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Superman

For other uses, see Superman (disambiguation).

Superman, nicknamed The Man of Steel, is a fictional character and superhero who first appeared in Action Comics #1 in 1938 and eventually became one of the most popular and well-known comic book icons of all time.

The character, who was created by Jerry Siegel and Joe Shuster, subsequently appeared in various radio serials, television programs, and films. Superman was born Kal-El on the planet Krypton. He was sent to Earth in a rocket by his scientist father Jor-El moments before Krypton exploded, landing on Earth outside the town of Smallville, where he was discovered and adopted by the amiable Jonathan and Martha Kent. As he grew, he discovered that he possessed superhuman powers. When not fighting the forces of evil as Superman, he lives disguised as Clark Kent, a "mild-mannered reporter" for the Daily Planet. Clark's love interest is fellow reporter, Lois Lane.

Superman is a loan translation from the German Übermensch (literally "over-man" or "super-man").

Synopsis

Superman's abilities and relationships have changed over time. Editors and writers used the process of retroactive continuity, or retcon, to adjust to changes in popular culture, eliminate restrictive segments of the mythos, and permit contemporary storylines. These changes, while significant, permit the retention of the core elements that make Superman an iconic character.

The modern story of Superman's origin parallels that of other cultural heroes and religious figures [1] (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Superman#fn_narration) who were spirited away as infants from places where they were in danger.

Cover of Action Comics #1, the first appearance of Superman. Art by Joe Shuster.

In the legend extant in the early 1960s (and memorably summarized at the start of each episode of the 1950s Adventures of Superman television series[2] (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Superman#fn_narration)), Superman was born on Krypton as Kal-El, the son of Jor-El, a scientist and leader. When Kal-El was two or three years old, Jor-El learned that Krypton was doomed to explode, and he brought this to the attention of Krypton's ruling leaders, the Science Council. Disbelieving Jor-El's prediction, they refused to warn their fellow Kryptonians, and forbade Jor-El to do so. Jor-El promised that neither he nor his wife Lara would leave Krypton, and decided to use the little time remaining to save his son. Moments before Krypton exploded, they launched Kal-El in a rocket ship towards Earth, knowing that Earth's lower gravity and yellow sun would give the boy extraordinary powers.

Kal-El's ship landed in a field near the town of Smallville, and was discovered by Jonathan and Martha Kent. (In the earliest comics, the Kents were named "John" and "Mary"; in a 1942 text novel and the 1950s television series The Adventures of Superman, the Kents were named "Sarah" and "Eben.") They named him Clark, after Martha's maiden name. After formally adopting him, the Kents raised him on their farm through his pre-school years. By the time Clark started school, the Kents had sold their farm and moved into Smallville, where they purchased a general store. During this time, both Clark and the Kents had discovered Clark's amazing powers, and, with Clark realizing the good he could do with his powers, began training their adopted son to use his powers wisely. At the age of eight, Clark adopted the superhero identity Superboy, and began to fight crime, both in the present and in a far future time as a member of the Legion of Super-Heroes. After he graduated from high school and the Kents died, Clark moved to Metropolis to attend Metropolis University. During his junior year, Clark changed his superhero name to Superman. After graduating with a degree in journalism, Clark was hired by the Daily Planet.

In 1986, after the Crisis on Infinite Earths miniseries, DC Comics hired writer/artist John Byrne to recreate the Superman character and retell the Superman mythos, reshaping the previous forty-eight years of stories by putting several new twists on the established mythos. In this "post-Crisis" version, starting with the miniseries The Man of Steel, Superman—like all "post-Crisis" Kryptonians— was created through in-vitro fertilization on Krypton. While a fetus, he escaped Krypton's destruction in a spacecraft (his "birthing matrix" with a rocket engine attached), and landed months later outside of Smallville, by which time he had fully gestated into an infant. Effectively this Superman was "born" on Earth, and was a "son" of Earth as much as Krypton. As in the original version he was found and adopted by the Kents, and raised like a normal human. In the retelling, Clark's powers developed gradually, beginning with his nigh-invulnerability, and he didn't fly until he was a teenager. After leaving Smallville, he traveled the world before settling in Metropolis, completing his education, and going to work at the Daily Planet. The remodeled Clark did not become a superhero until just before starting work at the Daily Planet, when he prevented an experimental spacecraft from crashing in Metropolis. The Kents were kept alive during Clark's transition to Superman.

In the post-Crisis comics, Clark Kent is presented more as the "real" person, with Superman the secret identity that he presents to the world to prevent his enemies from harming his family or friends. Also post-Crisis, people do not suspect that Superman is hiding his real identity because he wears no mask. The concept that Clark is the real man, and the greater emphasis on his earthly upbringing, is a deliberate reversal of the earlier, pre-Crisis version. As in the original version, Lois Lane is Clark Kent/Superman's love interest. In the early 1990s, Lois and Clark fell in love. Clark soon told her he was Superman, which caused a brief strain in their relationship, but they eventually married, in the mid-1990s special Superman: The Wedding Album.

A 2004 miniseries, Birthright, introduced further changes to Superman's origin story, bringing back some of the pre-Crisis elements eliminated by John Byrne and introducing elements of the Smallville television series.

In Metropolis, Superman (as Clark Kent) works as a reporter at the Planet, "a great metropolitan newspaper" which allows him to keep track of ongoing events where he might be of help. Largely working on his own, his identity is easily kept secret. Fellow reporter Lois Lane became the object of Clark's/Superman's romantic affection. Lois's affection for Superman and her rejection of Clark's clumsy advances have been a recurring theme in Superman comics, television, and movies.

When crises arise, Clark quickly changes into Superman. In the Fleischer animated series of theatrical cartoons, he often ducked into a telephone booth to make the transformation. In the comic books he rarely does so, favoring the Daily Planet's storeroom. Clark sometimes has to quickly improvise in order to find a way to change unnoticed. In the first Christopher Reeve Superman movie, Kent, comically unable to use a newer, open-kiosk pay phone, entered a revolving door and changed clothes while spinning within it at superspeed. Thus made invisible, he appeared to enter the building as Kent and exit seconds later as Superman.

Superman's abilities

Superman possesses extraordinary powers which render him, as stated in the lead-in to the 1950s television series, "faster than a speeding bullet, more powerful than a locomotive, and able to leap tall buildings in a single bound". His powers were relatively limited in the early stories, but grew to become near-godlike by the 1980s. After Byrne's 1986 rewrite, Superman's powers were diminished, though have grown again since then.

His powers include:

From the 1940s through the early 1980s, Superman's powers were nearly unlimited: he could travel millions of light-years in brief periods of time; he could dive into stars unharmed; he could travel through time by moving at speeds faster than light; and he could move planets and lift any weight. He could even vibrate his body so fast, the vibrations rendered him "invisible" to the human eye.

When Superman was revamped in 1986, he became more vulnerable and was no longer omnipotent. As in the original series, writers again gradually increased his powers. Since "coming back to life" during The Death of Superman story arc, Superman can once again survive nuclear blasts, though they leave him wounded and weakened, and he can no longer fly faster than the speed of light or travel through time under his own power. His strength too has increased, to the point of allowing him to move mountains again.

How Superman's powers work

Superman's powers are derived from his Kryptonian biology and Earth's sun (a yellow star), and are likely increased by Earth's lesser gravity (versus Krypton's higher gravity).

Various explanations have been offered over the years explaining how Superman's powers work. In the earliest comics, all Kryptonians were said to possess superpowers while on Krypton. By the late 1940s, this was changed to Kryptonians only gaining superpowers when under a lower gravity environment such as Earth's. In the early 1960s, after the introduction of Supergirl, this was amended to Kryptonians deriving their powers from mainly exposure to a yellow sun (vs. Krypton's red sun), as well as to a much lesser degree Earth's lower gravity; when under a red sun, a Kryptonian would be completely powerless, even if it was a low-gravity environment. John Byrne in his 1986 reboot suggested that Superman's powers were telekinetic in their functioning (in addition to the traditional yellow sun explanation).

One such "scientific" explanation used in various recent analyses of how Superman's powers might work is as follows:

Kryptonian mitochondria absorb certain wavelengths of the radiation emitted by solar fusion. Under a red sun, this yields increased abilities, which are multiplied a thousand-fold by a yellow sun. The solar energy supplements respiration, such that when cellular materials (perhaps Kryptonian ATP) combine with glucose, they produce abilities beyond those of humans under a yellow sun.

"K-ATP" is produced rapidly, enabling a Kryptonian to build up reserves that permit days of super-powered activity in the absence of sunlight. In addition, Krypton's gravity was 50-100 times stronger than Earth's, so Kryptonian cells are also much stronger and denser than a human's.

Under a yellow sun, other factors contribute to invulnerability. First, cell membranes and organelles become more resistant to harm; secondly, a bioelectric field surrounds the cells, making them thousands of times tougher. This "aura" surrounds Superman's epidermis and teeth, and possibly his nails as well. His hair is invulnerable, too. Superman has been shown shaving and presumably cutting his hair by reflecting his heat vision off of a piece of curved, reflective metal from the rocket in which he landed. When his cells become "supercharged" under a yellow sun, a Kryptonian becomes super-powered. He is invulnerable to forces under 1 kt., and is harmed only by repeated blows of over 1 mt. His brain and nervous system keep up with his enhanced speed, as they too are amplified by K-ATP.

Superman's other senses are less linked to solar energy than his strength and speed. Due to Earth's thinner air, he can hear things no human can. Solar energy magnifies its accuracy, allowing him to fine-tune it. His taste, smell, and touch are equally acute. He sees all wavelengths, from radio to X-rays, allowing him to detect thermal trails and other "invisible" things.

Superman's cells store vast amounts of yellow solar energy. He replenishes his supply even on cloudy days, and weakens only after a week without sunlight. Near a red sun, his powers would fail faster. Red solar radiation creates a chemical which does not lead to the super energy produced by K-ATP. Kryptonite exposure also stops the process that converts yellow sunlight into superpowers, leaving Superman immediately weakened. His powers return quickly once the kryptonite is removed. In recent comics, Superman seems to be slowly building up immunity to kryptonite, and it is possible that its effect is in part psychological.

Earlier in his life, as in his battle with Doomsday, Superman's solar energy supply was depleted by exertion. More recent exertions caused less of a power drain, suggesting that he is now either storing more energy, or growing stronger under the yellow sun. It is unknown whether higher energy stars might increase his powers even more.

Weaknesses

There are some things Superman cannot do. Since he is not human, he cannot donate blood, tissue, or organs. Procedures like surgery are impossible without special equipment. He does not sweat under earthly conditions, as no temperatures are high enough to make him secrete liquid to cool himself down. Like humans, he needs food and water to survive. The issue of whether Superman can father children is humorously explored in the movie Mallrats, as well as in the essay Man of Steel, Woman of Kleenex by sci-fi author Larry Niven (originally published in his 1971 collection All the Myriad Ways.). On the television series Lois and Clark, the pair adopted a child who, like Clark, came from mysterious origins. But historically, many stories have established that Superman can in some manner have progeny.

As a Kryptonian, he has one specific area of vulnerability. Since Krypton was destroyed, its remains (rendered radioactive by the explosion) have been spreading throughout the universe as kryptonite, a crystalline substance which has several major variants:

Other variants were introduced sporadically, but after the 1986 John Byrne reboot, all versions except for green were retconned out of existence. Since that time, an updated version of red kryptonite was reintroduced into the comics. Recently, with the destruction of the Kryptonite meteor in Superman/Batman, large quantites of kryptonite have fallen to earth; new forms beyond the red and green are believed to be amongst them, however, only blue kryptonite has been seen in addition to the previously known types so far. The effects of the new blue kryptonite are unknown at this time.

Kryptonians are also vulnerable to magical and psychic effects, although they are no more detrimentally affected by such effects than a normal human would be.

Equipment

Given his abilities, personal equipment plays less of a role for Superman than for other superheroes.

The Fortress of Solitude, located in the Arctic in the pre-Crisis version of the mythos and (until recently) in Antarctica in the post-Crisis version, in recent issues of the comic book, however, the Fortress has been destroyed and Superman rebuilds it deep in the Amazon. The Fortress acts as Superman's getaway, although it has communications equipment for urgent messages. While various 1940s comics made mention of Superman having a "mountain retreat," the Fortress in its familiar sense was first introduced in the comics in 1958.

Pre-Crisis, the Fortress included laboratories, a private zoo of alien animals, a room for communication with the Phantom Zone with a projector to place or remove people from it, a Krypton memorial, a trophy room, and a gym with custom exercise equipment. It also had tribute rooms to personal friends like Lois Lane, Jimmy Olsen, Batman, and Clark Kent (to throw off suspicion about his secret identity by visitors unfamiliar with it), where Superman prepared special gifts for each in the event of his death. Most importantly, the Fortress was where Superman stored the bottle city of Kandor, which pre-Crisis, was a Kryptonian city shrunken and stolen by Brainiac prior to the planet's destruction. For years, Superman worked to reverse the city's condition, while also enjoying the opportunity to visit a native community where he was an honored guest.

