(Note:
this is part of a larger piece I wrote in 2015. I’ve made a few tweaks this
week to tighten the arguments, reference something I wasn’t previously aware
of, and – obviously – reflect Lee’s death.)
I want to
take this opportunity to discuss Lee's politics, and how they came to influence
his writing. Some of what follows was gleaned from Lee's own Amazing Fantastic Incredible, but the
main influence here is Sean Howes' The
Untold Marvel Story, without which this essay wouldn't have been possible.
I highly recommend Howes' book (Lee’s is interesting too, though the
limitations of its usefulness in the pursuit of understanding who he truly was
are presumably obvious).
Let's
start at the beginning. Born the son of a Romanian immigrant and a native New
Yorker, Lee's family struggled badly with money whilst he was growing up. It
would be entirely too pat to suggest his parents' difficulty keeping him entertained
on their budget (Lee talked about a gift of a pedal bike being life-changing,
and said he has no idea how they found the money for it) is what led him to
start dreaming up superheroes and alternative dimensions. That said, there is
one aspect of his childhood worth lingering, and that's the story he told of
leaving his local cinema each time he watched an Errol Flynn film and riding on
his bike around the neighbourhood looking for women being harassed so that he
could intercede.
As Lee
admitted, it's fortunate for his own sake that he never actually came across a
woman being harassed. Which is to say, of course, any woman he understood as being harassed. That's an
important distinction to make, because this seemingly random slice of Lee’s
childhood manages to summarise precisely what made Lee so inconstant a
political actor. The central tension arises from two fundamental truths about
the man. First, he abhorred bullies. Secondly, he wasn’t all that good at actually
recognising bullies, or knowing what
to do about it when he did.
(I hadn’t realised when I wrote this back in 2015 that Lee himself had been accused of sexually harassing women in his employ, but that fact adds another level of not just ugliness to this story, but irony too.)
That’s
the diagnosis, then. What’s the pathology? Lee’s basic error, so far as I can
tell, was a conviction that the US government was, broadly speaking, a force
for good, or at least not so bad that its claim to be the country's ultimate
moral authority (divine beings aside) could seriously be doubted. Sure, there
were individual members of that government who could fail to live up to the
responsibilities and duties their positions placed on them (Lee wrote one or
two of them himself), but as an aggregate unit, Lee seemed willing to believe
the government is always doing the absolute best it can. As Lee had Iron Man
announce in 1966: ``No-one has the right to defy the wishes of his government!
Not even Iron Man!''.
Say what
you like about Lee – he walked the walk. Several of his fellows at the
then-called Timely Comics were drafted during WWII, but Lee went in
voluntarily. One can quibble over whether this decision was made out of a wish
to serve America as a political structure or as a national ideal, but there’s
little enough sense elsewhere in Lee’s life that he thought too much about that
distinction in any case. If there is meaningfully different alternative
explanation for Lee volunteering, it’s more likely to be his established hatred
of bullies. Perhaps Lee simply wanted to help out his colleagues and fellow
Jewish men who had been so ahead of the country’s mood in condemning (and
provided four-colour shit-kickings of) Adolf Hitler.
Perhaps
it doesn’t matter whether he signed up first and foremost to serve the United
States, or to oppose Hitler. Either way, Hitler was most certainly the kind of
man Lee liked to oppose. The label “bully” falls as short of adequately
describing Hitler as does the phrase “leery of diversity”, but that isn’t to
say it’s actually inaccurate. Describing fascism as bullying with a body-count
isn’t terribly sophisticated, but there is certainly truth there. It genuinely
isn’t difficult to imagine Lee enlisting because he wanted to play a role in
Hitler’s downfall. To sum up his decision, as does Captain America in the MCU,
by noting his dislike of bullies.
Which,
obviously, is the right instinct. It’s quite clear that Lee wanted an end to
overt bigotry. The problem is, it’s hard to find evidence that he ever thought
very hard about how to do it, and whether that could be enough. Lee was vocal
about how much he hated racists, for example, but had very little grasp of what
racism actually was. Sure, he wrote
several pieces for ''Stan's Soapbox'' about the transparent ridiculousness of
racism (including the one currently blanketing Twitter like a carpet of faintly self-righteous snow). But he also responded
to a letter criticising Marvel for a dearth of black characters and deriding
Black Panther as a token by arguing it wouldn't look realistic if there was a
sudden increase in the number of black people ``stampeding'' through their
comics. As though realism was something Marvel had to take pains to maintain – at
that point more of their heroes were reformed alien invaders than were people
of colour – hell; that might still be true. Regardless, a rapid uptick in black
representation would not somehow have broken any carefully maintained laws of
plausibility.
