Supergods
Héroes, mitos e historias del cómic
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- $14.900
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- $14.900
Descripción editorial
La historia de superhéroes contada por el legendario guionista de cómics Grant Morrison.
No hace ni un siglo que viven entre nosotros. Se puede documentar su aparición: en 1938, cuando llegó a los kioscos el primer número de Action Comics, con las aventuras de un periodista miope y tímido, que bajo la camisa blanca llevaba una malla con la letra S. En pocos años, los cielos del mundo imaginario estaban llenos de mutantes, aliens y vigilantes: Batman, el capitán Marvel, Iron Man o los X-Men siguieron la estela de Superman para salvar al mundo, patrullar las ciudades derrotando a los malvados, y sobre todo nutrir los sueños de varias generaciones.
Son los superhéroes. Pero antes de ser héroes, son una Idea. Y sobre eso habla esta historia.
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
A Scottish playwright and comic book writer, Morrison (Arkham Asylum) traces the rise of superheroes from the 1940s golden age to the comics industry of today. This excellent survey of pop deity origins begins with "the ur-god and his dark twin," Superman and Batman. As Morrison sees it, "archetyped, pop-mythic tales of superpowered heroes and villains" soared into our collective imaginations in an explosive fashion. Superman, "the personification of a thrusting industrial tomorrow," had a primal impact. Soon there was a pantheon of gods and figures from legend and myth: Hawkman ("an avatar of hawk-headed Horus"), the Flash ("the Greek god Hermes") and Captain Marvel, whose magic word, "Shazam," was an acronym: Solomon, Hercules, Atlas, Zeus, Achilles, Mercury. When writers brought the superhero gods down to Earth and gritty real life (as in Watchmen), Morrison went back to basics: "I decided I would plant my flag in the world of dreams, automatic writing, visions and magic." The second half of this engrossing book covers his own comics career while also probing his personal psyche. Morrison is a skilled word magician, seeking creativity in a cosmological dimension.