Post-Crisis, the Fortress was originally created by the Kryptonian artifact, the Eradicator, when Superman tried to dispose of it in Antarctica. The device created the Fortress which contains much of Krypton's technology, including artificially intelligent robots. Superman and fellow superhero Steel encased the Fortress in a tesseract, permitting the Man of Steel to carry the Fortress wherever he travels. Superman also stores in the Fortress various equipment, weapons, and vehicles of Kryptonian design, including a large fighting mecha called a battlesuit and a means of accessing the Phantom Zone.

A trademark of the Fortress in all of its incarnations is a memorial statue of his Kryptonian parents, Jor-El and Lara, holding up a globe of the planet Krypton.

Superman, in the pre-Crisis comics, also had androids that could impersonate himself (as both Superman and as Clark Kent). He largely abandoned them when Earth's pollution began to interfere with their functions. Post-Crisis, Superman at one time had built various Superman robots; however, all but one were destroyed, with the sole remaining robot currently being kept on duty at the Fortress of Solitude. This one remaining robot was destroyed by superheroine Donna Troy, at the expense of her own life, though she was soon resurrected.

For situations involving kryptonite, Superman in the original comics had a collection of lead-lined suits for protection. If his powers were disabled or he needed stronger protection, Superman also had his "Supermobile," a small flying car-like vehicle which could fly anywhere and use its powerful waldo arms to handle outside objects.

Superman's costume was created by Ma Kent; pre-Crisis, she created it out of the blankets from the rocket that brought him to Earth. Said blankets, like everything else from Krypton under a yellow sun environment such as Earth's, shared Clark's invulnerability. His armor-like costume could also protect others that wore it. While carrying passengers in flight, Superman would wrap them in his cape to protect them from air friction. In the post-Crisis comics, his costume is invulnerable because of the bioelectric field that his cells produce (see how it works)

In the original comics, Clark's eyeglass lenses were made from two small rounded pieces of glass from his spaceship. Since they were of Kryptonian origin, Clark could fire his heat vision through them without melting them (in contrast, the post-Crisis Clark has to lift his glasses [made of ordinary materials] off his eyes when he uses his heat vision). Superman also sometimes carries spare change in his hollowed-out belt buckle, which also doubles as a Justice League communication device. When he had Kandor in his possession in the pre-Crisis comics, all of these improvisations were supplemented by the products of the professional tailors and lenscrafters available in the bottle city.

Personality and character

Originally, Superman's personality could be rough and destructive. In one really early story in which the government would not help maintain low income areas unless a disaster occurred, Superman went on a rampage and created one. Superman is also nearly always portrayed as having had some hand in WWII, when the timeline permits. As superhero stories became more oriented toward young readers, the writers moved toward his better known "boy scout" persona. Even so, Superman's capacity for a violent anger is a key element to many of the most 'dramatic' moments in his appearances, since it is this sort of telling snapshot into his psyche that allows readers and watchers to see that Superman's goodness is not inherent to his being, but learned, like it is with us.

This is why, despite the emphasis on Superman having powers "far beyond those of mortal men," his name referred also to his goodness. While Jor-El sent Kal-El to Earth because he felt the human race had the capacity to be great and good if they wished to be, it is clear that Kal-El chose to become Superman and a force for good. The education he received on the family farm is the most potent symbol for 'old fashioned values' one can conjure, and this helps ground the character. He seems out of place and out of touch with his world because he is, in fact, the product of 'better times' more than the real world.

Superman has been willing to lay down his life or sacrifice his powers for good. He rescues cats from trees and participates in community fund-raisers. He often acts behind the scenes and lets others receive the credit. His modesty and humility catches his foes and critics off-guard, as they do not understand why he spends his life helping others and doing good.

Recent writers have attempted to deepen Superman's persona and provide a rationale for his goodness. They reveal his self-doubts, and his fear that he might abuse his powers and become a monster, subject to no one. He therefore makes it a point of submitting to authority, helping him to feel a restraint on his actions. In an extraordinary show of mutual respect, Superman has given Batman a ring of green kryptonite, so that if he ever lost his reason, posing a danger to himself or to humans, Batman could use the ring to defeat him.

This line of thinking, that Superman is a hero as deeply conflicted with his gifts as Batman is with his past, is key to the modern interpretation of Superman not as a better man, but what is best in man. It is also important that Superman often struggles with vast social issues in his fiction, including tackling world hunger, unsuccessfully, in a short wide-panel 1990s graphic novel called Peace on Earth. (with artwork by Alex Ross). Through these conflicts, discussions of good and evil are formed, as Superman struggles with restraint in the face of bigotry, avarice, and cruelty. In this manner, Superman's excessive arsenal of powers is rendered secondary to his ability to convince others to act.

This was a further motivation for Superman becoming a reporter, for it is then possible that his physical abilities give him no unfair advantage in a field where the critical skills are intellectual (although his editor, Perry White, praised him in Superman: The Movie as "the fastest typist I have ever seen"). He writes fiction in his spare time, publishing two books, "The Janus Contract" and "Under a Yellow Sun".

Far from a perfect individual, Superman is often pictured with a sense of childish innocence mixed with patriarchal restraint. He is also a man with an incredible depth of feeling, since he lives within his own mind as much as he does in the reality of society, often struggling with the differences between the right answer and the practical one. In many ways, Superman is truly one of the most "human" heroes conceived, since he responds to emotional grief in stark contrast to the way he shrugs off bullets, bombs, and death-rays. Superman's daily martyrdom is reflected tellingly in print during his reappearance in the mid-1990s miniseries Kingdom Come, where he is pictured as a bearded carpenter with a long beam of wood across his back, mirroring a Christ-like image of a man who gave himself for a world that, in that storyline, did not love him.

Superman's "lily white" persona has been mocked, ridiculed, and spoofed, especially in recent comic book history, when "grim and gritty" comics dominated the market. Superman may seem old-fashioned and even quaint compared to the "dark avengers" who currently command the lion's share of the market, and this is intentional. Superman fights fair long after both sides have begun swinging below the belt, knowing that his vast powers require him to act with equal restraint. On several recent occasions, Batman has faced Superman, and Batman has served as a foil to Superman's goodness; Batman, in his more recent incarnations, won't hesitate to use guile or underhanded tactics to gain an advantage, while Superman will be overly hesitant to use his natural gifts as an unfair edge. Indeed, Batman has undergone an increasingly dark makeover. However, Superman continues to be a driving force in the medium after more than sixty years.

History

Cover of Superman #14, dated January-February 1942. Art by Fred Ray.

Superman was created by Jerry Siegel and Joe Shuster not as a hero, but as a villain. Their short story "The Reign Of The Superman" concerned a bald-headed villain bent on dominating the world. The story did not sell, forcing the two to reposition their character on the right side of the law. In 1935, their Superman story was again rejected, but DC Comics printed another of their creations, Dr. Occult, who made his first appearance in New Fun Comics #6, October 1935.

The revised Superman first appeared in Action Comics #1, June 1938. Siegel and Shuster sold the rights to the company for $130. DC copied the character without remuneration to the creators, while suing other companies for copying it. The Saturday Evening Post reported in 1941 that the pair was being paid $75,000 each per year, still a fraction of DC's Superman profits. In 1946, when Siegel and Shuster sued for more money, DC fired them, prompting a legal battle that ended in 1948, when they accepted $200,000 and signed away any further claim to Superman or any character created from him. DC soon took Siegel's and Shuster's names off the byline.

During a multimedia career spanning over sixty years, Superman has starred in every imaginable situation, throughout the universe, and in many eras of history. Facing myriad perils, his powers have increased to the point that he is nearly omnipotent. This poses a challenge for writers: "How does one write about a character who is nearly as powerful as God?" (Superman's Kryptonian name, Kal-El, resembles the Hebrew words for "all that God is") This problem contributed to a decline in Superman's popularity, especially during the 1960s and 1970s, when Marvel Comics brought a new level of character development to mainstream comic books. By the early 1980s, DC Comics had decided that a major change was needed to make Superman more appealing to current audiences. Writer-artist John Byrne joined Superman and re-started with his The Man of Steel retelling of his origin. This 1986 reboot brought substantial changes to the character and met huge success at the time, being one of the top-selling books. The re-launch of Superman comic books returned the character to the mainstream, again in the forefront of DC's titles.

Some fans debated whether the more drastic changes were necessary, and some of the more traditional historical elements Byrne removed from the backstory were later restored. Byrne himself quit the books after a few years because he felt DC was not supporting the changes he made. But Byrne's changes became the template for Superman's origin and characterization for almost two decades. Most notably, his alterations to Lex Luthor, altering him from a scientific oriented villain to a businessman remain to this day.

Two alterations have had long-term effects. In the epic The Death of Superman storyline, the hero apparently died at the hands of supervillain Doomsday. He returned from the dead, though his "death" gave rise to a number of new characters and storylines. In 1995, Superman (or rather, Clark Kent) finally married Lois Lane, and the two have had a happy marriage... so far. Future editorial changes to the series may reverse some or all of these changes.

In 2003, DC Comics released a 12-issue maxiseries titled Superman: Birthright, written by Mark Waid and penciled by Lenil Francis Yu; this was made into a retcon of Superman's post-crisis origin, replacing Byrne's version, but yet using many elements from that version, along with elements that subtly tie into the Smallville television show.

Other characters

Familiar supporting characters in the Superman mythos include:

Superman also has a rogues gallery of supervillain enemies, including:

In Metropolis, Superman enjoys a close relationship with the police department. This especially applies to the Special Crimes Unit (SCU), a police unit that deals with superpowered threats, led by Captain Margaret Sawyer, one of the few openly gay characters in mainstream superhero comics today.

There have been a number of characters called Superboy. The original Superboy, introduced in 1944's More Fun Comics #101, represented "the adventures of Superman when he was a boy." This Superboy is no longer in publication, as post-Crisis continuity deemed that Clark Kent did not become a superhero until he reached adulthood. A new Superboy character who is a clone of Superman was created in the early 1990s; adventures featuring this character continue to be published. The Superboy name has also been the name of denizens of other dimensions, such as one from a "pocket universe" parallel dimension in the late 1980s post-Crisis Superman comics, and several individuals the current Superboy encountered during his trip through Hypertime (one of those essentially being an exact double of the pre-Crisis Superboy).

Pre-Crisis, Superman's foster parents, Jonathan and Martha Kent, died in the summer after his high school graduation; post-Crisis, the Kents are alive and well and are regularly visited by Clark, who relies on them for advice in difficult times.

Comics that regularly feature Superman

Current comics starring Superman:

Current comics in which Superman does not star, but appears regularly:

Additional reading

Adaptations in other media

The 1941 theatrical cartoon Superman, produced by the Fleischer Studios. George Reeves as Superman (1951) Actor Christopher Reeve as Superman Actor Brandon Routh as Superman in "Superman Returns" due in 2006.

The Superman character has made the transition to radio, television, and movies, each on multiple occasions. Among the actors who have played the role are George Reeves, Christopher Reeve, and Dean Cain.

There have also been numerous animated cartoon series starring the Man of Steel:

The last two are in continuity with Batman: The Animated Series and its spinoffs, forming what some fans call the "Diniverse", named after Paul Dini, who writes and produces the shows.


Cultural influences

USPS stamp honoring Superman's first appearance

Both Superman's name and the premise of his character owe a debt to the concept of the Übermensch, developed by the 19th century philosopher Friedrich Nietzsche, and elaborated upon by George Bernard Shaw. Additionally, Superman is believed to have been inspired in part by Philip Wylie's 1930 science fiction novel Gladiator, about a man whose superhuman strength inspires him to help the human race, but who is instead spurned by humanity precisely because of his power. Other sources cited as inspirations include Doc Savage and The Shadow. Superman is a staple of American pop culture.

DC Comics has trademarked variations on the "super" theme, such as "superdog" and "supergal", to circumvent parody or product confusion. Nevertheless, a great many imitations and parodies of Superman have appeared over the years. One of the first Superman-like characters to emerge, Fawcett Comics' Captain Marvel, sparked legal action because of its similarities to Superman. Well-known spoofs of Superman include Mighty Mouse, Underdog, Super Grover, and Super Goof.

In the 1990s, comic book artist and writer Rob Liefeld created a Superman pastiche and starred him in his own comic book series, Supreme. The series, published by Liefeld's Awesome Comics, sold moderately well at first, but sales dwindled until the series was taken over with issue #41 by writer Alan Moore. Moore produced 22 issues of Supreme that paid homage to the classic "Silver Age" Superman.

Comedian Jerry Seinfeld expressed his fandom of Superman in several ways. On the Seinfeld TV show, a Superman statue sat on the stereo in Jerry's livingroom, and a Superman refrigerator magnet was always visible in his kitchen. Jerry affectionately addressed some of his girlfriends as "Lois Lane". Seinfeld is also famous for having a Superman reference in every episode. In 1998, an American Express commercial featured real-life Jerry Seinfeld and an animated Superman as buddies holding a running conversation around New York City.