(Lee also wanted credit for the fact Man-Ape
was black, which is probably even more clueless a defence of Marvel's
commitment to diversity than bragging about creating a gay character named
``Pinky'' Pinkerton, which Lee also did. On the other hand, in the same
response nodding to the Man-Ape, Lee mentioned Sam Wilson, the Falcon, despite
the minor obstacle of Wilson not actually existing as a character at all. After
writing his response, Lee and Gene Colan immediately huddled and created him,
meaning that Lee both managed to give the original writer what he wanted,
another heroic black character - and ultimately a Marvel mainstay - AND take the
full credit. No-one ever looked at Stan Lee and asked whether he thought he
needed a bit more chutzpah.)
What a
sudden surge of African-American characters would
have done would hurt sales, and as Howe puts it, ``[Lee would] happily preach
tolerance, but he was not going to get caught taking an unpopular stance''.
Which at that precise time, when Lee was responsible for the entirety of
Marvel's comic output, was probably true. While Lee's approach and output
during the late '60s put more than one nose out of joint (including the guy
responsible for drawing Iron Man's nose, as it happens), his decision to take
the path of least resistance at that point can at least be contextualised by
the fact he was certainly aware that if Marvel collapsed, he would not be the
only one hurt, nor the one hurt most. Just a few short years earlier, when Lee
was busy helping to build the empire he would ultimately be responsible for, he
was far more willing to take risks. Problem was, those risks were often in
exactly the wrong direction.
Let’s
talk about Iron Man, a character whose origin story focusses around his narrow
escape from a clutch of sneering Asian Communists. Lee spent a lot of time
coming up with sneering Asian Communists. One could easily infer from this that
a) he hated Asians, b) he hated Communists, or c) both.
I don’t
actually think this is the problem, however. I don’t think Lee was anti-Asian,
or anti-Communist – at least in terms of coherently objecting to their politics.
I think it’s simpler than that. Lee hated bullies, and thought that’s what the
Communists were.
This lack
of political nuance not only explains why so much of Lee's output involved
Commie-smashing (seriously, Captain America: Commie Smasher was genuinely a
Lee-written book title for a while), but how an apparent liberal - even a
``casual'' one, as Howe puts it - could decide the best way to run counter to
the prevailing mood and generate an unexpected hit would be to create a
superhero (Iron Man) whose alter ego specialised in creating weapons to fight
the Communist overseas. We’ll come back to the Communists in good time, but for
now, let’s marvel (hah!) at the sheer ludicrousness of imagining Iron Man could
possibly represent some kind of deliberate inversion of the status quo. Somehow,
amid the spiralling international tensions that would lead to the Vietnam War
breaking out just a year later, Lee managed to come to the pig-headed conclusion
that a hero designed to be “counter-cultural” would take the form of a man who
made his fortune through getting commission on international murder sprees (or
pretended this was the reason and figured people would buy it, which amounts to
a similar failure to understand the contemporary political climate).
It is of
course, beyond obvious that Tony Stark is not a hero from within the counter-culture,
but one that stands opposed to it; a purely reactionary
figure. Seeing the anti-war movement as the prevailing attitude of the time is,
likewise, a fairly unambiguously reactionary position. But it isn’t the
reactionary element of Lee’s take here that jumps out, so much as the
incoherence. Lee was undoubtedly genuinely searching for another hit – genuinely thought it
was smart to (claim to) swim about the current as a way of being daring and different. The
fact he so completely to understand what that current actually was isn’t evidence of terrible politics,
it’s evidence of a terrible grasp of
politics. A fundamental inability to actually understand the complexities of
the prevailing mood. Lee didn’t hate the zeitgeist. He just couldn’t recognise
it unless it put a sheet over its head.
