Batman Paper Anon

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    Grey, Blue, and Yellow at the Center of a Bloody Universe

    By DoctorDown

    Batman is a character known worldwide. His iconic chevron of a black bat

    silhouette against an oval of yellow can be seen on t-shirts and lunchboxes all over

    the world. For the past 70+ years, The Caped Crusader has risen to high fame

    fighting his rogues gallery of nemeses page after page, cover to cover. It is these

    villains of his, this colorful band of conniving killers, which truly make Batmans

    panels shine. It is not just their colorful schemes and quirked personality traits, but

    their commonalities to our hero, that keep us intrigued. Bend Batman just one

    fraction of a degree, and you will see the mirror image of those whom he fights.

    As with any long running series, things change drastically over time.

    Characters, writers, artists, histories; everything is modified, altered, and rewritten

    by the pen that draws that issues lines. The Batman series is no stranger to this. All

    things, even down to the very nature and personality of the protagonist, have ridden

    a full spectrum of difference.

    At his inception in 1939 (Detective Comics #27), Batman was based of the

    serial, noir pulp fictions of the time, creating a Bogart double with a mask and a

    utility belt. He solved crime and savagely beat, maimed, and killed criminals in the

    name of justice with little remorse. It wasnt a SAWfilm, but it certainly wasnt

    Superman either. Batman was a hero penned in the vein of pulp characters like Doc

    Savage and The Shadow.

    By the time Batman received his own series outside ofDetective Comics, his

    persona had changed. He had gained his kid sidekick, Robin, and had vowed not to

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    kill or use a gun. By the end of WWII, Batman had adopted a postwar editorial

    direction that increasingly de-emphasized social commentary in favor of

    lighthearted juvenile fantasy. (Wright, p. 59) This was the beginning of an era that

    would last into the 70s, ending with the fall of the Batman television show staring

    Adam West.

    In the 70s and early 80s, many changes were made in an attempt to bring

    The Dark Knight back to his pulp roots. His costume had desaturated in color, he

    gained the dim, yellow oval behind his bat silhouette chevron, and his cases left the

    odd and strayed back to the path of detective stories. Still, the Batman series was

    failing, and would continue to do so until Frank Miller created the five-month series

    The Dark Knight Returns in 1986. It was in this year that long time series writer

    Dennis ONeil was promoted to the position of editor for the Batman comics.

    With the release ofThe Dark Knight Returns and Dennis ONeil in charge,

    Batman was revived. Within the next two years, most of the Batman series staples

    would be printed, of which include Year One, The Killing Joke, and the death of the

    2nd Robin character inA Death in the Family. This established a grittier Batman that

    would be pushed, not just physically, but psychologically, to the very brink of his

    being. It stirred audiences, created some of the most acclaimed pieces in superhero

    comic literature, and established the Batman of modern day.

    Since its revival, Batman has encountered far more mental traumas than

    ever before that. Pre-Miller, Batmans greatest worries were mainly physical ones.

    Often times, it was simply a matter of escaping a trap or restraints and knocking out

    the outlandishly costumed villain with a well placed POW or WAM. If anything,

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    the television show of the late 60s is the epitome of that. A bright color palette with

    comically sized bombs, moneybags with dollar signs on them, and a ridiculous catch

    phrase formula of Holy [current conversation subject]!, was the pathway to a low-

    grade version of a highly touted detective. The Batman and his medley of

    adversaries were one-dimensional; shallow shadows of some of the rich histories

    given since.

    Between the late 80s pieces and the highly acclaimed, award winning, 1990s

    cartoon series, Batman: The Animated Series, the Batman Universe gained the level

    of depth it had been lacking for so long. Characters like Harley Quinn, the Jokers

    answer to Robin, were created, and early villains such as Mr. Freeze donned new

    looks, backgrounds, and personas. This gave a soul to the series and The Caped

    Crusader as well.

