xxxxx The Continuity Pages-
- ROBERT MAYER-
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Introduction
Robert Mayer is best known as the author of Superfolks, the 1977 novel that has been read as the first deconstructionist super-hero work.
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CONTENTS
PERIODICALS
BOOKS
  • Superfolks
  • Superfolks
    Robert Mayer's first novel, Superfolks, was published in 1977 under a garrish cover. It went largely ignored until Kurt Busiek made reference to it in his introduction to the first
    Astro City trade paperback. Busiek had long been a fan of the novel, first picking it up in 1977, and claimed that the novel was of vital importance for the super-hero genre. But the novel itself, long out of print, was unavailable except to those lucky enough to find it in used bookstores.
    In December 2003, the tiny publisher About Comics released a 2100-volume run of the novel (with only 2000 released to the public) in comic book proportions. At last, comics historians could easily read the novel and test Busiek's claims. I myself bought the book for this reason, not knowing quite what to expect.
    The book, flatly, lives up to Busiek's hype -- and then some. It is truly a revolutionary work. Its take on super-heroes is not strictly deconstructionist: it takes the tone of magical realism, letting super-heroes have sex, but is simultaneously filled with satirical, even ridiculous elements. While brilliant deconstructionist takes on super-heroes are offered, they exist simultaneously with a mishmash of popular cultural figures, from Marilyn Monroe to Spirow Agnew. Perhaps, more than anything, the novel is simply fun and enjoyable to read; again and again, as with the best of literature, I found myself feeling the neurons firing in new ways, saying to myself almost chapter by chapter some variation of "holy shit, this is good!"
    The novel clearly exerted a tremendous influence. Though it is difficult to ascertain what simularities between Superfolks and later deconstructionist works can accurately be attributed to outright influence and what simularities can be attributed to great minds thinking in the same direction, making explicit what lay implicit in the super-hero genre, many such simularities exist. Alan Moore's seminal Miracleman has tremendous resonance with Superfolks, prominently including the aging of Miracleman's human identity, the use of Kid Miracleman as a villain who uses his powers to cross the boundaries of human morality -- not to mention opening with the same Nietzsche quote. Moore's "last Superman story" similarly featured Mr. Mxyzptlk as the secret villain, using his powers in new and destructive ways, and similarly concluded with Superman choosing a domestic life as a mortal. Watchmen and Superfolks both make reference to the historical Kitty Genovese murder as a turning point in a super-hero's consciousness, both use documents from the super-hero world within the narrative, and both feature a sprawling corporate conspiracy connected with Cold War nuclear tensions. Rick Veitch's seminal Bratpack similarly explored super-human sexuality, though it focused on characters other than the Superman analogue as Superfolks did.
    The similarities do not stop with the deconstructionist revolution of the super-hero genre in the mid-1980s. Even Kieth Giffen's Justice League had a Captain Marvel analogue who had aged and had forgotten his secret word. The unapologetic blend of realism with ridiculous elements in Superfolks would manifest in the reconstructionist works inaugurated by Kurt Busiek's Marvels. Samaritan in Busiek's Astro City not only had blue hair, like the protagonist of Superfolks, but also had awards for his super-heroic feats (an idea introduced in Superfolks). Perhaps the work that best duplicates this unapologetic combination of realism and the ridiculous, however, would be Alan Moore's seminal work on Supreme.
    Other elements of Superfolks have been even more forward-looking, most notably the sex. What Mayer did -- as, perhaps, with all deconstructionist moves -- was simply to put into print the kind of things kids talked about on paygrounds: what was super-sex like? Yet, due to corporate censorship and the fact that novels can get away with things that place comics under the counter in plastic baggies all but labelled "for disgusting perverts only," almost all comics have thus far been unable to deal with sex in such a graphic yet humorous manner as Superfolks.
    Pretty damned impressive? Yes, it is. Really. And, like the above works it influenced, one needs to know Superfolks to be fluent in the masterpieces of the super-heroic genre.

    IMAGE
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    DESCRIPTION
    STATUS
    Superfolksa novel by Robert Mayer; Kurt Busiek introduction; the same proportions as comic books; 160 pages; published by About Comics in December 2003
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    First published online on 4 January 2004. These comics and related characters and art are copyrighted by their respective owners. This site is copyrighted by Julian Darius and intended for scholarly purposes and to increase interest in its topic.