We see
further evidence in his inconsistent attitude to protest movements, and in
particular student protest movements. Lee wasn’t against student activism in
and of itself. At one point he even replied to criticism of Marvel's poor
treatment of hippies (which Lee was a part of, though how much his caricatures
of the Beat generation were meant to be affectionate is an open question) by
arguing he was actually very much in favour of activism on campuses. At least
that way, he argued, they were engaging, making less likely that students would drop out.
Alas, his
approval of passionate student engagement with the politics of the day only
lasted as long as protesters acted in a way he approved of. Make your point,
sure. Just don't yell, because yelling upsets people. It upsets the peace, and
that might get you into trouble for which you can only blame yourself. It's
this kind of cognitive dissonance - I agree you need something desperately and
immediately, but please ask those nice government types politely for it - that
meant Lee could simultaneously support the Civil Rights movement and write a
comic about a hated minority that has an FBI agent secretly helping that minority, as oppose to
plotting to assassinate Xavier if he ever became too effective. Lee might argue
that there was no way in '63 he could have known how deep the FBI were into the
government's attempt to stifle the move toward civil rights, but that hardly
helps - he didn't know because he wasn't listening, and when he heard something
by accident he demanded people quieten down.
An almost
perfect synecdoche of Lee's approach can be found in his dialogue for Amazing Spiderman #68. Here Spidey
encounters a group of students protesting their university's declsions ion how to use its land.
At first Peter is sympathetic to their cause, but like Lee it doesn't take long
at all for him to decide that whilst they might have a valid case, they're
going about it in entirely the wrong way. ``Anyone can paint a sign, mister!
That doesn't make you right!'', our hero yells at one point. The issue ends
with the protesters framed for vandalism and arrested, with Spidey swinging
away, amused that their entirely unfair and potentially calamitous brush with
the law might give them time to calm down. This was in 1968, the year of the
Columbia University protests.
Once
again, we see evidence of Lee's beliefs regarding the basic decency and natural
authority of, well, authority. He will grant you the right to talk back to those in power, so long as you do it quietly, and accept it immediately if they rule against you.
The problem here will be familiar to many of you. Setting yourself up in opposition to those compelled to shout, just so they can be heard, is obviously going to mean taking stances against protesters and minorities - these being the people who have to yell themselves hoarse simply to be heard. Of course the quietest voices are those of the status quo. There's no need to shout your message when it can be heard everywhere at all times. When your position has become the heartbeat of your very country, there is no need to reach for the snare-drum and mark time for the march.
Demanding those without access to a microphone keep their demands sotto voce is no more than a plea to not have to hear them at all. It's a way for the poerfupp to salve their consciences, by ensuring every problem is either one they don't know about, or one they can feel justified in ignoring because of how "badly" those who notified them of the issue are behaving.
The reports of Lee getting frustrated over demands by Kirby and Ditko to receive their fair share of Marvel revenue is perhaps germane here - Lee knew he wasn't prepared to do what was necessary to secure them equitable deals (and in Lee's defence, it might have taken threatening to quit, with the risk that Martin Goodman would have called his bluff) so he became audibly frustrated with the fact they wouldn't quietly swallow their displeasure.
The problem here will be familiar to many of you. Setting yourself up in opposition to those compelled to shout, just so they can be heard, is obviously going to mean taking stances against protesters and minorities - these being the people who have to yell themselves hoarse simply to be heard. Of course the quietest voices are those of the status quo. There's no need to shout your message when it can be heard everywhere at all times. When your position has become the heartbeat of your very country, there is no need to reach for the snare-drum and mark time for the march.
Demanding those without access to a microphone keep their demands sotto voce is no more than a plea to not have to hear them at all. It's a way for the poerfupp to salve their consciences, by ensuring every problem is either one they don't know about, or one they can feel justified in ignoring because of how "badly" those who notified them of the issue are behaving.
The reports of Lee getting frustrated over demands by Kirby and Ditko to receive their fair share of Marvel revenue is perhaps germane here - Lee knew he wasn't prepared to do what was necessary to secure them equitable deals (and in Lee's defence, it might have taken threatening to quit, with the risk that Martin Goodman would have called his bluff) so he became audibly frustrated with the fact they wouldn't quietly swallow their displeasure.