One of the few Superman-like characters that DC Comics allowed to stand without litigation is Hyperion, from Marvel Comics's superhero team, Squadron Supreme. The Squadron Supreme was created to do unofficial JLA/Avengers crossovers; the "new" characters were thinly veiled versions of their DC JLA counterparts. Hyperion stood in for Superman, the Whizzer for The Flash, etc. DC in turn introduced the "Assemblers of Angar", a thinly-veiled Avengers pastiche. Hyperion has been revamped in a new Marvel series, Supreme Power, giving a new take on the Superman mythology.

In 2004, local authorities in Sweden refused to allow a child to be named Stålmannen, which means Superman (literally: The Man of Steel). The Swedish parliament was considering at the time whether to intervene and overrule the initial judgement.[3] (http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/world/europe/3701802.stm)

Superman in popular music

Superman has long been a popular subject for music, inspiring songs by artists ranging from The Kinks and Barbra Streisand of one generation through The Sugarhill Gang, Genesis, R.E.M., Crash Test Dummies, and Spin Doctors to current performers like Eminem, Dream Theater , Three Doors Down, Our Lady Peace and Five For Fighting. See: Superman in popular music

Superman parodies/references

See also: Superdupont, Superlópez

Notes

1# Moses, Gilgamesh)

2# Narrator Bill Kennedy intoned at the start of each program: "Faster than a speeding bullet. More powerful than a locomotive. Able to leap tall buildings in a single bound. Look! Up in the sky. It's a bird. It's a plane. It's Superman! Yes, it's Superman - strange visitor from another planet who came to Earth with powers and abilities far beyond those of mortal men. Superman - who can change the course of mighty rivers, bend steel with his bare hands, and who disguised as Clark Kent, mild-mannered reporter for a great metropolitan newspaper, fights a neverending battle for Truth, Justice, and the American Way."


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Superman - who can change the course of mighty rivers, bend steel with his bare hands, and who disguised as Clark Kent, mild-mannered reporter for a great metropolitan newspaper, fights a neverending battle for Truth, Justice, and the American Way.". As a humorous celebration of the theory of evolution, the annual Darwin Award is bestowed on individuals who "aid the process of evolution by demonstrating their unfitness" through fatally stupid actions. It's Superman! Yes, it's Superman - strange visitor from another planet who came to Earth with powers and abilities far beyond those of mortal men. Darwin came fourth in the 100 Greatest Britons poll sponsored by the BBC and voted for by the public. It's a plane. His impressive and supposedly hard-to-forge beard was reportedly a contributing factor in this choice. It's a bird. Darwin was given particular recognition in 2000 when his image appeared on the Bank of England ten pound note, replacing Charles Dickens.

Look! Up in the sky. In 1964, Darwin College, Cambridge was founded, named in honnor of the Darwin family, partially because they owned some of the land it was on. Able to leap tall buildings in a single bound. The 14 species of Finches he researched in the Galápagos Islands are affectionately named "Darwin's Finches" in honour of his legacy. More powerful than a locomotive. In Australia's Northern Territory, the capital city (originally Palmerston) was renamed Darwin to commemorate the author's 1839 visit there, and the territory now also boasts Charles Darwin University and Charles Darwin National Park. 2# Narrator Bill Kennedy intoned at the start of each program: "Faster than a speeding bullet. During Darwin's lifetime many species and geographical features were given his name, including the Darwin Sound named by Robert FitzRoy after Darwin's prompt action saved them from being marooned, and the nearby Mount Darwin in the Andes celerating Darwin's 25th birthday.

1# Moses, Gilgamesh). To some of his detractors, Darwin would be "the monkey man", often depicted as part ape. See also: Superdupont, Superlópez. The idea that there was no line to draw between man and beast would forever make Darwin a symbol of iconoclasm who removed humanity's privileged role in the centre of the universe. See: Superman in popular music. Darwin's theory of evolution was a significant blow to notions of divine creation and intelligent design prevalent in 19th-century science, specifically overturning the Creation biology doctrine of "Created kinds". Superman has long been a popular subject for music, inspiring songs by artists ranging from The Kinks and Barbra Streisand of one generation through The Sugarhill Gang, Genesis, R.E.M., Crash Test Dummies, and Spin Doctors to current performers like Eminem, Dream Theater , Three Doors Down, Our Lady Peace and Five For Fighting. His work was extremely controversial at the time he published it and many during his time did not take it seriously.

The Swedish parliament was considering at the time whether to intervene and overrule the initial judgement.[3] (http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/world/europe/3701802.stm). His work established that "evolution" had occurred: not necessarily that it was by natural or sexual selection (this particular recognition would not become fully standard until the rediscovery of Gregor Mendel's work in the early 20th century and the creation of the modern synthesis). In 2004, local authorities in Sweden refused to allow a child to be named Stålmannen, which means Superman (literally: The Man of Steel). Charles Darwin's theory of evolution based upon natural selection changed the thinking of countless fields of study from biology to anthropology. Hyperion has been revamped in a new Marvel series, Supreme Power, giving a new take on the Superman mythology. Spencer's evolutionary "progressivism" and his social and political ideas were largely Malthusian, and his books on economics of 1851 and on evolution of 1855 predated Darwin's publication of the Origin in 1859. DC in turn introduced the "Assemblers of Angar", a thinly-veiled Avengers pastiche. The use of the phrase "Social Darwinism" to describe Malthus's ideas is particularly disingenuous, since Malthus died in 1834 before the inception of Darwin's theory was spurred by his reading the 6th edition of Malthus' famous Essay on a Principle of Population in 1838.

Hyperion stood in for Superman, the Whizzer for The Flash, etc. However, Darwin did not believe that his scientific theory mandated any particular theory of governance or social order. The Squadron Supreme was created to do unofficial JLA/Avengers crossovers; the "new" characters were thinly veiled versions of their DC JLA counterparts. Though the term is anachronistic, in Darwin's day the difference between what was later called "Social Darwinism" and simple "Darwinism" was less clear. One of the few Superman-like characters that DC Comics allowed to stand without litigation is Hyperion, from Marvel Comics's superhero team, Squadron Supreme. These ideas became discredited by association with racism and imperialism. In 1998, an American Express commercial featured real-life Jerry Seinfeld and an animated Superman as buddies holding a running conversation around New York City. In 1944 the American historian Richard Hofstadter applied the term "Social Darwinism" to describe 19th- and 20th-century thinking developed from the ideas of Thomas Malthus and Herbert Spencer, which applied ideas of evolution and "survival of the fittest" to societies or nations competing for survival in a hostile world.

Seinfeld is also famous for having a Superman reference in every episode. In the twentieth century, eugenics movements gained popularity in a number of countries and became associated with reproduction control programmes such as compulsory sterilisation laws, then were stigmatised after their usage in the rhetoric of Nazi Germany in its goals of genetic "purity". Jerry affectionately addressed some of his girlfriends as "Lois Lane". In 1883, after Darwin's death, Galton began calling his social philosophy Eugenics. On the Seinfeld TV show, a Superman statue sat on the stereo in Jerry's livingroom, and a Superman refrigerator magnet was always visible in his kitchen. Neither Galton nor Darwin expressed any affinity for government intervention and instead believed that, at most, heredity should be taken into consideration by people seeking potential mates. Comedian Jerry Seinfeld expressed his fandom of Superman in several ways. In The Descent of Man Darwin agreed that Galton had demonstrated that "talent" and "genius" in humans were likely inherited, but thought that the social changes Galton proposed were too "utopian".

Moore produced 22 issues of Supreme that paid homage to the classic "Silver Age" Superman. Following Darwin's publication of the Origin his cousin Francis Galton applied the concepts to human society and ideas to promote "hereditary improvement" starting in 1865 and elaborated at length in 1869. In the 1990s, comic book artist and writer Rob Liefeld created a Superman pastiche and starred him in his own comic book series, Supreme. The series, published by Liefeld's Awesome Comics, sold moderately well at first, but sales dwindled until the series was taken over with issue #41 by writer Alan Moore. Despite this hope, the "Lady Hope Story" claiming his sickbed conversion was published in 1915 and has since been much propagated by some Christian groups to the extent of becoming an urban legend, though the claims were refuted by Darwin's children. Well-known spoofs of Superman include Mighty Mouse, Underdog, Super Grover, and Super Goof. we may at least hope that nothing of the kind now prevails". One of the first Superman-like characters to emerge, Fawcett Comics' Captain Marvel, sparked legal action because of its similarities to Superman. In concluding his biography of his grandfather Darwin recounted how after the death of Erasmus Darwin in 1802 false stories were circulated that he had called for Jesus on his deathbed, writing "Such was the state of Christian feeling in this country at the [time]..

Nevertheless, a great many imitations and parodies of Superman have appeared over the years. He went as far as saying that he did "not believe in the Bible as a divine revelation", but was always insistent that he was agnostic and had "never been an atheist". DC Comics has trademarked variations on the "super" theme, such as "superdog" and "supergal", to circumvent parody or product confusion. In his later life, Darwin was frequently asked about his religious views. Superman is a staple of American pop culture. He continued to give support to the local church and help with parish work, but on Sundays would go for a walk while his family attended church. Other sources cited as inspirations include Doc Savage and The Shadow. With the death of his daughter Annie, Darwin finally lost all faith in a beneficent God and saw Christianity as futile.

Additionally, Superman is believed to have been inspired in part by Philip Wylie's 1930 science fiction novel Gladiator, about a man whose superhuman strength inspires him to help the human race, but who is instead spurned by humanity precisely because of his power. On return, while developing his theory of natural selection he came to think that the religious instinct had evolved with society and gradually lost his belief in the Bible. Both Superman's name and the premise of his character owe a debt to the concept of the Übermensch, developed by the 19th century philosopher Friedrich Nietzsche, and elaborated upon by George Bernard Shaw. beliefs of any barbarian.".
. was no more to be trusted than the.. The last two are in continuity with Batman: The Animated Series and its spinoffs, forming what some fans call the "Diniverse", named after Paul Dini, who writes and produces the shows. But I had gradually come, by this time, to see that the Old Testament..

There have also been numerous animated cartoon series starring the Man of Steel:. I was quite orthodox.. Among the actors who have played the role are George Reeves, Christopher Reeve, and Dean Cain. He joined the Voyage of the Beagle and later recalled that "Whilst on board the Beagle. The Superman character has made the transition to radio, television, and movies, each on multiple occasions. At university studying Anglican theology to become a clergyman, he was a firm believer convinced by the teleological argument in William Paley's Natural Theology, which offered an argument for the existence of God from design. Current comics in which Superman does not star, but appears regularly:. Charles Darwin came from a Nonconformist background, but attended a Church of England school.

Current comics starring Superman:. Other possible causes include psychobiological problems. Pre-Crisis, Superman's foster parents, Jonathan and Martha Kent, died in the summer after his high school graduation; post-Crisis, the Kents are alive and well and are regularly visited by Clark, who relies on them for advice in difficult times. Recently it was suggested that when he was ill in bed for a month at Valparaiso this was Chagas' disease from insect bites, causing the later problems. The Superboy name has also been the name of denizens of other dimensions, such as one from a "pocket universe" parallel dimension in the late 1980s post-Crisis Superman comics, and several individuals the current Superboy encountered during his trip through Hypertime (one of those essentially being an exact double of the pre-Crisis Superboy). The cause was unknown during his lifetime, and treatments had little success. A new Superboy character who is a clone of Superman was created in the early 1990s; adventures featuring this character continue to be published. From 1837 onwards Darwin was repeatedly incapacitated with episodes of stomach pains, vomiting, severe boils, palpitations, trembling and other symptoms, which particularly affected him at times of stress when attending meetings or dealing with controversy over his theory.

The original Superboy, introduced in 1944's More Fun Comics #101, represented "the adventures of Superman when he was a boy." This Superboy is no longer in publication, as post-Crisis continuity deemed that Clark Kent did not become a superhero until he reached adulthood. Mary's churchyard at Downe, but at the request of Darwin's colleagues William Spottiswoode, President of the Royal Society, arranged for Darwin to be given a state funeral and buried in Westminster Abbey. There have been a number of characters called Superboy. He had expected to be buried in St. This especially applies to the Special Crimes Unit (SCU), a police unit that deals with superpowered threats, led by Captain Margaret Sawyer, one of the few openly gay characters in mainstream superhero comics today. Darwin died in Downe, Kent, England, on 19 April 1882. In Metropolis, Superman enjoys a close relationship with the police department. His evolution-related experiments and investigations culminated in five books on plants, and then his last book returned to the effect worms have on soil levels.

Superman also has a rogues gallery of supervillain enemies, including:. He also developed his ideas that the human mind and cultures were developed by natural and sexual selection, an approach which still persists in evolutionary psychology. Familiar supporting characters in the Superman mythos include:. Darwin produced practical explanations for the differences between males and females, and between different races and cultures. In 2003, DC Comics released a 12-issue maxiseries titled Superman: Birthright, written by Mark Waid and penciled by Lenil Francis Yu; this was made into a retcon of Superman's post-crisis origin, replacing Byrne's version, but yet using many elements from that version, along with elements that subtly tie into the Smallville television show. These two subjects were tackled in The Descent of Man and Selection in Relation to Sex and followed up by The Expression of the Emotions in Man and Animals. so far. Future editorial changes to the series may reverse some or all of these changes. Opponents claimed that the beauty of birds demonstrated divine guidance.