    With that soul, came enough psychological disorders to make Freud blush.

    The Batman series has received attention and analytical study from a mass of

    professionals with expensive degrees and long-winded doctorates, at the very least

    because every villain ends up in a mental ward instead of a prison. Batman has

    become as much about psychology at it started about sleuthing. With Superman, his

    strength, wit, and versatility will win the day, but with Batman, its something

    different. With Batman, a reader isnt there to watch the radiation infused boxing

    match, they are there to witness the Worlds Greatest Detective beat the foe with

    his mind.

    So what is it that gives Batman that depth? How is it that when a villain such

    as the Joker or Catwoman approaches the panel, greater adrenaline is pumped than

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    when Lex Luthor or Sinestro do? Its because Batmans villains play on a different

    level of psyche than kill with robotsor smash with magic hammer. The foes of

    the Batman series rattle Batman (and the reader) because they are a version of

    Batman. In almost every major villain Batman has, there is a piece of him. They are

    mirror shards of himself, and they would show themselves if Batman were ever to

    waver in his self-discipline only to a degree or two.

    Bruce Wayne grew up wealthy. Born into a family of great fortune to begin

    with, his father, Dr. Thomas Wayne, was an extremely gifted surgeon who

    embedded positive moral values within his son through philanthropic deeds. If he

    were to have grown up with out the trauma of his parent drying tragically, perhaps

    Bruce would have continued along that path more confidently, but the trauma did

    occur. It could easily have been that after playing witness to his parents murder,

    Bruce Waynes emotions could have gotten the better of him. With a great deal of

    monetary fortune, he could have easily spent his days as his playboy bachelor faade

    would suggest. The Penguin is this shard of the mirror.

    The Penguin, born Oswald Cobblepot, is a villain based off of a nefarious

    aristocrat archetype. His signature appearance is usually a tuxedo, complete with a

    top hat, monocle, umbrella, and often a cigarette or cigar in his mouth. He sees

    himself as of the highest class and a superior in the human race. In ironic fashion, he

    is often deformed, or depicted with ugly and stout features, at the very least. He is

    short, fat to the point of round, bald or balding, and has a nose that sticks out a great

    length (all the better to stick up, I assume). In Tim Burtons BatmanReturns (1992),

    his deformity goes as far as to give him flippers for hands.

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    He is a view of what Bruce could have been. As a young man, Bruce had a

    great amount of money and a emotional burden to throw money at. He may not

    have had any deformities, but the wealth could have made Bruce ugly, it could have

    turned him into a high aristocrat that would have given Cobblepot a run for his

    money (pun intended).

    However, the Penguin, though one of the first, is not a very large Batman

    nemesis. His actions have led to murder, but it more often than not leads to crimes

    ranking in theft. In current chronology, he even assists Batman with underground

    information and runs a shady club more or less for the criminal world. As well as all

    that, he is probably the sanest of all Batmans foes. He may be deformed and suffer

    from severe megalomania, but he is in complete control and exerts a modicum of

    ration behavior unseen in most other villains.

    Carl Jung coined the phrase The Shadow Aspect or Shadow Self. He

    describes it as thus (Jung, Psychology):

    We carry our past with us, to wit, the primitive and inferior man with his desires

    and emotions, and it is only with an enormous effort that we can detach ourselves

    from this burden. If it comes to a neurosis, we invariably have to deal with a

    considerably intensified shadow. And if such a person wants to be cured it is

    necessary to find a way in which his conscious personality and his shadow can live

    together.

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    If anything, Bruce Wayne has taken his shadow self, the primitive response

    to his desires and emotion, and has created Batman. He has found his cure

    through living with it; creating a purpose and a way to enact that purpose. This

    alter ego, this twin, this double, is Bruce Waynes way of dealing with the trauma of

    his parent being murdered right in front of him. Batman is a physical manifestation

    of this shadow self, and just as Bruce has done, so has Harvey (Smith, Batman).

