisis, which resulted in the destruction of Florida and Cuba. As such,
Atlanta became an underwater city populated by merpeople, their technology
advanced further than the mainstream DC Universe, and the hippie movement was
in its infancy when the nineties rolled around.
Dan Jurgens, the
man who killed Superman and the brain behind Tangent, justified this divergence
when he told Comic
Book Resources:
“While
the DCU Earth is essentially the same as our own, no more advanced in terms of
technology or communications despite the existence of those qualities within
the super-powered community, Earth Tangent is greatly influenced by all of
that. Earth Tangent's economic, geographic and political landscapes are defined
by the superhero community, whereas in the DCU those aspects exist unaffected
by the superhero community.”
Jurgens brings
up an excellent point about a medium that birthed the trope, “Reed
Richards is Useless.” Take the Flash’s rogues gallery for example, Captain
Cold and his cohorts possess technology that can generate temperatures near
absolute zero, alter weather patterns, and even transmute the 118 elements. Why
did the scientists and business leaders not reverse engineer the technology
after the Central City Police Department confiscated it? The Tangent imprint
gives something of a look at such a world and is perhaps a blueprint for how
ambitious writers should combine the two genres.
Some could argue
that Superman: Red
Son is an alternate history and I
suppose it is to some extent. The premise is simple enough: baby Kal-L lands in
Ukraine in 1938 instead of Kansas. However, my impression of the mini-series is
that if it is alternate history, it is about squishy as bag full of
marshmallows (or a Type X on Sliding
Scale of Alternate History Plausibility.) Its writer, Mark Millar, makes
reference to even greater civil unrest in the late 1960s under surviving JFK, a
war against communists in the South Pacific in 1983, and a second American
Civil War in 1986 without too much elaboration. Granted, there are constraints
to the medium but it is clear that the focus is more on Superman as a seemingly
benevolent leader of the Soviet Union and his rivalry with Lex Luthor than on
the butterflies that a Soviet Man of Steel would create. That is not to say Red
Son is not worth reading, it is more
fantasy than alternate history.
Watchmen, by Alan Moore and Dave Gibbons, is the mirror image
of Red Son in terms of realism
and setting. In fact, the world of Watchmen could be a reflection ours until 1938 where the first
appearance of Superman in Action Comics #1 inspired a wave of costumed vigilantes, and again in
1959 with the creation of Dr. Manhattan. Alternate history is one portion of
Watchmen’s complexity that Moore executes extremely well. Dr. Manhattan
essentially gave the United States the strategic advantage in the Cold War and
practically won the Vietnam War single-handedly but that also becomes a
disadvantage because he is also the lone reason why the Soviet Union stays in
check. Hence, Moore makes the consequences of his departure realistic as
evidenced by the Soviet invasion of Pakistan and bringing Earth closer to the
brink of Nuclear War. However, there are also several other economic and
cultural consequences as well. The good doctor’s ability to synthesize lithium
allows for the mass production of electric cars, hence reducing the United
States’ dependence of foreign petroleum, and the appearance “real” superheroes
essentially led to the death of the medium in the late forties so pirate comics
like “The Tales of the Black Freighter.” (Though I wonder how Indian fast food
became so popular with the American public instead of McDonalds.) Watchmen is practically required reading for all comic book
fans, but to read it again from the prism of an alternate historian
demonstrates how well the two genres blend.
One of the
things I admire about alternate history is that it posed a question Marvel
asked when they released a new title in February 1977, “what if?” Personally, I
am not as interested in the typical “What if the Axis won World War II?” or
“What if the Confederacy won the American Civil War?” as I am interested in
smaller events like “What
if a more moderate candidate sought the democratic nomination in 1972” or “What
if Lucille Ball decided not to sell Desilu Studios to Gulf+Western?”
because even the smallest pebble can create many ripples. Marvel 1602,
Tangent Comics, and Watchmen demonstrate that alternate history can blend with
the fantastic as peanut butter tends to do with chocolate, and they are only
the tip of the glacier. In a universe populated by gods, aliens, and immortal
cavemen who could alter the flow of history well before the 20th
century, the myriad of scenarios to use as story fodder is practically endless.
Is there a writer ambitious enough to push this hybrid genre to its creative
limits?
Only time will
tell.
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