In 1995, Superman (or rather, Clark Kent) finally married Lois Lane, and the two have had a happy marriage.. New fossil evidence proved the antiquity of man, but other writers failed to fully tackle human evolution. He returned from the dead, though his "death" gave rise to a number of new characters and storylines. Variation grew to two huge volumes, forcing him to leave out man and sexual selection, but when printed was in huge demand. In the epic The Death of Superman storyline, the hero apparently died at the hands of supervillain Doomsday. Huxley used his working-men's lectures to widen the audience, and Wallace remained a supporter but increasingly differed, turning to spiritualism. Two alterations have had long-term effects. He was visited by a reverent Ernst Haeckel who had spread the gospel of Darwinismus in Germany, and at Cambridge students now supported his ideas.

Most notably, his alterations to Lex Luthor, altering him from a scientific oriented villain to a businessman remain to this day. Lying on his sickbed, his rooms became filled with experiments on climbing plants. But Byrne's changes became the template for Superman's origin and characterization for almost two decades. As with the barnacles, homologous parts served different functions in different species. Byrne himself quit the books after a few years because he felt DC was not supporting the changes he made. When his daughter was ill and they went to a seaside resort, his interest in orchids began an innovative study of how their beautiful flowers served to control insect pollination and ensure cross fertilisation. Some fans debated whether the more drastic changes were necessary, and some of the more traditional historical elements Byrne removed from the backstory were later restored. Darwin experimented with seedlings and domestic animals.

The re-launch of Superman comic books returned the character to the mainstream, again in the forefront of DC's titles. For a more detailed account of his biography during this period see Darwin from Orchids to Variation, Darwin from Descent of Man to Emotions and Darwin from Insectiverous plants to Worms.. This 1986 reboot brought substantial changes to the character and met huge success at the time, being one of the top-selling books. During the last twenty-two years of his life Darwin produced an enormous amount of work, both original research and large books, despite repeated problems of illness and the onset of old age. Writer-artist John Byrne joined Superman and re-started with his The Man of Steel retelling of his origin. It became a staple scientific text accessible to a newly curious middle class and to "working men", hailed as the most controversial and discussed scientific book ever written. By the early 1980s, DC Comics had decided that a major change was needed to make Superman more appealing to current audiences. As attention and controversy gathered, the book was translated into many languages and went through numerous reprints.

Facing myriad perils, his powers have increased to the point that he is nearly omnipotent. This poses a challenge for writers: "How does one write about a character who is nearly as powerful as God?" (Superman's Kryptonian name, Kal-El, resembles the Hebrew words for "all that God is") This problem contributed to a decline in Superman's popularity, especially during the 1960s and 1970s, when Marvel Comics brought a new level of character development to mainstream comic books. Darwin found that, as well as being a key scientific controversy of the era, his theory resonated with various movements at the time and became a key fixture of popular culture. During a multimedia career spanning over sixty years, Superman has starred in every imaginable situation, throughout the universe, and in many eras of history. A core circle of scientific friends – Huxley, Charles Lyell, Joseph Dalton Hooker, and Asa Gray – actively pushed his work onto the fore of the scientific and public stage, and defended him against his many critics. DC soon took Siegel's and Shuster's names off the byline. He was constantly in ill health, and mustered support through letters and correspondence . In 1946, when Siegel and Shuster sued for more money, DC fired them, prompting a legal battle that ended in 1948, when they accepted $200,000 and signed away any further claim to Superman or any character created from him. Darwin himself did not personally defend his theories in public, though he read eagerly about the continuing debates.

The Saturday Evening Post reported in 1941 that the pair was being paid $75,000 each per year, still a fraction of DC's Superman profits. To many, Darwin's view of nature became associated with one in which the distinction between man and beast was non-existent. DC copied the character without remuneration to the creators, while suing other companies for copying it. The story spread around the country: Huxley had said he would rather be an ape than a Bishop. Siegel and Shuster sold the rights to the company for $130. On being asked by Wilberforce whether he was descended from monkeys on his grandfather's side or his grandmother's side, Huxley, recognising his opportunity, apparently muttered to himself: "The Lord has delivered him into my hands", and then replied that he "would rather be descended from an ape than from a cultivated man who used his gifts of culture and eloquence in the service of prejudice and falsehood" (several alternative versions of this supposed quote exist, see Wilberforce and Huxley: A Legendary Encounter). The revised Superman first appeared in Action Comics #1, June 1938. In the ensuing debate Thomas Huxley established himself as "Darwin's bulldog" – the fiercest defender of evolutionary theory on the Victorian stage.

Occult, who made his first appearance in New Fun Comics #6, October 1935. Professor John William Draper made a boring speech on Darwin and social progress, then 'Soapy Sam' Wilberforce, the Bishop of Oxford, argued against Darwin. In 1935, their Superman story was again rejected, but DC Comics printed another of their creations, Dr. The most famous confrontation took place at a meeting of the British Association for the Advancement of Science in Oxford. The story did not sell, forcing the two to reposition their character on the right side of the law. Then Essays and Reviews by seven liberal Anglican theologians declared that miracles were irrational (and supported the Origin), distracting attention away from Darwin. Their short story "The Reign Of The Superman" concerned a bald-headed villain bent on dominating the world. The Church of England scientific establishment reacted against the book, and Darwin's old Cambridge tutors Sedgwick and Henslow expressed their disappointment in him.

Superman was created by Jerry Siegel and Joe Shuster not as a hero, but as a villain. Owen initially appeared neutral, but his review condemned the book, leading Darwin to feel that an envious Owen hated him. However, Superman continues to be a driving force in the medium after more than sixty years. Reviewers were quick to pick out the unstated implications of "men from monkeys", though a Unitarian review was favourable and The Times published a glowing review by Huxley which included swipes at Richard Owen, leader of the scientific establishment Huxley was trying to overthrow. Indeed, Batman has undergone an increasingly dark makeover. He closely monitored the public's response to his ideas, keeping press cuttings of thousands of reviews, articles, satires, parodies and caricatures. On several recent occasions, Batman has faced Superman, and Batman has served as a foil to Superman's goodness; Batman, in his more recent incarnations, won't hesitate to use guile or underhanded tactics to gain an advantage, while Superman will be overly hesitant to use his natural gifts as an unfair edge. Darwin's work set off a great deal of controversy.

Superman fights fair long after both sides have begun swinging below the belt, knowing that his vast powers require him to act with equal restraint. Darwin wrote in deliberate understatement that "light will be thrown on the origin of man and his history". Superman may seem old-fashioned and even quaint compared to the "dark avengers" who currently command the lion's share of the market, and this is intentional. The book only briefly alluded to the fact that man, too, would evolve as with the other organisms described in his book. Superman's "lily white" persona has been mocked, ridiculed, and spoofed, especially in recent comic book history, when "grim and gritty" comics dominated the market. At the time Evolutionism implied creation without divine intervention, and Darwin avoided using the words "evolution" or "evolve", though concluding that "endless forms most beautiful and most wonderful have been, and are being, evolved". Superman's daily martyrdom is reflected tellingly in print during his reappearance in the mid-1990s miniseries Kingdom Come, where he is pictured as a bearded carpenter with a long beam of wood across his back, mirroring a Christ-like image of a man who gave himself for a world that, in that storyline, did not love him. The title was agreed as On the Origin of Species by Means of Natural Selection, and when the book went on sale to the trade on 22 November 1859, the stock of 1,250 copies was oversubscribed.

In many ways, Superman is truly one of the most "human" heroes conceived, since he responds to emotional grief in stark contrast to the way he shrugs off bullets, bombs, and death-rays. Receiving constant encouragement from his scientific friends, Darwin finally finished his abstract, and Lyell arranged to have it published by John Murray. Far from a perfect individual, Superman is often pictured with a sense of childish innocence mixed with patriarchal restraint. He is also a man with an incredible depth of feeling, since he lives within his own mind as much as he does in the reality of society, often struggling with the differences between the right answer and the practical one. For the next thirteen months, Darwin struggled with ill health to produce what was originally to be an abstract of his "big book on species". He writes fiction in his spare time, publishing two books, "The Janus Contract" and "Under a Yellow Sun". It was mentioned briefly in a few small reviews but did not yet command much further thought, and was not yet fully distinguishable to most people from other varieties of evolutionary thought. This was a further motivation for Superman becoming a reporter, for it is then possible that his physical abilities give him no unfair advantage in a field where the critical skills are intellectual (although his editor, Perry White, praised him in Superman: The Movie as "the fastest typist I have ever seen"). The initial announcement of the theory gained little immediate attention.

In this manner, Superman's excessive arsenal of powers is rendered secondary to his ability to convince others to act. He put matters in the hands of Lyell and Hooker, who agreed on a joint presentation at the Linnean Society on 1 July of On the Tendency of Species to form Varieties; and on the Perpetuation of Varieties and Species by Natural Means of Selection. Through these conflicts, discussions of good and evil are formed, as Superman struggles with restraint in the face of bigotry, avarice, and cruelty. Darwin did so, shocked that he had been "forestalled" and though Wallace had not asked for publication, offering to send it to any journal that Wallace chose. It is also important that Superman often struggles with vast social issues in his fiction, including tackling world hunger, unsuccessfully, in a short wide-panel 1990s graphic novel called Peace on Earth. (with artwork by Alex Ross). Then on 18 June 1858, he received a paper from Wallace describing the evolutionary mechanism, with a request to send it on to Lyell. This line of thinking, that Superman is a hero as deeply conflicted with his gifts as Batman is with his past, is key to the modern interpretation of Superman not as a better man, but what is best in man. He encouraged Wallace's theorising, saying "without speculation there is no good & original observation", adding that "I go much further than you".

In an extraordinary show of mutual respect, Superman has given Batman a ring of green kryptonite, so that if he ever lost his reason, posing a danger to himself or to humans, Batman could use the ring to defeat him. Sensitive to Lyell's fears on this, Darwin responded that "I think I shall avoid the whole subject, as so surrounded with prejudices, though I fully admit that it is the highest & most interesting problem for the naturalist". He therefore makes it a point of submitting to authority, helping him to feel a restraint on his actions. As Darwin worked on his Natural Selection manuscript in December 1857, Wallace wrote to ask if it would delve into human origins. They reveal his self-doubts, and his fear that he might abuse his powers and become a monster, subject to no one. Darwin pressed ahead despite illness, getting specimens and information from others including Wallace and Asa Gray. Recent writers have attempted to deepen Superman's persona and provide a rationale for his goodness. In the spring of 1856 Lyell read a paper on the Introduction of species by Alfred Russel Wallace, a naturalist working in Borneo, and urged Darwin to publish his theory to establish precedence.

His modesty and humility catches his foes and critics off-guard, as they do not understand why he spends his life helping others and doing good. Darwin completed his work on barnacles (Cirripedia) in 1854 and turned his attention to his theory of species. He often acts behind the scenes and lets others receive the credit. Thomas Huxley became a friend and ally. He rescues cats from trees and participates in community fund-raisers. After a long series of crises, she died and Darwin lost all faith in a beneficent God. Superman has been willing to lay down his life or sacrifice his powers for good. Then his treasured daughter Annie fell ill, reawakening his fears that his illness might be hereditary.

He seems out of place and out of touch with his world because he is, in fact, the product of 'better times' more than the real world. He pressed on with his work on barnacles and found "homologies" showing dramatically how organs could have changed functions to meet new conditions, supporting his theory. The education he received on the family farm is the most potent symbol for 'old fashioned values' one can conjure, and this helps ground the character. To try to deal with his illness Darwin went to a spa in Malvern in 1849 for two months of water treatment, and to his surprise this was successful. While Jor-El sent Kal-El to Earth because he felt the human race had the capacity to be great and good if they wished to be, it is clear that Kal-El chose to become Superman and a force for good. In 1847 Hooker read the "Essay" and sent notes giving Darwin the calm critical feedback that he needed. This is why, despite the emphasis on Superman having powers "far beyond those of mortal men," his name referred also to his goodness. Darwin completed his third Geological book in 1846 and, assisted by his friend the young botanist Joseph Dalton Hooker, began a huge study of barnacles.

As superhero stories became more oriented toward young readers, the writers moved toward his better known "boy scout" persona. Even so, Superman's capacity for a violent anger is a key element to many of the most 'dramatic' moments in his appearances, since it is this sort of telling snapshot into his psyche that allows readers and watchers to see that Superman's goodness is not inherent to his being, but learned, like it is with us. While it attracted great denunciations, it also attracted positive attention. Superman is also nearly always portrayed as having had some hand in WWII, when the timeline permits. Later that year the anonymous publication of Vestiges of the Natural History of Creation proposed a form of "Transmutation" similar to Lamarck's evolution, applying it to all realms of the human and natural world. In one really early story in which the government would not help maintain low income areas unless a disaster occurred, Superman went on a rampage and created one. In 1842, the year that the family moved to Down House to escape the pressures of London, Darwin formulated a short "Pencil Sketch" of his theory and by 1844 had written a 240-page "Essay" which provided an expanded version of his early ideas on natural selection. Originally, Superman's personality could be rough and destructive. Darwin made attempts to explain his theory to close friends, but they were slow to show interest and seemed unable to grasp the idea of selection without a divine selector.

