Friday, 26 February 2010

Points On A Curve No 2: The King Is Not Dead, Long Live The King

A quote from the previous entry, to serve as a Reader's Warning - "Here then, by way of illustration, will be "my" Aquaman, and it's a character composed of brief comic book moments, images taken somewhat out of context, and suppositions barely supported by evidence. On reflection, this Aquaman bears no relation to any canon, not of today or any past era, and it ignores great swathes of work by very able creators; not because their work was poor, but because it didn't strike a chord with me, or perhaps because I never even read their work. My Aquaman isn't owned by any corporation, open to any critic's challenge, or amendable as a concept even by myself. Which, counter-intuitively, makes "my" Aquaman all the more real to me."


1. What's An Aquaman For?

Super-hero. King. Crime-fighter. Outcast and pariah. Warrior-Monarch. Mystic, 'Waterbearer'. Husband, father, friend, mentor. Environmentalist. Lonely guy, angry guy, abandoned guy.

Who is this Aquaman and what is he for?


2. Finding The King At The End Of The World

The first time I ever believed Aquaman was a King, rather than just accepting the fact, was in Grant Morrison's JLA #41: all the peoples of the world have been driven insane with war-madness by Mageddon and on Venice Beach, fighting breaks out between enraged soldiers and the super-heroes who can't hold the chaos back. Zantanna shields the Black Canary as the sands around them are raked with bullets, the Ray is shot from the sky and believes himself about to die. And, as is the way of these things, all order and hope is lost.

And then.

An Atlantean war machine rises above the waves. From within, the amplified voice of King Arthur Of Atlantis breaks across the beach. The soldiers pause from their carnage.

"Lay down your arms! I'm serious and I have the firepower to prove it! Sworn protectorate of over fifteen thousand submarine states. My territory surrounds every continent on the planet. I rule most of this planet's surface and almost all of its depths. So don't even think about picking a fight with the King Of Atlantis."

3. The Legal Authority And The Serious Firepower Of The King Of The Seven Seas


My first reaction to this scene was purely emotional. I laughed, and I felt proud of Aquaman. I'd never conceived of the character in the way Morrison, and artist Howard Porter, presented him, but it was as if I had and that someone else had overheard my thoughts and put them down on paper. For I'd always thought that DC's Atlantis ought be a world super-power, and I'd many times imagined Arthur being not a barbarian warrior, but a soldier wielding might through judgement and strategy. And here he was. This was the Aquaman leading a technologically advanced armada into war. This was the Aquaman wielding the legal authority to wage war in defence of a coalition composed of many thousands of undersea states all less powerful than Atlantis, all united in common cause.

It was, perhaps, yet another example of Grant Morrison throwing into his scripts quick redefinitions of characters, as if the Scotsman was permanently scared that he'd never get round to using all the bright ideas he'd generated.

And it all made perfect emotional sense to me. It felt right. And then, after the feelings, came the thinking. Why did this strike such a chord with me? I have little sympathy for the Warrior-Monarch take on Aquaman, the grimly pulpy, sword'n'sorcery Aquaman, the hand-eaten-by-piranhas Aquaman. That Aquaman smelt too much to me of
editorial-anxiety, of the grafting-on of current trends onto a character who'd never sat too well with angst before. In fact, the more Aquaman was deluged by ill-fortune - by his lost wife, his dead son, his alienated people, his disillusionment's, his estranged foster son, by his mutilation - the less I could see of Aquaman. The endless tragedies didn't make him more interesting, didn't broaden the character's appeal or deepen his identity. They obscured him.

Aquaman had disappeared for me under the rust of layers and layers of angst and misery and miscalculation and misfortune. After awhile, all I could see was the beard and the hook, the grimace and the canyon-deep frowns. If I looked really hard enough, I still couldn't see the King Of The Seven Seas. I couldn't see Aquaman at all.

For all I admired the craft and sincere good intentions of his creators. I couldn't see Aquaman at all.