    Two-Face could be described as having a dissociative disorder; a person who

    literally is giving you two personalities. When someone begins to truly develop an

    alternative identity, or a true alter ego, we move from what may be the normal to

    something much darker; much more pathological. In fact, ultimately, quite

    psychotic.

    This is Dr. Robert T.M. Philips, a forensic consultant, discussing the

    definitional sanity of the Batman villain known as Two-Face, a man who is literally

    two different entities split down the center of his body. Based upon Year One, The

    Long Halloween, and a few other pieces, he started out as Assistant District Attorney

    Harvey Dent. He, Commissioner Gordon (Captain at the time), and Batman formed

    an alliance to bring down Gotham Citys crime. While prosecuting a criminal in

    court, Harvey is attacked by said criminal with acid, scarring his face permanently.

    This trauma is what creates Two-Face, a crime lord who decides his decisions based

    upon the flip of a scarred coin he received from his abusive father.

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    The quote from Dr. Philips above describes Harvey Dent/Two-Face to the

    T. He is a split (literally) personality with an alternative identity which is a

    darker, psychotic being. Though he is primarily Two-Face, Harvey has been known

    to emerge as well. Alternatively, Harvey can be seen battling himself as Two-Face

    over various problems in multiple runs of the series. He is a character at ends with

    his mental being, and because of the severe trauma that is beyond comprehension,

    he has created a second half of himself to fall into.

    Take one more look at the quote from Dr. Philips on more time. Please,

    remove Two-Face and replace it with Bruce Wayne. They are interchangeable.

    In order to deal with severe trauma, Bruce Wayne created Batman. Batman is his

    alter ego. The question of Which is the true identity? could be easily brought up.

    Bruce Wayne anxiously awaits being Batman. It could be said that Bruce Wayne

    was lost as a child the night his parents were shot, and that he has been building

    Batman ever since. In issue #33 ofDetective Comics, the origin of Batman is first

    revealed and as a child, Bruce Wayne steps up to his parents graves and proclaims

    by the spirits of my parents [I will] avenge their deaths by spending the rest of my

    life warring on all criminals. Without it even having a name, Bruce Wayne had

    birthed The Batman.

    How close is Batman to Two-Face then? In very obvious terms, Batman

    fights criminals, and Two-Face is a criminal. But, Batman is on the edge; he is

    teetering. At a time of incredible stress or further trauma, could he become a Two-

    Face of Batman?

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    In the recent series Batman R.I.P, Bruce Waynes mind is crushed by the

    weight that his father may still possibly be alive and running an advanced criminal

    organization. He is attacked by the organization and buried alive in a coffin. He

    finally makes his way out, but not as Bruce Wayne, as Batman. He has lost all of his

    memories as Bruce Wayne, leaving him without an identity. All he knows is his

    training as Batman.

    One of DC Comics current co-Publishers, Dan Di Dio, has said, The reality is

    that the Batman persona is the true persona, in our opinion [] Bruce Wayne is the

    mask. Does that make it true? Has Bruce Wayne been swallowed whole by his

    alter-ego, leaving only a mask? Rabbi Cary A. Friedman, author of a book of life

    philosophy from Batman comics called Wisdom from the Batcave, has a retort to Dan

    Di Dio (Smith, Batman):

    Which is the real identity? Is it Bruce, or is it Batman? And I think the really

    cool answer would be to say Oh, its Batman!, but I think that misses the point.

    What defines the character is the essential humanity that Bruce Wayne possesses.

    Possessing this humanity is what separates Bruce Wayne from Two-Face.