When he had Kandor in his possession in the pre-Crisis comics, all of these improvisations were supplemented by the products of the professional tailors and lenscrafters available in the bottle city. In December 1839 as Emma's first pregnancy progressed, Charles suffered an episode of his illness and accomplished little during the following year. Superman also sometimes carries spare change in his hollowed-out belt buckle, which also doubles as a Justice League communication device. Later that year it was published on its own becoming the bestseller nowadays known as The Voyage of the Beagle, establishing Darwin as a popular author. Since they were of Kryptonian origin, Clark could fire his heat vision through them without melting them (in contrast, the post-Crisis Clark has to lift his glasses [made of ordinary materials] off his eyes when he uses his heat vision). Darwin's Journal and Remarks was a great success, even being praised by one of Darwin's heroes, the scientific explorer Alexander von Humboldt. In the original comics, Clark's eyeglass lenses were made from two small rounded pieces of glass from his spaceship. FitzRoy's account was eventually published in May 1839.

In the post-Crisis comics, his costume is invulnerable because of the bioelectric field that his cells produce (see how it works). He took his time with careful research until he had enough evidence, knowing that a great deal of opposition would erupt when he presented his theory. While carrying passengers in flight, Superman would wrap them in his cape to protect them from air friction. He embarked on extensive experiments with plants and consultations with animal husbanders including pigeon fanciers and pig breeders, in an attempt to discover holes in the hypothesis. His armor-like costume could also protect others that wore it. He was convinced by his theory of evolution, but vividly aware that transmutation of species was associated with radical democratic agitators seeking to overthrow society, and publication could mean ruin. Said blankets, like everything else from Krypton under a yellow sun environment such as Earth's, shared Clark's invulnerability. Darwin was now settled with a private income, an eminent geologist in the scientific élite of clerical naturalists with a mass of work in hand, writing up his findings and theories (see Published works below) and superintending the multivolume Zoology describing his collections.

Superman's costume was created by Ma Kent; pre-Crisis, she created it out of the blankets from the rocket that brought him to Earth. Several of their children suffered illness or weaknesses, and Charles Darwin's fears that this might be due to the closeness of his and Emma’s lineage was expressed in his writings on the ill effects of inbreeding and advantages of crossing. If his powers were disabled or he needed stronger protection, Superman also had his "Supermobile," a small flying car-like vehicle which could fly anywhere and use its powerful waldo arms to handle outside objects. Many of these and their grandchildren would later achieve notability themselves (see Darwin–Wedgwood family). For situations involving kryptonite, Superman in the original comics had a collection of lead-lined suits for protection. The Darwins had ten children, three of whom died early. This one remaining robot was destroyed by superheroine Donna Troy, at the expense of her own life, though she was soon resurrected. After first living in Gower Street, London, the couple moved on 17 September 1842 to Down House in Downe (which is now open to public visits, south of Orpington).

Post-Crisis, Superman at one time had built various Superman robots; however, all but one were destroyed, with the sole remaining robot currently being kept on duty at the Fortress of Solitude. On 29 January 1839, Darwin married his cousin Emma Wedgwood at Maer in an Anglican ceremony arranged to also suit the Unitarians. He largely abandoned them when Earth's pollution began to interfere with their functions. On 24 January 1839 he was honoured by being elected as Fellow of the Royal Society and presented his paper on the Roads of Glen Roy. Superman, in the pre-Crisis comics, also had androids that could impersonate himself (as both Superman and as Clark Kent). He was showing the stress, and Emma wrote urging him to get some rest, almost prophetically remarking "So don't be ill any more my dear Charley till I can be with you to nurse you". A trademark of the Fortress in all of its incarnations is a memorial statue of his Kryptonian parents, Jor-El and Lara, holding up a globe of the planet Krypton. A period of house-hunting culminated with finding "Macaw Cottage" in Gower Street, London, and Darwin moved his "museum" in over Christmas.

Superman also stores in the Fortress various equipment, weapons, and vehicles of Kryptonian design, including a large fighting mecha called a battlesuit and a means of accessing the Phantom Zone. Around late November 1838 he compared breeders selecting traits to a Malthusian Nature selecting from variants thrown up by "chance" so that "every part of newly acquired structure is fully practised and perfected", thinking this "the most beautiful part of my theory" of how species originated. Superman and fellow superhero Steel encased the Fortress in a tesseract, permitting the Man of Steel to carry the Fortress wherever he travels. Darwin considered Malthus's argument, that human populations breed beyond their means and compete to survive, in relation to his findings about species relating to localities, earlier enquiries into animal breeding, and ideas of Natural "laws of harmony". The device created the Fortress which contains much of Krypton's technology, including artificially intelligent robots. His warm reply eased her heart's concern, but this tension would remain. Post-Crisis, the Fortress was originally created by the Kryptonian artifact, the Eradicator, when Superman tried to dispose of it in Antarctica. John "our Saviour's farewell discourse to his disciples", a section on following the Way which also includes "If a man abide not in me...they are burned".

For years, Superman worked to reverse the city's condition, while also enjoying the opportunity to visit a native community where he was an honored guest. Again he discussed his ideas, and she subsequently wrote beseeching him to read from the Gospel of St. Most importantly, the Fortress was where Superman stored the bottle city of Kandor, which pre-Crisis, was a Kryptonian city shrunken and stolen by Brainiac prior to the planet's destruction. His thoughts and work continued in London over the autumn and he suffered repeated bouts of illness; then on 11 November he returned and proposed to Emma. It also had tribute rooms to personal friends like Lois Lane, Jimmy Olsen, Batman, and Clark Kent (to throw off suspicion about his secret identity by visitors unfamiliar with it), where Superman prepared special gifts for each in the event of his death. Against his father's advice he did not get around to proposing, but did tell her of his ideas on transmutation. Pre-Crisis, the Fortress included laboratories, a private zoo of alien animals, a room for communication with the Phantom Zone with a projector to place or remove people from it, a Krypton memorial, a trophy room, and a gym with custom exercise equipment. Having come down in favour, he went to visit his cousin Emma on 29 July.

While various 1940s comics made mention of Superman having a "mountain retreat," the Fortress in its familiar sense was first introduced in the comics in 1958. Fully recuperated, he returned home to Shrewsbury and pondered his career and prospects, drawing up a list with columns headed "Marry" and "Not Marry". The Fortress acts as Superman's getaway, although it has communications equipment for urgent messages. At Glen Roy in glorious weather he considered the riddle of the "roads" and identified them as raised beaches. The Fortress of Solitude, located in the Arctic in the pre-Crisis version of the mythos and (until recently) in Antarctica in the post-Crisis version, in recent issues of the comic book, however, the Fortress has been destroyed and Superman rebuilds it deep in the Amazon. Illness prompted Darwin to take a break from the pressure of work and he went "geologising" in Scotland, spending 28 June visiting Edinburgh on the day that Queen Victoria had her coronation in London. Given his abilities, personal equipment plays less of a role for Superman than for other superheroes. He had avoided taking on official posts which would take valuable time, but by March 1838 Whewell had recruited him as Secretary of the Geological Society.

Kryptonians are also vulnerable to magical and psychic effects, although they are no more detrimentally affected by such effects than a normal human would be. On 1 November Darwin gave a talk on worm casts to the Geological Society. The effects of the new blue kryptonite are unknown at this time. His uncle Jos pointed out an area of ground where cinders had disappeared under loam, which Jos thought might have been the work of earthworms. Recently, with the destruction of the Kryptonite meteor in Superman/Batman, large quantites of kryptonite have fallen to earth; new forms beyond the red and green are believed to be amongst them, however, only blue kryptonite has been seen in addition to the previously known types so far. His invalid aunt was being cared for by the as yet unmarried Emma. Since that time, an updated version of red kryptonite was reintroduced into the comics. At Maer, the Wedgwood's home, he entertained his relations.

Other variants were introduced sporadically, but after the 1986 John Byrne reboot, all versions except for green were retconned out of existence. On 20 September he suffered "palpitations of the heart" and left for a month of recuperation in the country. Since Krypton was destroyed, its remains (rendered radioactive by the explosion) have been spreading throughout the universe as kryptonite, a crystalline substance which has several major variants:. Under pressure with organising Zoology and correcting proofs of his Journal, which had to have the introduction revised when FitzRoy complained that he was "astonished at the total omission of any notice of the officers" for their help, Darwin's health suffered. As a Kryptonian, he has one specific area of vulnerability. He developed the hypothesis that, for example, where every island in the Galápagos Archipelago had its own kind of tortoise, these had originated from a single tortoise species and had adapted to life on the different islands in different ways. But historically, many stories have established that Superman can in some manner have progeny. In mid-July he began a secret notebook on transmutation, his "B" notebook, with a title page headed Zoönomia.

On the television series Lois and Clark, the pair adopted a child who, like Clark, came from mysterious origins. Darwin finished writing his Journal around 20 June when King William IV died and the Victorian era began. The issue of whether Superman can father children is humorously explored in the movie Mallrats, as well as in the essay Man of Steel, Woman of Kleenex by sci-fi author Larry Niven (originally published in his 1971 collection All the Myriad Ways.). Beagle, and a search for sponsorship was answered when Henslow used his contacts with the Chancellor of the Exchequer Thomas Spring Rice to arrange a Treasury grant of £1,000. Like humans, he needs food and water to survive. Another project he started was getting the expert reports on his collection published as a multivolume Zoology of the Voyage of H.M.S. He does not sweat under earthly conditions, as no temperatures are high enough to make him secrete liquid to cool himself down. He now also plunged into writing a book on South American Geology, at the same time speculating on transmutation in his Red Notebook which he had begun on the Beagle.

Procedures like surgery are impossible without special equipment. He had already been invited by FitzRoy to contribute his Journal, based on his field notes, as the natural history section of the captain's account of the Beagle's voyage. Since he is not human, he cannot donate blood, tissue, or organs. At the same meeting Darwin was elected to the Council of the Society. There are some things Superman cannot do. On 17 February 1837, Lyell used his presidential address at the Geographical Society to present Owen's findings to date on Darwin's fossils, pointing out the inference that extinct species were related to current species in the same locality. It is unknown whether higher energy stars might increase his powers even more. Darwin remained more comfortable with the respectability of his friends the Whig Cambridge Dons, even though his ideas were pushing beyond their belief that natural history must justify religion and social order.

More recent exertions caused less of a power drain, suggesting that he is now either storing more energy, or growing stronger under the yellow sun. Scientific circles were buzzing with ideas of Transmutation of species. Earlier in his life, as in his battle with Doomsday, Superman's solar energy supply was depleted by exertion. Eras's dinner parties included inspiring savants like Lyell, Babbage and Thomas Carlyle. In recent comics, Superman seems to be slowly building up immunity to kryptonite, and it is possible that its effect is in part psychological. When in London Charles stayed with his brother Erasmus, meeting Eras's lady friend the Unitarian writer Miss Harriet Martineau, whose stories had popularised the Malthusian Whig Poor Law reforms. His powers return quickly once the kryptonite is removed. From the collections of others, including FitzRoy's, he was able to relate the finches to separate islands.

Kryptonite exposure also stops the process that converts yellow sunlight into superpowers, leaving Superman immediately weakened. Waterhouse, and while the birds seemed almost an afterthought their assessment by the ornithologist John Gould startlingly revealed that what Darwin had taken to be wrens, blackbirds and slightly differing finches from the Galápagos were all separate species of finches. Red solar radiation creates a chemical which does not lead to the super energy produced by K-ATP. The Mammalia were ably taken on by George R. Near a red sun, his powers would fail faster. On the same day Darwin presented his mammal and bird specimens to the Zoological Society. He replenishes his supply even on cloudy days, and weakens only after a week without sunlight. With Lyell's enthusiastic backing Darwin read his first paper to the Geological Society of London on 4 January 1837, showing that Chile, and the South American landmass, was slowly rising.

Superman's cells store vast amounts of yellow solar energy. Owen's surprising revelations of extinct giant rodents and sloths confirmed Darwin's place in the scientific establishment. He sees all wavelengths, from radio to X-rays, allowing him to detect thermal trails and other "invisible" things. An eager Charles Lyell met Darwin on 29 October and introduced him to Richard Owen, an up-and-coming anatomist who agreed to work on the fossil bones at his Royal College of Surgeons. His taste, smell, and touch are equally acute. Acutely aware of the hazards of radicalism, Charles turned down the then controversial Robert Edmund Grant's offer to catalogue invertebrates. Solar energy magnifies its accuracy, allowing him to fine-tune it. After consulting Henslow in Cambridge who would work on the plants, Darwin went round the London institutions to find the best available naturalists to describe his other collections for early publication.