4. The Bluff Of Kings


There's an alternative reading to Morrison and Porter's Venice Beach scene. After all, we're only actually shown one war-machine and one troop of "submarine" warriors. Perhaps Aquaman is actually pulling a tremendously daring bluff here? Perhaps it's not that Morrison has sneaked in one of his characteristic re-imaginings of a major character, perhaps there isn't a "protectorate of over fifteen thousand submarine states". Perhaps it's just that Arthur is a bright, brave man who puts himself - and his soldiers - into a war zone in order to face down fighting-mad armies? Perhaps this is an Arthur Curry who's so used to the exigencies demanded of power that he can deliberately play the role of peace-maker cloaked as a war-monger? Not grim and gritty, but playing grim and gritty.

And it was there that it struck me. For as long as I could remember, the character of Aquaman had been the prisoner of the roles he'd been editorially-mandated to play. If Arthur was a King, then he was hemmed in by the role of King, as if he was a helpless figure fated to stand still while his subjects revolted, his enemies plotted, his destiny closed in on him. When Arthur lost his hand, we saw not a man who rose above tragedy, but a man shattered by it, a man so fundamentally changed by his loss that his very personality degenerated. His marriage collapsed when his son was lost, and again Arthur was a victim. Rather than being allowed to take charge, to work with his wife to rebuild his family, to comfort each other through their loss, Arthur was pushed away by his distraught wife. And when - one of many - reconciliations occurred, it didn't show anything other than "love overcoming". The chance to show Arthur and Mera working hard to rebuild their world was never the central point of the narrative. But chance and sentimentality and the accident of 'love' don't create a hero or a heroine. Hard work and bravery do.

Arthur Curry, Aquaman, has too often been a victim. And though one can feel sympathy for victims, it's hard to admire them. Heroes shouldn't be constantly running from persecution, or trapped for years as living water, or mutilated and traumatised, or even living their lives in the undersea suburbs of small American cities.

Not if they're super-heroes and Kings.

And Grant Morrison's Aquaman was a super-hero and a king. The world is ending, the Apocalypse is here, and he's determined to put his own body on the line in order to secure a beach-head of peace. Perhaps he playing an elaborate and brave bluff. Perhaps he's as hard as nails and has at last created a political-military alliance which allows him to act as a major player on the world stage. Perhaps its a mixture of the two.

But he's not a victim. Because he's not a victim.

5. Not Broken, No Need To Fix


The worst thing about monarchies in comic-books is that most writers have no idea how to write them. In their search for conflict which can be used to ratchet up the angst suffered by their lead characters, a Monarchy is too vulnerable a status quo for writers not to disrupt. If Asgard exists, then Odin must stumble, Thor must be exiled, Asgard must fall, and then Thor will return. The Monarchy itself, such a rich seed-bed for epic stories, endlessly becomes reduced to a soap-opera mechanism, creating easily-sparked character conflict that will always end in the same way: the King or Prince is exiled, the Kingdom is threatened, the King or Prince returns.

But after awhile, this cycle breeds weariness, familiarity and even contempt. How many times must Hippolyta, Odin, or Zeus, miscalculate before we conclude that they're fools and unworthy of our affection? And how many times must Atlantis reject to one degree or another Aquaman before we decide that either the Atlanteans aren't worth of our heroes' affection, or, even more dangerously, that our hero isn't worth our respect either?

Too many writers and editors can't resist breaking things just because it generates a little heat. And eventually, when just about everything that can be broken has been broken, the only step left can appear to be to change, for example, Aquaman into a monstrous "dweller in the darkness", and then kill him. Still a victim.

But the character never was broken.

6. A Distrust Of Kings


It's no surprise that the most convincing portrayals of monarchies in superhero comics come from British creators, such as Paul Jenkins and the Ablett/Lanning team with The Inhumans and Neil Gaiman on The Sandman, or from American creators, such as Priest and Hudlin, who have a stake in making sure that their kingly character isn't demeaned. The Brits are stepped in myths of monarchy, of Kings who will return. The Americans have a stake in positively representing Wakanda's monarchy, because that fictional nation's political system is perceived to be intertwined with respect for an important Black character.

