{"id":1693,"date":"2015-10-05T21:11:13","date_gmt":"2015-10-06T01:11:13","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/www.profligategrace.com\/?p=1693"},"modified":"2015-10-05T21:12:40","modified_gmt":"2015-10-06T01:12:40","slug":"i-dont-need-another-hero","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.profligategrace.com\/?p=1693","title":{"rendered":"I don&#8217;t need another hero"},"content":{"rendered":"<p><span style=\"font-weight: 400;\">One upside to writing about masculinity is that going to the movies counts as research. \u00a0I have taught enough men ages 18-35 to know that I need to see every superhero movie. \u00a0Even if they do not themselves like superhero movies, blockbusters end up being an assumed topic of conversation with their friends and coworkers. \u00a0One very gracious student who loves superhero movies stayed in conversation with me as I watched hours and hours of backlogged movies. \u00a0After sorting through the nuances of each era\u2019s Superman, the various Batmans, the Spiderman from <\/span><i><span style=\"font-weight: 400;\">Electric Company<\/span><\/i><span style=\"font-weight: 400;\"> to the Spiderman crawling up buildings today \u2013 I realized I was not going to find a superhero franchise that I like. \u00a0I was on a fool\u2019s errand, because I disagree with the whole shtick. \u00a0<\/span><!--more--><\/p>\n<p><span style=\"font-weight: 400;\">My mother loves superhero movies, and she has told me she would prefer I keep my holiday film criticism to myself, thank you very much. \u00a0At the risk of ticking off more loved ones, here is why I do not like superhero movies. \u00a0They assume that we, the people, need a hero. \u00a0As one current student pointed out, even the Avengers franchise, which features a team of heroes working together, creates a post-9\/11 feedback loop. Each film features teeming groups of humans, running around like scattered ants, on the verge of mass destruction, needing a team of super-humans to save us from the forces of chaos. \u00a0He astutely observed that our repetitive viewing of impending chaos keeps people trapped in a trauma response to 9\/11. \u00a0He suggested that we end up stuck feeling afraid, and saved, and afraid, and saved \u2013 usually by a man who can do something we are fundamentally unable to do. \u00a0Merely mortals, without Batman\u2019s fortune or Superman\u2019s genes, viewers watch ourselves saved from apocalypses. \u00a0I suppose there are some viewers who leave the movie theater inspired to put on a superhero suit and save someone, but that is also a fool\u2019s errand. \u00a0Trying to be someone else\u2019s savior is a very bad idea, however cute the suit and however pretty the damsel. \u00a0<\/span><\/p>\n<p><span style=\"font-weight: 400;\">In case someone thinks that Ironman is the exception (I hear this frequently) please consider how the ironic twist of those movies depends still on a man-saving-the-world template. \u00a0Though the perky woman next to him puts on a similar superhero costume, the overarching assumptions of the superhero story remain intact. \u00a0We, the people, cannot manage ourselves. \u00a0We, the people, are under threat from this or that form of villainy. \u00a0We, the people, need a hero. \u00a0This is a profoundly undemocratic way of seeing the world. \u00a0I am baffled that film makers get away with this unpatriotic stuff. \u00a0But they do get away with it, and the superhero stench wafts over into other genres. \u00a0From Lincoln to Martin Luther King, Jr., historical dramas have recently offered filmgoers a grand story of a great man who was able to make history. \u00a0In his review of Spielberg\u2019s reconstituted Lincoln, David Bromwich sums up beautifully what is wrong: \u201cAny leader who adopts the posture of <\/span><i><span style=\"font-weight: 400;\">seeing himself on the stage of history<\/span><\/i><span style=\"font-weight: 400;\"> is a glory to himself and a menace to all whom he must lead.\u201d \u00a0Even Atticus Finch was not, it turns out, Atticus Finch. \u00a0Whatever you make of the controversy around or the quality of Harper Lee\u2019s <\/span><i><span style=\"font-weight: 400;\">Go Set a Watchman<\/span><\/i><span style=\"font-weight: 400;\">, the take-away message is that Gregory Peck\u2019s 1962 depiction of the character is satisfyingly lacking in subtlety. \u00a0Life together is not a superhero movie. \u00a0<\/span><\/p>\n<p><span style=\"font-weight: 400;\">Democracy depends on cacophony \u2013 on the discord of disparate voices. \u00a0Hero narratives assume cacophony is a problem to be overcome, whether by a man in a cape or by a great speech given by a great man on a big stage. \u00a0Craving a leader who stands above me is an impulse I must resist, if I am going to be a citizen in a democracy or even if I am just going to be a constructively critical human being. \u00a0Or, if I am going to remain Christian. \u00a0Churches sometimes crave a hero as much as Fox audiences (evidently) crave a big Reagan airplane. \u00a0When we do, we should read and read again the beginning of Acts, when the church receives a very different kind of power. People who were not supposed to speak to one another, or speak up at all, talked all at once. \u00a0Writing during a time of famine, the Hebrew prophet Joel had seen a vision of a miracle whereby women and even servants would speak up. \u00a0The beginning of Christianity depends on that vision. \u00a0That is reason enough for me to resist the temptation to find a hero.<\/span><\/p>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"<p>One upside to writing about masculinity is that going to the movies counts as research. \u00a0I have taught enough men ages 18-35 to know that I need to see every superhero movie. \u00a0Even if they do not themselves like superhero movies, blockbusters end up being an assumed topic of conversation with their friends and coworkers. 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