Due to Earth's thinner air, he can hear things no human can. He visited his home in Shrewsbury and his father drew on investments to provide Charles with a suitable allowance. Superman's other senses are less linked to solar energy than his strength and speed. By the time that the Beagle returned on October 2, 1836, Darwin was a sought-after celebrity in scientific circles. He is invulnerable to forces under 1 kt., and is harmed only by repeated blows of over 1 mt. His brain and nervous system keep up with his enhanced speed, as they too are amplified by K-ATP. While Darwin was still on the voyage, Professor Henslow had carefully fostered his former pupil's reputation by giving selected naturalists access to the fossil specimens and even having Darwin's geological writings privately printed for distribution. When his cells become "supercharged" under a yellow sun, a Kryptonian becomes super-powered. While on board the ship Darwin suffered from seasickness, in October 1833 he caught a fever in Argentina, and in July 1834 returning from the Andes down to Valparaiso he fell ill and spent a month in bed (see Charles Darwin's illness).

Superman has been shown shaving and presumably cutting his hair by reflecting his heat vision off of a piece of curved, reflective metal from the rocket in which he landed. This experience and his detestation of the slavery he saw convinced him that the widespread concept of inferior races was incorrect, and that humanity was not as far removed from animals as his clerical friends believed. His hair is invulnerable, too. Within a year the missionaries had reverted to savagery, yet preferred this rather than return to civilisation. This "aura" surrounds Superman's epidermis and teeth, and possibly his nails as well. Three natives of Tierra del Fuego returning with them as missionaries had become civilised in two years, yet their relatives appeared to him savages little above animals. First, cell membranes and organelles become more resistant to harm; secondly, a bioelectric field surrounds the cells, making them thousands of times tougher. In the first edition of The Voyage of the Beagle, he explained species distribution in the light of Charles Lyell's ideas of 'centres of creation'; however, in later editions of this Journal he foreshadowed his use of Galápagos Islands fauna as evidence for evolution: "one might really fancy that from an original paucity of birds in this archipelago, one species had been taken and modified for different ends.".

Under a yellow sun, other factors contribute to invulnerability. might exclaim 'Surely two distinct Creators must have been [at] work'". In addition, Krypton's gravity was 50-100 times stronger than Earth's, so Kryptonian cells are also much stronger and denser than a human's. An Australian marsupial rat-kangaroo and a platypus were such strikingly different creatures as to cause him to remark that "An unbeliever .. "K-ATP" is produced rapidly, enabling a Kryptonian to build up reserves that permit days of super-powered activity in the absence of sunlight. On returning to Britain he was shown that Galápagos tortoises and finches also were in distinct species related to islands. The solar energy supplements respiration, such that when cellular materials (perhaps Kryptonian ATP) combine with glucose, they produce abilities beyond those of humans under a yellow sun. Darwin found distinct species of Argentinian Rheas in overlapping territories, and nearby Galápagos Islands had different mockingbirds.

Under a red sun, this yields increased abilities, which are multiplied a thousand-fold by a yellow sun. At the time he thought them similar to African species, but after the voyage Richard Owen showed that the remains were of animals related to living creatures in the same area. Kryptonian mitochondria absorb certain wavelengths of the radiation emitted by solar fusion. In South America he discovered fossils of gigantic extinct Megatheriums and Glyptodons in strata which showed no signs of catastrophe or change in climate. One such "scientific" explanation used in various recent analyses of how Superman's powers might work is as follows:. He theorised that coral atolls form on sinking volcanic mountains, and when the Beagle reached the Cocos (Keeling) Islands its survey supported his theory. John Byrne in his 1986 reboot suggested that Superman's powers were telekinetic in their functioning (in addition to the traditional yellow sun explanation). Darwin read Charles Lyell's Principles of Geology which explained features as the outcome of gradual processes over huge periods of time, and wrote home that he was seeing landforms "as though he had the eyes of Lyell": stepped plains of shingle and seashells in Patagonia appeared to be raised beaches; in Chile, he experienced an earthquake that raised the land, and collected seashells high in the Andes.

Krypton's red sun), as well as to a much lesser degree Earth's lower gravity; when under a red sun, a Kryptonian would be completely powerless, even if it was a low-gravity environment. His detailed notes formed the basis for his later work and provided social, political, and anthropological insights into the areas he visited. In the early 1960s, after the introduction of Supergirl, this was amended to Kryptonians deriving their powers from mainly exposure to a yellow sun (vs. He methodically collected an enormous number of specimens, many of them new to science, which established his reputation as a naturalist and made him one of the precursors of the field of ecology. By the late 1940s, this was changed to Kryptonians only gaining superpowers when under a lower gravity environment such as Earth's. Darwin's work during the Beagle expedition allowed him to study first-hand a rich variety of geological features, fossils and living organisms, and exposed him to numerous foreign cultures. In the earliest comics, all Kryptonians were said to possess superpowers while on Krypton. This voyage became a five-year expedition that would change science dramatically.

Various explanations have been offered over the years explaining how Superman's powers work. His father objected to the voyage, regarding it as a waste of time, but was persuaded by Josiah Wedgwood to agree to and fund his son's participation. Superman's powers are derived from his Kryptonian biology and Earth's sun (a yellow star), and are likely increased by Earth's lesser gravity (versus Krypton's higher gravity). This would give him valuable opportunities to develop his career as a naturalist. His strength too has increased, to the point of allowing him to move mountains again. Henslow had recommended Darwin for the position of gentleman's companion to Robert FitzRoy, the captain of HMS Beagle, which was departing in December on a two-year expedition to chart the coastline of South America. As in the original series, writers again gradually increased his powers. Since "coming back to life" during The Death of Superman story arc, Superman can once again survive nuclear blasts, though they leave him wounded and weakened, and he can no longer fly faster than the speed of light or travel through time under his own power. Darwin was surveying strata in Wales on his own when he received a message that his intended companion had died, dashing plans to visit Madeira, but on his return home he received another letter.

When Superman was revamped in 1986, he became more vulnerable and was no longer omnipotent. To prepare for this project, Darwin joined the geology course of the Reverend Adam Sedgwick, and worked with him during the summer break at mapping strata in Wales. He could even vibrate his body so fast, the vibrations rendered him "invisible" to the human eye. Inspired by Alexander von Humboldt's Personal Narrative, he planned to study natural history in the tropics and to visit Madeira with some classmates on graduation. From the 1940s through the early 1980s, Superman's powers were nearly unlimited: he could travel millions of light-years in brief periods of time; he could dive into stars unharmed; he could travel through time by moving at speeds faster than light; and he could move planets and lift any weight. Residential requirements now kept Darwin at Cambridge until June, and following Henslow's example and advice, he was in no rush to take holy orders. His powers include:. In his finals in January 1831 he performed well in theology and, having scraped through in classics, mathematics and physics, came tenth out of a pass list of 178.

After Byrne's 1986 rewrite, Superman's powers were diminished, though have grown again since then. Charles received private tuition from Henslow, whose subjects were maths and theology. His powers were relatively limited in the early stories, but grew to become near-godlike by the 1980s. When exams loomed, Charles focused on his studies, becoming particularly enthused by texts by William Paley, including Paley's argument of divine design in nature. Superman possesses extraordinary powers which render him, as stated in the lead-in to the 1950s television series, "faster than a speeding bullet, more powerful than a locomotive, and able to leap tall buildings in a single bound". Charles subsequently joined Henslow's natural history course, becoming the "favourite pupil", known as "the man who walks with Henslow". Thus made invisible, he appeared to enter the building as Kent and exit seconds later as Superman. Along with his cousin William Darwin Fox he became engrossed in the current craze for the competitive collecting of beetles, and Fox introduced him to the Reverend John Stevens Henslow, professor of botany, for expert advice on beetles.

In the first Christopher Reeve Superman movie, Kent, comically unable to use a newer, open-kiosk pay phone, entered a revolving door and changed clothes while spinning within it at superspeed. At Cambridge, Charles preferred riding and shooting to studying. Clark sometimes has to quickly improvise in order to find a way to change unnoticed. This was a sensible career move at a time when Anglican parsons were provided with a comfortable income, and when most naturalists in England were clergymen who saw it as part of their duties to explore the wonders of God's creation. In the comic books he rarely does so, favoring the Daily Planet's storeroom. In 1827, his father, unhappy that his younger son would not become a physician, enrolled him in a Bachelor of Arts course at Christ's College, University of Cambridge, which would qualify him to be a clergyman. In the Fleischer animated series of theatrical cartoons, he often ducked into a telephone booth to make the transformation. He also sat in on Robert Jameson's natural history course, learning about stratigraphic geology and assisting with work on the collections of the Museum of Edinburgh University, then one of the largest in Europe.

When crises arise, Clark quickly changes into Superman. In March 1827, Darwin made a presentation to the Plinian society of his discovery that black spores often found in oyster shells were the eggs of a skate leech. Fellow reporter Lois Lane became the object of Clark's/Superman's romantic affection. Lois's affection for Superman and her rejection of Clark's clumsy advances have been a recurring theme in Superman comics, television, and movies. He joined Grant in pioneering investigations of the life cycle of marine animals on the shores of the Firth of Forth, where Grant found evidence for homology, the radical theory that all animals have similar organs and differ only in complexity. Largely working on his own, his identity is easily kept secret. In Darwin's second year he became active in student societies for naturalists, and became an avid student of Robert Edmund Grant, who was enthused by the theories of Jean-Baptiste Lamarck and Charles's grandfather Erasmus about evolution by acquired characteristics. In Metropolis, Superman (as Clark Kent) works as a reporter at the Planet, "a great metropolitan newspaper" which allows him to keep track of ongoing events where he might be of help. Darwin studied taxidermy with a freed black slave from South America, and found his tales of the South American rainforest absorbing.

A 2004 miniseries, Birthright, introduced further changes to Superman's origin story, bringing back some of the pre-Crisis elements eliminated by John Byrne and introducing elements of the Smallville television series. After school he started medical studies at Edinburgh University in 1825, but his disgust at the poor quality of the anatomy lectures of Professor Alexander Munro III and his revulsion at the brutality of surgery led him to neglect his medical studies. Clark soon told her he was Superman, which caused a brief strain in their relationship, but they eventually married, in the mid-1990s special Superman: The Wedding Album. When he went to the nearby Shrewsbury School the next year he lived there as a "boarder". In the early 1990s, Lois and Clark fell in love. His mother died when he was only eight. As in the original version, Lois Lane is Clark Kent/Superman's love interest. He was the fifth of six children of Robert and Susannah Darwin (née Wedgwood), and the grandson of Erasmus Darwin, and of Josiah Wedgwood, both from the Darwin – Wedgwood family which supported the Unitarian church.

The concept that Clark is the real man, and the greater emphasis on his earthly upbringing, is a deliberate reversal of the earlier, pre-Crisis version. Charles Darwin was born in Shrewsbury, Shropshire, England, on 12 February 1809, at the family home, The Mount House. Also post-Crisis, people do not suspect that Superman is hiding his real identity because he wears no mask. . In the post-Crisis comics, Clark Kent is presented more as the "real" person, with Superman the secret identity that he presents to the world to prevent his enemies from harming his family or friends. In a national recognition of Darwin's preeminence, he was buried in Westminster Abbey, close to Sir William Herschel and Sir Isaac Newton. The Kents were kept alive during Clark's transition to Superman. His last book was about earthworms.

The remodeled Clark did not become a superhero until just before starting work at the Daily Planet, when he prevented an experimental spacecraft from crashing in Metropolis. He was made a Fellow of the Royal Society, continued his research, and wrote a series of books on plants and animals, now including mankind in The Descent of Man and Selection in Relation to Sex and The Expression of the Emotions in Man and Animals. After leaving Smallville, he traveled the world before settling in Metropolis, completing his education, and going to work at the Daily Planet. His 1859 book The Origin of Species by Means of Natural Selection, or The Preservation of Favoured Races in the Struggle for Life (usually abbreviated to The Origin of Species) established evolution by common descent as the dominant scientific theory of diversification in nature. In the retelling, Clark's powers developed gradually, beginning with his nigh-invulnerability, and he didn't fly until he was a teenager. Fully aware of the likely reaction, he confided only in close friends and researched to meet anticipated objections, but in 1858 the information that Alfred Russel Wallace now had a similar theory forced early joint publication of Darwin's theory. As in the original version he was found and adopted by the Kents, and raised like a normal human. His biological observations led him to study transmutation of species and develop his theory of natural selection in 1838.