Elsewhere, I wonder if American creators instinctively distrust the very idea of a benevolent and competent monarchy. Certainly, the British Monarchy and the person of King George III plays the role of antagonist in the myths and legends of the American Revolution. And monarchies have traditionally stunk of the past to Americans, of previous and discarded political systems replaced by and improved upon by American democracy. It may be that American creators consciously or subconsciously feel awkward presenting a modern day monarchy in a positive light. After all, as Thomas Paine said "England ... hath known some few good monarchs, but groaned beneath a much larger number of bad ones ..". And that's true; there's always been far, far more bad kings and queens than good ones. Perhaps it feels wrong to suggest that a monarchy could ever be a viable, acceptable system. God knows, in reality I have no sympathy with monarchies, aristocracies, tyrannies, dictatorships and their brethren. But there are ways to allow Aquaman to stay a monarch - and be a successful and humane monarch - without offending anyone's political sensibilities.

Arthur could be a constitutional monarch. He could be a state figurehead, responsible for advising the nation, representing it in public, and assuming key responsibilities at times of crisis. In such a way, Aquaman could 'rule' over a people - from Atlantis or across a wider area of the submarine world - while co-existing with democratic rights. (He could even be tasked with the job of protecting the rights of the people when they're encroached upon by government.) Or Aquaman could be, as he was when he first became the King Of Atlantis, an elected monarch, . (There were 13 Polish Kings elected by elements of the Polish people in the late middle-ages, for example. Being a King was not there a matter of absolute power, and rule wasn't passed down to the King's biological successors.) Or Aquaman could take responsibility for some aspect of Morrison's undersea protectorates, securing the peace legitimately without taking absolute power himself.

And there are examples of admirable monarchs in history. Not many, I will readily admit, as a good democrat should, but a few; Alfred The Great, such a brave man constantly losing and brilliantly learning and fighting back against fearsome odds; Marcus Aurelius, philosopher and Emperor and relentlessly warring prince; Cincinnatus, dictator of Rome, called twice to supreme power during nightmare disasters, twice saving the day and then twice abandoning office to retire back to his farm. I'm sure you can think of other examples too. Not so many that we'd ever want a King, but enough for some small measure of sneaking nostalgia to wink in and out of our imaginations.

7. The King Was Never Dead, The Long-Lived King


But why should Aquaman be a king?

Well, part of that is the emotional truth that he's been a King, or an ex-King, for as long as I've known him. I have an intractable fan's heart. Unless I can be convinced that a better solution exists, I'm happy to stay with an established, familiar fact.

And being a King shouldn't stop Arthur playing most if not all of the other roles that he's played in his time. He can still be a superhero, still be a Justice Leaguer, still engage in quests, still play the lone wolf when occasion demands.

But being a King is something few other characters can convincingly be. For Arthur, being King is part of his history. It's a struggle for a creator to remove the imprint of monarch from Arthur Curry's nature: at best after the attentions of the revisionist creator, he's still an ex-King. The label of King doesn't fade, and Aquaman will remain King of The Seven Seas even if not of Atlantis. There's no way to remove him from his past. The kingship will always be there, and if ignored, it'll just be the elephant in the room. It's a major character marker, a unique seller point, a plot-generator, a familiar trope of the hero's identity; it's the character element that keeps on generating plot point after plot point.

Consider again the story possibilities inherent in Morrison's speech quoted earlier in this entry;

"Sworn protectorate of over fifteen thousand submarine states. My territory surrounds every continent on the planet. I rule most of this planet's surface and almost all of its depths. So don't even think about picking a fight with the King Of Atlantis."

And that Aquaman is nobodies' victim; not necessarily some gruff Conanesque figure, nor a '50s American suburban surrogate smiling his way through fishy adventures, but someone with elements of both. He needs no faux-grimness, no cruel exiles, no broken families, no physical mutilations to mark him out as unique or special. He already is unique and special. He's already a super-hero, and he's alot more too.

He's Aquaman and he's the King.


To be continued in Points On A Curve No 3, where we'll take a little trip to Atlantis to consider why any reader should ever want to go there. And in Points On A Curve No 4, we'll question what kind of man Aquaman is , and therefore what kind of King he would be.


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6 comments:

  1. Wow...interesting stuff. You've examined aspects to the character I've only barely thought about, even after all these years.

    And there's more? Fantastic!