    Whereas Two-Face has discarded his Harvey Dent humanity for the remorseless

    murderer, Bruce Wayne has drawn the hard line and separated his two states of

    being. He cant help but stay Bruce Wayne because even though Batman may be the

    avenger of his parents, Bruce is still the one who lost them. Bruce Wayne is whom

    Batman wants to retire and be. He is the one who asks advice from Alfred and

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    allows another Robin into his family. In Alan Moores Batman one-shot, The Killing

    Joke, Barbara Gordon (the then-current Batgirl) is shot and paralyzed from the waist

    down by the Joker. Batman goes to the hospital to see her, but when he calls out to

    her, he does not tell her its Batman, he whispers paternally, Barbara, can you hear

    me? Its me. Its Bruce.

    Batmans gallery of rogues is extensive. Throughout the chronicles of the

    worlds greatest detective and his stories, villains have been weaved in and out

    drastically. Mr. Freeze was originally a nothing more than a mad scientist who

    received his Ph. D. in freeze rays from Oxford, but when Batman: The Animated

    Series aired, he was changed. His back-story earned the show an Emmy. It is one of

    a man, Dr. Victor Fries, sent over the edge by love and heartbreak. He froze his

    dying wife to save her, but accidentally shattered her in the process and grew insane

    because of it. His objective thereafter was to kill everyone he considered to be the

    cause, and wouldnt you know it, the project was funded by Wayne enterprises.

    The similarities are extreme in this case: both Bruce and Victor have lost love

    ones and have sent themselves on a mission to take down the evil they believe

    caused it with their alter egos. It rings the bell harder when you consider what

    Jeffery Lieberman M.D. says concerning child Bruce Waynes guilt over his parents

    (Smith, Batman): Kids, even if they arent directly responsible for the event,

    generally personalize and take responsibility for the event. Both Bruce and Victor,

    in their minds at the very least, believe they are responsible for the deaths of the

    loved ones.

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    Catwoman is another example. The difficult home life under a suicidal

    mother and an alcoholic father who hates that she reminds him of his wife leads to

    Selina Kyles running away. She gets caught up with prostitution and thievery, but

    once the thievery becomes more lucrative, she turns into a slightly Robin Hood-

    esque figure. Having murdered and being a thief in general, shes willing to cross

    lines that Batman will not, yet Batman rarely treats her as a villain. He sees himself

    in her. How similar they are is what leads to their emotional and sexual

    entanglements.

    As previously mentioned, Batmans list of adversaries runs quite long.

    However, there is one figure that goes beyond what all of the others can achieve or

    fathom. A figure that is pure demon. A nightmare made real, just for Bruce. This

    iconic foe is loathed vehemently by Batman, and made to be enraptured by him all at

    the same time.

    The Joker is a villain beyond villain. He is anonymous chaos. Loki in human

    form. He was established as the baddest of the bad in something so good, it could

    only have been penned by Alan Moore, The Killing Joke. The Joker had been around

    long before this one-shot graphic novel, but it was this piece that truly set the bar.

    The Joker had started out in the early issues ofBatman, indeed, as a homicidal

    maniac. He committed murder and pranks, and often ended the issues with him in a

    situation where he surely must be dead, yet some how makes it out. In the Silver

    Age 60s, The Joker lost a lot of his gumpsh. He became less of a murderous lunatic

    and more of a prankster. The characters usage was lessened quite a bit until the

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    mid 70s when Dennis ONeil and Neal Adams revived him back a the killer he used

    to be.

    It wasnt until The Killing Joke was created that there had ever been a reason

    to look at the Joker beyond that he enjoys killing people. The Killing Joke brought

    Batmans struggle with The Joker to light. It was less of Batman, and instead, it

    seemed more like Bruce Wayne in Batman attire. His defenses were lowered; he

    seemed defeated by The Jokers existence. The opening of the novel is Batman

    walking into Arkham Asylum to practically bargain with The Joker. The Joker has

    left a double in his place, and while Batman is talking reason into the fake, the real

    Clown Prince is out in the world.