Effectively this Superman was "born" on Earth, and was a "son" of Earth as much as Krypton. Darwin's five-year voyage on HMS Beagle brought him eminence as a geologist and fame as a popular author. While a fetus, he escaped Krypton's destruction in a spacecraft (his "birthing matrix" with a rocket engine attached), and landed months later outside of Smallville, by which time he had fully gestated into an infant. He developed his interest in natural history while studying first medicine, then theology, at university. In this "post-Crisis" version, starting with the miniseries The Man of Steel, Superman—like all "post-Crisis" Kryptonians— was created through in-vitro fertilization on Krypton. Charles Robert Darwin (12 February 1809–19 April 1882) was a British naturalist who achieved lasting fame as originator of the theory of evolution through natural and sexual selection. In 1986, after the Crisis on Infinite Earths miniseries, DC Comics hired writer/artist John Byrne to recreate the Superman character and retell the Superman mythos, reshaping the previous forty-eight years of stories by putting several new twists on the established mythos. Examine Darwin's crustacean collection online.

After graduating with a degree in journalism, Clark was hired by the Daily Planet. BBC News: 'Darwin family repeat flower count'. During his junior year, Clark changed his superhero name to Superman. 12 different portraits of Charles Darwin at the National Portrait Gallery, UK. After he graduated from high school and the Kents died, Clark moved to Metropolis to attend Metropolis University. Darwin's Portrait on the £10 Note. At the age of eight, Clark adopted the superhero identity Superboy, and began to fight crime, both in the present and in a far future time as a member of the Legion of Super-Heroes. The Friends of Charles Darwin.

During this time, both Clark and the Kents had discovered Clark's amazing powers, and, with Clark realizing the good he could do with his powers, began training their adopted son to use his powers wisely. AboutDarwin.com. By the time Clark started school, the Kents had sold their farm and moved into Smallville, where they purchased a general store. Paul, "Darwin, social Darwinism and eugenics," in Jonathan Hodge and Gregory Radick, eds., The Cambridge Companion to Darwin (Cambridge, England: Cambridge University Press, 2003), 214-239. After formally adopting him, the Kents raised him on their farm through his pre-school years. Diane B. (In the earliest comics, the Kents were named "John" and "Mary"; in a 1942 text novel and the 1950s television series The Adventures of Superman, the Kents were named "Sarah" and "Eben.") They named him Clark, after Martha's maiden name. (Detailed history of Darwin's views on race, sex, and class).

Kal-El's ship landed in a field near the town of Smallville, and was discovered by Jonathan and Martha Kent. James Moore and Adrian Desmond, "Introduction", in The Descent of Man, and Selection in Relation to Sex (London: Penguin Classics, 2004). Moments before Krypton exploded, they launched Kal-El in a rocket ship towards Earth, knowing that Earth's lower gravity and yellow sun would give the boy extraordinary powers. ( London: HarperCollins, 2002). Disbelieving Jor-El's prediction, they refused to warn their fellow Kryptonians, and forbade Jor-El to do so. Jor-El promised that neither he nor his wife Lara would leave Krypton, and decided to use the little time remaining to save his son. Richard Keynes, Fossils, Finches and Fuegians: Charles Darwin's Adventures and Discoveries on the Beagle, 1832-1836. When Kal-El was two or three years old, Jor-El learned that Krypton was doomed to explode, and he brought this to the attention of Krypton's ruling leaders, the Science Council. The Darwin Deathbed Conversion Question.

In the legend extant in the early 1960s (and memorably summarized at the start of each episode of the 1950s Adventures of Superman television series[2] (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Superman#fn_narration)), Superman was born on Krypton as Kal-El, the son of Jor-El, a scientist and leader. ISBN 0-7181-3430-3. The modern story of Superman's origin parallels that of other cultural heroes and religious figures [1] (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Superman#fn_narration) who were spirited away as infants from places where they were in danger. Adrian Desmond and James Moore, Darwin (London: Michael Joseph, the Penguin Group, 1991). These changes, while significant, permit the retention of the core elements that make Superman an iconic character. Janet Browne, Charles Darwin: Voyaging and The Power of Place (Princeton: Princeton University Press, 1995-2002). Editors and writers used the process of retroactive continuity, or retcon, to adjust to changes in popular culture, eliminate restrictive segments of the mythos, and permit contemporary storylines. E.

Superman's abilities and relationships have changed over time. Charles Darwin, Voyage of the Beagle, (including Robert FitzRoy's Remarks with reference to the Deluge), (Penguin Books, London 1989) ISBN 0-14-043268-X. Superman is a loan translation from the German Übermensch (literally "over-man" or "super-man"). Seward Volume I, Volume II. Clark's love interest is fellow reporter, Lois Lane. Francis Darwin and A.C. When not fighting the forces of evil as Superman, he lives disguised as Clark Kent, a "mild-mannered reporter" for the Daily Planet. 1903: More Letters of Charles Darwin, ed.

As he grew, he discovered that he possessed superhuman powers. Francis Darwin Volume I, Volume II. He was sent to Earth in a rocket by his scientist father Jor-El moments before Krypton exploded, landing on Earth outside the town of Smallville, where he was discovered and adopted by the amiable Jonathan and Martha Kent. 1887: Life and Letters of Charles Darwin, ed. Superman was born Kal-El on the planet Krypton. Correspondence of Charles Darwin. The character, who was created by Jerry Siegel and Joe Shuster, subsequently appeared in various radio serials, television programs, and films. 1958: Autobiography of Charles Darwin (Barlow, unexpurgated).

Superman, nicknamed The Man of Steel, is a fictional character and superhero who first appeared in Action Comics #1 in 1938 and eventually became one of the most popular and well-known comic book icons of all time. 1887: Autobiography of Charles Darwin (Edited by his Son Francis Darwin) [19]. In an episode of the television series The Monkees, the Monkees audition over the telephone in a phone booth, delaying Clark Kent from using the booth to change into Superman. 1881: Formation of vegetable Mould Through the Action of Worms [18]. Superman, who appears in the film wearing only polka-dot boxer shorts, is shown begging the astronauts for the return of his costume. 1880: The Power of Movement in Plants [17]. In the Philippines-produced movie Fly Me To The Moon (produced around 1988), starring Tito Sotto, Vic Sotto and Joey De Leon (the hosts of Eat Bulaga!), Superman's costume got sucked into their spaceship's rocket booster while the three were on their way to the moon. 1879: "Preface and 'a preliminary notice'" in Ernst Krause's Erasmus Darwin [16].

Unlike Superman, Suppaman can't fly, and instead pretends to fly by lying belly down on a skateboard and scooting through the streets. 1877: The Different Forms of Flowers on Plants of the Same Species [15]. Slump, in the form of "Suppaman" (the way that Superman is written in Japanese katakana), a short, fat, pompous buffoon who transforms into a Superman-like costume by eating a sour (or "suppa" in Japanese) pickle. 1876: The Effects of Cross and Self-Fertilisation in the Vegetable Kingdom [14]. Japanese manga artist Akira Toriyama parodied Superman in his first series Dr. 1875: Insectivorous Plants [13]. The story can be found in the collection "Superheroes", edited by John Varley and Ricia Mainhardt. 1875: Movement and Habits of Climbing Plants [12].

In this story, "Kyril Kentarovsky" took on the identity of "Bolshoiman", who attempted to represent Russia but only managed to get thrown into a gulag (with Leon Trotsky as his cellmate). 1872: The Expression of Emotions in Man and Animals [11]. Author John Varley wrote the short story "Truth, Justice and the Politically Correct Socialist Path", a parody where Superman does not land in the United States but in Soviet Russia. 1871: The Descent of Man and Selection in Relation to Sex. Various gag strips, including one by Sergio Aragones in which a hobo finds Clark Kent's abandoned suit inside a phone booth and steals it, and another by Don Martin in which a series of massive lifts induce a "super-hernia.". 2. However, Incredi-Man did so by faking homosexuality;. 1, Vol.

The character boasted such powers as incredi-hearing and incredi-viola playing, and like Superman, avoided World War 2 service. 1868: Variation of Plants and Animals Under Domestication (PDF format), Vol. "The Incredi-Man Archives," an alleged reprint collection of a 1940s infringement of Superman (like Captain Marvel). 1862: On the various contrivances by which British and foreign orchids are fertilised by insects [10]. "What If Truth in Advertising Laws Applied to Comic Book Previews," which made sport of DC Comics' killing and reviving the character;. 1859: On the Origin of Species by Means of Natural Selection, or the Preservation of Favoured Races in the Struggle for Life. "What If Superman Were Raised by Jewish Parents?" (in which the rabbi is unable to circumcise his super-foreskin, but he makes his mother proud by using his vision to become a radiologist);. 1858: On the Perpetuation of Varieties and Species by Natural Means of Selection.

Other related pieces include:. 1854: A Monograph on the Fossil Balanidæ and Verrucidæ of Great Britain [9]. Since then, numerous MAD articles about or including Superman have appeared, including parodies of the various TV and movie projects. The Balanidae (or Sessile Cirripedes); the Verrucidae, etc. [8]. From its earliest days, MAD Magazine has frequently spoofed the Man of Steel; some consider the parody "Superduperman!" (from issue #4) to be the magazine's first true example of what would come to be the MAD vein. 1854: A Monograph of the Sub-class Cirripedia, with Figures of all the Species. The Saint from the independent comic The Pro was an obvious parody of Superman; he wore a blue spandex uniform with a red cape, had a day job as a reporter, and had an unrequited crush on his pushy co-worker. 1851: A Monograph on the Fossil Lepadidae; or, Pedunculated Cirripedes of Great Britain [7].

In the darker Supreme Power reboot, Hyperion is taken from his foster family by the government and raised as a super-soldier to be acutely aware of his biological superiority, and believes himself to be better than all humans. The Lepadidae; or, Pedunculated Cirripedes. [6]. Hyperion, originally of Marvel Comics' Squadron Supreme, was originally a tribute to Superman; like Superman, he was a solar-powered alien who fell to Earth in a spaceship and tried to live as a human. 1851: A Monograph of the Sub-class Cirripedia, with Figures of all the Species. As a differentiating twist, Apollo is the gay lover of Midnighter, the corresponding Batman-pastiche. [5]. He also gets his powers from the sun, wears a spandex outfit with a triangular logo on the front, and possesses the powers of flight, heat vision and super-strength. Herschel ed.

Apollo of the superhero teams Stormwatch and the Authority is often seen as a Superman-pastiche. 1849: Geology from A Manual of scientific enquiry; prepared for the use of Her Majesty's Navy: and adapted for travellers in general., John F.W. 2000s: Justice League: The Animated Series and Justice League Unlimited by Warner Bros. 1846: Geological Observations on South America [4]. Late 2000: Batman Beyond episodes "The Call Parts 1 & 2" by Warner Bros. 1844: Geological Observations of Volcanic Islands [3], (French version). 1990s: Superman: The Animated Series by Warner Bros. 1842: The Structure and Distribution of Coral Reefs [2].

Late 1980s: Short-lived Superman series based on the "new" DC Comics Superman produced by Ruby-Spears. Beagle: published between 1839 and 1843 in five volumes by various authors, Edited and superintended by Charles Darwin: information on two of the volumes –. Early 1980s: Super Powers: Galactic Guardians. Zoology of the Voyage of H.M.S. 1970s: Hanna-Barbera Productions produces several Super Friends series. 1839: Journal and Remarks (The Voyage of the Beagle). 1966: New Adventures of Superman. 'Beagle.' [1].

1960s: Filmation's Batman-Superman Adventure Hour. OF H.M.S. 1940s: Fleischer Studios' Superman theatrical cartoons (17 in all, with Bud Collyer providing the voice of Superman). DARWIN, ESQ. Starring Brandon Routh as Superman/Clark Kent & Kevin Spacey as his archenemy, Lex Luthor. FITZROY AND C. 2006: Superman Returns, to be directed by Bryan Singer. R.

2000s: Smallville television series, starring Tom Welling, Michael Rosenbaum, and Kristin Kreuk, which places Smallville in Kansas. – BY CAPT. Mid-1990s: Lois and Clark: The New Adventures of Superman television series, starring Dean Cain and Teri Hatcher. 1836: A LETTER, Containing Remarks on the Moral State of TAHITI, NEW ZEALAND, &c. Early 1990s: Superboy television series, starring John Haymes Newton (1988-1989) and Gerard Christopher (1989-1992). Charles Darwin's Books in an easy to read format. 1988: Superman's 50th Birthday, TV Special. Darwin Literature, Chapter-indexed, searchable versions of Darwin's works.

1985: Supergirl spin-off movie, starring Helen Slater. Works by Charles Darwin at Project Gutenberg. 1980s: Superman films: Superman II, Superman III, and Superman IV: The Quest For Peace, starring Christopher Reeve. Bibliography: Darwin Bibliography (including alternative editions, contributions to books & periodicals, correspondence & life). 1978 Superman: The Movie, starring Marlon Brando, Gene Hackman, and Christopher Reeve. Charles Waring Darwin (6 December 1856 – 28 June 1858). 1975: "It's A Bird, It's A Plane, It's Superman", TV special. Horace Darwin (13 May 1851 – 29 September 1928).