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  2. I never liked Aquaman as King of Atlantis. Protector maybe. An ambassador perhaps. I think making him king parallels Namor and that's where a lot of the comparisons come in. He's not Namor and they should stop trying to turn him into Namor.

    He didn't start out as king of Atlantis. He was the king of the seven seas. He ruled the fishes and other undersea life. He swam from shore to shore and helped people in danger where ever he would surface. Once they made him king of Atlantis he stopped being a superhero.

    A superhero is one that saves people by choice. As king of Atlantis it's no longer a choice but a duty. Superman doesn't have to protect Metropolis. Batman doesn't have to protect Gotham. They do it because they choose to. However Aquaman has to protect Atlantis because he is its ruler. This then no longer becomes a selfless act but one of self interest. It's like someone stopping a burglar from breaking into their home. They're not a hero. It's their home. They have to do something. If that person stopped a burglar from breaking into someone elses home then they're hero.

    I think Aquaman should stop being king. Let someone else rule. He should go back to swimming the oceans and helping people who really appreciate him. And besides, his depiction as king makes him look more like Warlord than what he was intended to be.

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  3. JRainey: There's an old Manic Street Preachers you may know called "This Is My Truth, Now Tell Me Yours", & I'm really pleased to see that's what you've done here. The whole purpose of "Points On A Curve" was to try to think through how we all create our own versions of fictional characters, & nothing shows that so well as having the privilage of reading your very different take on the issue of Aquaman as King. It's funny, but when DC imposes a continuity change on a character like Arthur, it's easy to bridle & feel that something daft has been done to a well-loved superhero. But reading "your" Aquaman, though it's very different to mine, doesn't feel anything other than interesting: where I might feel a corporate take is "wrong-minded", yours I sit and read & say "Yes, that's right for him in the terms he's given". That's because it isn't being imposed on me & it isn't being created on some editorial whim, by some desperate attempt to capture the market or whatever.

    I was particularly interested in your paragraph beginning "A superhero is one that saves people by choice". My take on Aquaman is that he took the Kingship as a choice, as a burden he would bear to give him the resources to help others. I don't think he likes being King, but I think he knows it's a responsibility he ought not to shirk. And I think that willingness to work within structures can be as heroic as working outside them.

    But I'm not disagreeing with you so much as sharpening up my own version of "Aquaman" by comparing my thought with yours. It's really interesting to read your own "points on a curve". There's no right answers here, are there, there's just our own versions informed by our own lives. That's what makes it all so fascinating. And the way that you supported your opinions with absolutely valid evidence means that I'd be an idiot to say anything else!

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  4. Aquaman nearly has to be a constitutional monarch. Not only because he was ELECTED king by the council of Atlantis to prevent civil war, but also because he is the “great uniter”. The sister cities were allies, but came to conflict as soon as he wasn’t king anymore (80’s series, when he was ambassador). He still fixed the problem. When Tritonis was destroyed by Kordax or aliens or whoever? He invited them into Poseidonis

    That’s how to continue with him as a king, even if he’s a king without a kingdom. He’s the general and champion of those people – even if he’s not sitting on a throne. He organized them and allied them all through the hard work of saving every single damned “Lost City” from a monster, or by defeating their wicked champions in gladiatorial combat.

    Even if he’s not the political leader of Atlantis, he’s the guy the politicians ask for advice, and if he takes command it’s for a good reason and they follow. In that way he’s like the Irish High King Brian Boru (In more ways than one, since Curry is an Irish name, he has the King Arthur ties and Atlantis has fair relationships with Irish sea legends). A hard-won authority, who united all the warring clans into a nation.

    He sat on the throne an outsider … with a wife who was an outsider, a foster brother who was an outsider. His wedding guests were super-heroes, not Atlantean bureaucrats. His best man was probably Superman. Mera’s maid-of-honor probably Wonder Woman.

    He’s practically the undersea messiah. Landlocked surface men may not take him seriously, but people on coasts do. And fishermen and sailors especially do.

