"Walk-On Parts": The Diminished Agency of Grant Morrison's Superhero Celebrities
Date
2019-12-16T12:56:29Z
Authors
Riley, Will
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Abstract
While several comic book writers have written superheroes as analogous to celebrities,
Grant Morrison is the author who has done so the most frequently. Using Zenith, Animal Man
and The Multiversity as its core examples, this paper suggests that Morrison’s depictions of
celebrities differentiates itself from others’ by applying a situationist lens to fame. Morrison’s
work reflects Guy Debord’s critique of celebrities’ role in social life, wherein famous people,
rather than being distinct individuals, have sacrificed their uniqueness in exchange for fame.
Morrison’s celebrities, instead of being able to use their public visibility to positively change
society, are constantly impeded by the artifice which constructs their fame in the first place. As a
result, they find themselves losing not just the ability for their words and deeds to impact the
world, but their ability to express themselves as individuals, ultimately becoming unwitting
upholders of the status quo.
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Keywords
Comic Books, Graphic Novels, Morrison, Grant, Milligan, Peter, Animal Man, The Multiversity, Paradax!, Celebrity Culture, Marshall, David P., Jurgens, Dan, Celebrity Studies, Debord, Guy, Situationism, Spectacle, Animal rights, DC Comics, 2000 AD, Monaco, James, Activism, Advocacy, Live Aid, Comics Studies, Zenith, Fame, TV interviews, Celebrity, Society of the Spectacle, Superpowers, Media, Superheroes, Ecoterrorism, Role Models, Metafiction, Talk Shows, Spectatorship, The Just, Damian Wayne, Social Media, alienation, genre fiction, fiction, Environmentalism