WTOP-TV (now W*USA) used a news theme music based on the play. Leonard Darwin (15 January 1850 – 26 March 1943). 1966: "It's a Bird...It's a Plane...It's Superman", a Broadway musical; lyrics by Lee Adams, music by Charles Strouse. Francis Darwin (16 August 1848 – 19 September 1925). 1951: "Superman And The Mole Men", feature film, and The Adventures of Superman TV series, both starring George Reeves. Elizabeth "Bessy" Darwin (8 July 1847 – 1926). 1940s: Two Superman serials starring Kirk Alyn and Noel Neill: Superman and Atom Man vs. Superman. George Howard Darwin (9 July 1845 – 7 December 1912).

1940s: Superman radio series, starring Bud Collyer and Joan Alexander. Henrietta Emma "Etty" Darwin (25 September 1843 – 1929). Yu: A "re-imagining" of Superman which brings back some old, pre-Crisis concepts and adds new modern ones. Mary Eleanor Darwin (23 September 1842 – 16 October 1842). Superman: Birthright - a twelve issue maxi-series written by Mark Waid and illustrated by Leinil F. Anne Elizabeth Darwin (2 March 1841 – 22 April 1851). Superman: Red Son - written by Mark Millar, illustrated by Dave Johnson: Elseworlds story asks "What if Superman had been raised in the Soviet Union?" Superman now stands for workers' rights and the struggle for global equality, and sets out to promote world communism. William Erasmus Darwin (27 December 1839 – 1914).

Superman For All Seasons - written by Jeph Loeb, illustrated by Tim Sale: Superman as a young man in a timeless, Rockwellian America, from confused lad to superpowered metropolite. Kingdom Come - written by Mark Waid, illustrated by Alex Ross: A painted epic, in which Superman has temporarily retired, giving way to a new breed of reckless, morally ambiguous superheroes. The story was novelized by Elliot S! Maggin. A novelization of the trilogy, entitled The Death and Life of Superman, was written by Roger Stern. The Death of Superman, World Without a Superman, and The Return of Superman - written by various artists, notably Dan Jurgens: the story of Superman's death, the world's (and his loved ones') reaction, and his eventual return.

The Man of Steel - written and illustrated by John Byrne: The revamp of Superman's origins following the Crisis on Infinite Earths. Originally published in Superman #423 and Action Comics #583. Whatever Happened to the Man of Tomorrow? - written by Alan Moore, illustrated by Curt Swan and George Pérez: The final chapter on the pre-Crisis Silver/Bronze Age Superman. Reprinted in Across the Universe: The DC Universe Stories of Alan Moore (ISBN 1401200877).

DeMatteis. This story was originally published in Superman Annual #11 and recently adapted for the animated series Justice League Unlimited by J.M. "For the Man Who Has Everything" - written by Alan Moore, illustrated by Dave Gibbons: Batman, Robin, and Wonder Woman journey to Superman's Fortress of Solitude to celebrate his birthday only to find their friend rendered comatose by the evil alien Mongul by an alien parasite that grants its host the illusion of their heart's desire. Miracle Monday - a novel by Elliot S! Maggin: tells the story of Superman trying to stop an entity of pure evil from causing universal chaos.

Last Son of Krypton - a novel by Elliot S! Maggin: Superman's "life story" is told and he faces a mysterious alien ruler. Justice League Unlimited. JLA Classified. JLA.

Superman/Batman. Adventures of Superman. Action Comics. Superman.

Gog: A human from the future who masters time travel, and hates Superman for allowing his parents to die. The Cyborg Superman: A reanimated astronaut cyborg who briefly impersonated Superman after his death, and also destroyed Green Lantern Hal Jordan's home of Coast City. The Toyman: An insane criminal who uses special equipment and weapons based on toys. Eventually, Superman, the superhero Steel, and Darkseid stopped Imperiex by using Doomsday as an ally, along with a powerful weapon called the Entropy Aegis.

Imperiex: An all-powerful force of nature whose purpose is destroying galaxies. Doomsday: A mindless, impossibly powerful, raging monster that "killed" Superman during the Death of Superman storyline. Intergang: A nationwide organized crime syndicate armed with weapons supplied in part by Darkseid. Parasite: A superpowered man who can absorb the powers, strength, and memories of any organic being, and wants Superman's power for himself.

Their leader is General Zod. Phantom Zone Prisoners: Pre-Crisis, these prisoners are Kryptonian criminals who hate Superman, as the son of their prison's creator, and become extremely destructive when they escape into Earth's yellow sun environment. The post-Crisis version is an alien entity who is an organic being, later converted into a robotic one, with similar ambitions. Brainiac: The pre-Crisis version is an alien android bent on conquest and Superman's death.

Mxyzptlk: A being from the fifth dimension with magical powers who delights in tormenting Superman and traditionally could only be made to return to his native dimension by being made to say or spell his own name backwards. Mr. Metallo: A criminal cyborg who prefers using kryptonite as a power source, which makes him a deadly threat to Superman. Bizarro: A grotesquely flawed duplicate of Superman who clumsily tries to emulate the original and causes a great deal of damage in the process.

The character is now often associated with Superman. Not originally created as a Superman villain, but by Jack Kirby for his New Gods series. Darkseid: A cruel and merciless alien who rules the planet Apokolips and only deals with Superman when it benefits his own agenda. He was later elected President of the United States; he was removed from this position when his evil nature became exposed to the American public.

Post-Crisis, the two first met as adults (though this has apparently reverted back to the pre-Crisis version with Birthright), with Luthor the corrupt head of a mega corporation. Pre-Crisis, arch-villain Lex Luthor was a friend of Clark from Smallville who became a criminal scientist with an all-consuming vendetta against Superman. Lex Luthor: Superman's most well-known enemy. Other notable JLA members include Batman, Wonder Woman, The Flash and the Green Lantern.

The Justice League of America: a team of superheroes of which Superman is a member and often the leader (pre-Crisis, Superman was also a founding member of the group). Post-Crisis, a newer version of Krypto was recently reintroduced. Krypto: In the pre-Crisis mythos, Krypto was the El family pet dog, who was sent into space in a malfunctioning test rocket of Jor-El's, and eventually drifted to Earth, where he was found by Superboy and gained superpowers. Post-Crisis, the name belongs to a clone, originally thought to have been of Superman, that was created after Superman died during the Death of Superman storyline.

Superboy: In pre-Crisis continuity, Superboy was the name of Superman as a boy. Steel: An engineer genius named John Henry Irons who created a high-tech, mechanized suit of armor to fight crime in, after Superman's death in the Death of Superman storyline, and still serves as a superhero today. In recent issues of Superman/Batman, a new "Supergirl from Krypton" (looking very much like the original) arrived on Earth. Post-Crisis, several newer unrelated versions of Supergirl have been introduced.

Supergirl: Pre-Crisis, Superman's cousin from Krypton. In the current version, they still live in Smallville and Clark visits them regularly and turns to them regularly in times he needs emotional support or advice. Often referred to as Ma and Pa Kent. Jonathan and Martha Kent: Superman's foster parents who adopted and raised him after he landed on Earth.

Lana and Pete later divorced. Post-Crisis, this didn't occur; instead, he married Lana Lang, with whom he had a son named Clark. Pete Ross: Clark Kent's childhood friend from Smallville; pre-Crisis, Pete secretly discovered Clark was Superboy, but kept the knowledge to himself. Lori Lemaris: A mermaid who Clark Kent dated while attending Metropolis University, and was the first person he proposed marriage to (though Lori turned him down).

Post-Crisis, Lana is aware of Clark's identity as Superman and has protected his secret. Lana Lang: Pre-Crisis, a television reporter who grew up in Smallville and shared Lois Lane's sometime obsession with trying to expose Clark Kent as Superman. Perry White: Editor of the Daily Planet. Jimmy is also known to have associated with Superman, earning him the nickname "Superman's Pal.".

Jimmy Olsen: Daily Planet photographer who often works with Lois and Clark, and has become a good friend to both. Actresses portraying Lois have included Noel Neill, Phyllis Coates, Margot Kidder, Teri Hatcher, and Erica Durance. Lois Lane: Superman's love interest, who is often portrayed as indifferent to Clark, but in love with Superman. Jewel kryptonite gave Phantom Zone prisoners amplified mental powers.

White kryptonite affects (and kills) only plant life. In some story arcs, it can also counteract the effects of red kryptonite. Blue kryptonite affects only Bizarros, in the same way that green kryptonite affects only Kryptonians. Gold kryptonite permanently removes a Kryptonian's superpowers.

In the "Tower of Babel" arc in the JLA comic book, a piece of red kryptonite made his skin invisible, allowing the sun to supercharge his cells past their normal limit and cause great pain to Superman himself. In the television series Smallville, red kryptonite causes the repressed, more violent and less conscientious part of his personality to gain control; on Lois and Clark, red kryptonite induced a sense of apathy. The effects wear off in 24-48 hours, after which a Kryptonian becomes immune to that particular piece. Red kryptonite has unpredictable effects on Kryptonians' physical or mental states, such as splitting Superman in two, inducing amnesia, turning him into a giant, etc.

Green kryptonite is fatal to Kryptonians exposed to it for a sufficient period of time. The ability is evident in The New Batman-Superman Adventures and the Justice League cartoon series, though. However, over time, this power as a whole has been scaled back, if not eliminated, in current comics. His skill with science and mathematics were beyond human comprehension.

He had a computer-like brain, which gave him total recall and the ability to speak all earthly languages and even most alien ones. In the Silver Age comics, Superman possessed the intelligence of a collection of the world's greatest minds. Super intellect: In the earliest comics, Kryptonians were endowed with genius-level intellects even on their native planet. Eventually, this superior mental talent was altered to being another superpower gained only under the influence of a yellow sun (though Krypton still possessed an advanced educational and intellectual state). One figure for Superman's strength is 250,000 tons.

This is because Superman's strength, like his other powers, has fluctuated over time, with the Man of Steel being at times able to shift a planet from its orbit. Super strength: The exact magnitude of Superman's strength is unknown, it is generally accepted that his strength easily surpasses the capacity to lift 100 tons, but how much more is not known exactly. Post-Crisis, his top speed seems to be at or near the speed of light, and he can no longer travel through time under his own power. The earliest Superman ran at a mere 30 miles per hour, but quickly became much faster; by the 1950s, Superman became capable of flying through space at faster-than-light speeds, as well as travel through time.

This includes running, but flying is less strenuous and more versatile. Super speed: The ability to move at an incredible speed, like the Flash. Super breath: The ability to create hurricane force winds by blowing, and to chill his breath to freeze a target (this latter ability has also been called "freeze breath"). Originally, Superman could jump 1/8 mile, and only acquired the ability to fly in the early 1940s, when the first Superman animated films were being produced and super-jumping proved to not look very impressive on theatre screens.

The power of flight, by force of will, which also allows him to maneuver precisely in any direction, as well as hover. Pre-Crisis, Superman also possessed the power of "super-ventriloquism," or the ability to pitch his voice across vast distances, which he would use in combination with his super-hearing as a means of communication. He is also a brilliant mimic, able to impersonate human voices or animal sounds. Super voice: Superman is a master ventriloquist; he used this once to rescue Lois from criminals.

The only Earth creature who can detect sounds at the frequency he can is a dog (70-100,000 Hz). Super-hearing: The ability to hear any sound at any volume or pitch. For these reasons, this explanation for his disguise's effectiveness was dropped, in favor of the traditional "suspension of disbelief" status quo. However, this theory presented numerous flaws, such as various stories where Batman would disguise himself as Clark Kent; it also failed to account for anyone studying Kent's build from behind, let alone how the illusion could work on a video camera or whenever Kent was performing his job as a TV news anchorman.

One late 1970s story, attempting to explain the effectiveness of Superman's disguise as Clark Kent, suggested that his super-hypnotism, aided by his Clark Kent glasses, worked continually to make others see him as a thin, mild mannered man, not an athlete in a suit, and even included photographs of himself. This ability was dropped in the modern comics. Super hypnotism: Pre-Crisis, Superman had the ability to hypnotize others at will. These beams can be made invisible, allowing Superman to work undetected.

Visually, the power is typically depicted as twin laser beams firing from the eyes. Heat vision: The ability to apply heat to a target by staring intensely at it with the conscious act of activating his power. Microscopic vision: The ability to see extremely small objects and images. Superman can also see the entire electromagnetic spectrum, including infrared and ultraviolet, allowing him to see in the dark.

Telescopic vision: The ability to see very distant objects, without violating the laws of physics. In one "post-Crisis" story this trick backfired when Superman simply scanned the field for lead, which instantly stands out as the only opaque substance to his vision, and found the hidden item easily. Opponents sometimes use lead lined constructs in an attempt to hide things from Superman. He can see things behind a wall as if the wall were not there, or can "peel back" layer after layer of matter in his mind.

X-ray vision: The ability to see through anything except lead. Vision-related powers:

    . In addition, his immune system protects him from toxins and diseases. His powers have since increased, allowing him to fly into the sun unharmed.

    Still able to withstand artillery shells, lasers, and even nuclear explosions, he would be killed if he flew into a star. In 1986, Superman was somewhat depowered. Near invulnerability: In the 1940s, "nothing less than a bursting artillery shell could break his skin"; by the 1970s he could fly through a star and shrug off a nuclear blast.