    And frankly, he’s something of a cowboy, too. “A man’s got to do what a man’s got to do.” Riding into a troubled town on the back of his seahorse and solving their dilemmas with quick wits, willingness to bluff and go on instinct. “Why’s this town acting so strange?” as all the villagers close their tavern doors. Naturally it’s because “bandits” in the form of Black Manta (The Man in Black) or The Fisherman (The Ugly) or Ocean Master (The Face from the Past) are holed up in town, ruling by fear, using the village as a front for something dastardly and greedy.

    Aquaman is Clint Eastwood. And Americans should, by all logic, love Clint Eastwood in every form.

    Of course, Aquaman is also 100% a bit of a Northern European Nazi ideal of the Aryan Race. It’s hard to forget the visual of the 40’s Aquaman – a blonde haired, blue eyed pretty boy bashing Nazis out of their U-Boats. To geneticists, Aquaman is the perfect specimen. 10x stronger and 10x faster than any basic human. His mind has advanced to the point where he has primal telepathy. He’d be something to worry about while you’re marveling – he’s like Khan from Star Trek (A eugenic (selectively bred) super-soldier.) … the only thing standing between him and dominating the world (ignoring Batman and Superman for a moment) is the sense of hard-work and decency he got from his father, Tom Curry … ex-Navy hardworking Irish-American from Maine.

    Atlantis, the place? Well, the fact is … the Atlanteans did very much prove that it’s them who aren’t worthy of Aquaman rather than the other way round. They couldn’t get over their prejudices toward an outsider. Right-wingers plotted revolutions. Left-wingers ran back to him every time something went wrong. Religious fanatics called his blond haired, purple-eye friend having half-surface self cursed. And he is cursed. Cursed and blessed by being from two worlds. Cursed and blessed with the power to control sea creatures that no other Atlanteans except his sea witch mother (and Pomoxis) have shown. Primal powers. Animal familiars. The Atlanteans are probably right to accuse him of being a sea witch. But he’s still going to save their asses.

    I agree. It needs a good Weta Workshops style design team to go at it. The only time I’ve ever wanted to actually visit the place has been Alex Ross’ designs of the golden twin cities in JUSTICE, and in the cartoons.

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  5. Jones: fantastic post! I thoroughly enjoyed reading your ideas! I've just said to my wife that I'm reading a fine comment that I can add nothing to because its watertight and excellent.

    My wife, being brighter than me, told me to tell you what I told her. And so I have.

    You said: "Aquaman nearly has to be a constitutional monarch." Yep, totally agree, & when he first got the job, it was because civil war was about to break out over the other candidates. Bob Haney threw that in in 1 panel, delivered by a smiling courtier as if civil war was an everyday happy-go-lucky affair. Dear Bob Haney.

    "In that way he’s like the Irish High King Brian Boru" - Great idea. The High King of the Seven Seas.

    "His wedding guests were super-heroes, not Atlantean bureaucrats." - There are so many points in your comment that I wish I'd thought of. I mention this one as an outstanding example of my sins of ommision.

    "Landlocked surface men may not take him seriously, but people on coasts do. And fishermen and sailors especially do." - I feel abit silly just praising your comments, but I did like this. And the previews of the JMS Brave And The Bold out this week mirror in part what you've deduced. It's a great idea.

    In fact, reading again through what you've written, I find that all I can add to your ideas is a series of forceful, supportive nods.

    If you're ever passing this way again, please do feel free to drop in. You're very welcome.

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  6. I respect everyone's opinion and agree there is room for different versions of a character. I still do not like Aquaman the King. I think it takes it out of the Superhero realm. Now if there was a comic called Orin King of Atlantis then I would have no problem. The stories might work for me a bit better. I happen to see Superheroes a certain way and for me I think it's difficult for one to be both King and a Superhero. I see Superheroes as people who go out and fight crimes and save people. Not trying to keep kingdoms in order and governing over people. Superheroes work on the outside often along with the law. They don't make the laws and are not the law. They are admirable because they rise out of the world they live in and do what they feel is right. We read about them and decide whether their actions are just. But once they become kings and mayors then they are held to a different standard and their actions become somewhat limited. I would rather see Aquaman in more of the Clint Eastwood role swimming from one underwater city to another than him as monarch of one underwater city where more than likely the stories will become stale and repetitive. And as we have seen that's pretty much what happened.

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