    Unlike The Joker before this, he is not off in Gotham, killing at random. No,

    this is an instance of pure evil. It goes beyond crime because the Joker is targeting

    Batman; making it personal. He shoots Batmans partner, Barbara Gordon a.k.a

    Batgirl (albeit, probably without knowing), and kidnaps her father, Commissioner

    Gordon. Joker has his henchmen strip Gordon, and sends him through a torturous

    carnival ride when pictures off his naked daughter Barbara, as she lies with a

    gunshot wound on the floor of his home.

    The Joker makes it extremely clear that his intention is to show that anyone

    can be as insane as he is. Once Batman arrives, he saves Gordon who pleads with

    him to capture Joker by the book, because We have to show him that our way

    works! Batman finds the clown and begins beating on him, but hes also in the

    same, pleading dialogue as the beginning of the book. Hes asking Joker to let it end

    because if it doesnt end by choice, they will both end up killing each other. In a rare

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    Batman says: Philosophically, we can acknowledge an imperfect world, we

    can acknowledge that we have to step outside the social norms, but that doesnt

    make the social norms meaningless.

    The Joker says: The presence of random injustice means that there is no

    justice. The fact that you can destroy innocence means there is no innocence. So,

    your lifeis a joke.

    [] The Joker isnt just threatening him physically, hes threatening

    Batmans existence.

    The first part ofthe statement is literally Batmans motto. Batman is under

    the belief that even though this world they live in is wrought with crime, criminals,

    and crazies, that doesnt make it unsalvageable. In Batmans mind, he must keep the

    mentality that all he does is for a purpose.

    The Jokers part in this statement is not the opposite of Batmans, it is simply

    the neutralization of it. He takes the exact formula Batman just used in his logic, and

    decimates his motto. Joker takes away from Batman that which makes him Batman,

    his resolution, hence the last part.

    By threatening Batmans existence, Fingeroth isnt talking about his life,

    hes talking about his purpose. Batman is Bruce Waynes purpose for living. Bruce

    believes he can use the tool that is Batman to save others from the traumas that

    haunted him as a child. It is this sentiment, this mindset, that has kept Batman alive

    all these years. Without that, what is Batman? This is Jokers purpose. He is there

    to challenge Batman beyond physical, beyond mental, beyond fear, or money, or

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    fame, or badges. The Joker is there to make sure that Batman stays in as much

    continuous trauma as possible, just as he is. That is where they are homogonous, for

    if The Jokers trauma were to end, he would be stop his murderous and criminal

    sprees, and his life would normal. If Bruce Wayne were to lose his trauma, then he

    would lose his greatest support; Bruce Wayne would lose Batman.

    Batman is a deeply methodical series. Though it has changed writers several

    times, itis the stories penned at the beginning of the Dennis ONeil editorial era that

    have created such richness. Frank Miller, Alan Moore, Jim Starlin, and all of the

    pencilers, colorists, and letterists in between are the one who created the base for

    this rich lore. A realm where a man with no super powers has pushed himself

    beyond super simply to block others from the pain thathe felt as a child. While

    Green Lantern comics tout space tours and alien races, while Superman comics

    concern the wish for a larger-than-life hero to simply be normal, Batman is busy

    fighting for the cause hes chosen; battling forever against demons in his mind,

    personified out in the land, even if he is a mentally ill being, he paves the road for a

    salubrious haven.

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    BIBLIOGRAPHY

    Works Cited

    Batman Unmasked. Dir. Steven Smith. History Channel, 2008. DVD.

    Daniels, Les.Batman: the Complete History. London: Titan, 1999. Print.

    Jung, C. G. The Collected Works of C.G. Jung / [v.11] Psychology and Religion :West and East.

    New York: Pantheon, 1958. Print.

    Moore, Alan, Brian Bolland, and Richard Starkings.Batman: The Killing Joke. New York: DC

    Comics, 2008. Print.

    Wright, Bradford W. Comic Book Nation: the Transformation of Youth Culture in America.

    Baltimore, MD: Johns Hopkins UP, 2003. Print.

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