|
ICE CREAM IS GREAT. Cookie dough is great.
Chunks of chocolate fudge are great. But put them all together
and mmm-boy... you've just discovered something really
great.
Call it the Great Chocolate Chip Cookie Dough Ice Cream
Theory of Creativity -- sometimes, the sum of a whole is greater
than its parts. It works for desserts, and it works for
superhero teams. And in the beginning, there was the Justice
Society to put this theory into practice.
By the early 1940s, DC had assembled a large cast of
interesting characters, all of whom enjoyed their own successful
series. Along with heavyweights Superman and Batman, DC's roster
included the Flash, Hawkman, the Spectre, Dr. Fate, the Sandman,
Green Lantern and dozens more. Individually, each of them
thrilled millions with their heroic exploits, so it didn't take
a genius to figure out that a book putting them all on a team
would be a guaranteed blockbuster.
During the team's decade-long career, the Justice
Society of America was dedicated to fighting spies
and saboteurs during the Second World War, and later moved on to
such super menaces as the Injustice Gang of the World, which was
(logically enough) a team-up of the JSA members' arch-foes. But
there were also stories in which writer Gardner Fox (who
co-created both Hawkman and the Flash) would also weave social
issues such as juvenile delinquency and world peace into the
narrative. These heroes can accomplish anything just by
working together, the stories seemed to say. So what's
stopping mankind from doing the same thing?
Superhero teams usually form when heroes meet a threat that
they can't overcome on their own, but that wasn't the case for
the JSA. The only thing they
attacked when they first came together was a Thanksgiving
turkey; they got together over dinner to discuss the troubles
that only fellow superheroes could understand. In other words,
the very first superhero team came together to provide mutual
support, not to kick butt. This emphasis on supporting each
other -- and proving the value of working together for a common
goal -- has become the blueprint for successful hero teams ever
since.
|