The
common thread throughout all this is Lee’s desire for people to get along. If
people couldn’t agree, they should just agree to disagree, and then forget the
whole damn thing. The most generous interpretation of this impulse is that Lee
genuinely believed the system was generally sound, and just needed people to
behave a little better. The less generous view is that he just wanted everyone
to quietly allow him to enjoy his wealth. Whichever it was (or what ratio existed between the two), Lee was fairly undiscerning in his curmudgeonly shushing.
Lee didn’t want racists to be overtly racist, but he didn’t want students to be
loudly political. He didn’t want fascism taking over Europe, but he didn’t want
the Communists causing a fuss either.
I said we’d come back to the Communists. There’s absolutely no doubt that Lee liked to put the boot in where the Reds were concerned. And why wouldn’t he? The last time the US Armed Forces he onced signed up to had headed for war, it was to stop the nightmarish actions of Hitler's Nazi Party. Why should first Korea, and then Vietnam be any different? When you look at how the US government was portraying foreign Communists at the time, why wouldn't Lee see them - as Captain America himself puts it - the ``Nazis of the 1950s'' and beyond?
It’s
instructive to consider what Lee’s experiences in the Army actually were. Lee
spent his time there writing narrations to training films and designing posters
warning GIs about the dangers of VD. Important to the war effort, no doubt, but
by spending the war Stateside, Lee never got the chance to experience the
realities of war or, more importantly for our purposes, the difference between
the propaganda's presentation of the enemy and the enemy themselves. He never
learned to doubt the official line, up to and including some pretty racist
assumptions about Asian communists that led to some fairly disgraceful representations of them at Marvel. In fairness, Lee later admitted his mistake
on this, but racist thinking was essential to his conceptionof the
Communists, who were forever the sneaky foreigners being deservedly punched by
square-jawed representations of American imperialism.
And yet
there’s X-Men #14-16, the introduction
of the Sentinel robots. Those three issues are simply packed with veiled
references to people like Joe McCarthy, and groups like HUAC. Lee might have
disliked the Communist abroad, but in his own country it was the witch-hunt for
domestic Communists that seemingly
put his back up.
One might
cynically suggest here that Lee was, hardly uniquely, nervous about the
McCarthy juggernaut treating middle-class white men (many of them writers, no less!) as
though they were somehow equivalent to those sneaky foreigners. Honestly,
though, I think Occam’s razor suggests Lee was just doing what he always did,
and suggesting the best thing for everyone is if people could just calm down a
bit. Lee’s criticisms of McCarthy were vastly more elliptical than those of the
Communists of Indo-China, but they arose from the same impulse – what Ultron
called, in easily the best moment of his eponymous MCU turn, “mistaking peace
for quiet”.
Quiet was
always the goal. Lee himself stated proudly that he tried to ensure the
politics of his story-lines were vague enough to keep both left and right happy
(though one imagines what he saw as ``the left'' was warped by his self-imposed
deafness to certain positions, and clearly Lee had no problem grotesquely
offending the foreign market). To return to Tony Stark, though, the limits of this approach are readily apparent. Refusing to either explicitly condemn or support the status quo is not to remain neutral, but to implicitly support the status quo. When a co-founder of the Libertarian Party can compliment Marvel for ``the fact that the heroes
run to being such capitalists as arms manufacturers... while the villains are
often Communists (and plainly labelled as such, in less than complimentary
terms)'', you're no longer letting sections of the right see the patterns they
approve of in the inkblots. You're using your fountain pen to write what they want you to write.
In fact,
whilst we're dragging him over the coals for throwing red meat to the
Libertarians, we should note that, were Lee truly as keen as he claimed to keep Marvel clear of
the rocks and shoals of political commentary, it was an idiotic move to let
Steve Ditko take control of Amazing
Spider-Man to the point he was directing Lee (in the page margins;
the two were no longer speaking) to have Spidey spout terms straight out of Ayn
Rand's horrific philosophy. Ditko bit hard and deep into Objectivism, a
political stance so objectionable it broke up at least one further
collaboration - calling those who require assistance to survive ``parasites''
tends to have that effect. If Lee had any qualms about a superhero nominally
dedicated to helping the less fortunate spit venom at those who failed to meet
Rand's ugly (and profoundly hypocritical) standards of acceptability, however,
I've seen no evidence of it. Again, this is not letting those who espouse
harmful political philosophies think
they see echoes of their position in the text. This is letting the text sound
out those positions.
(This is
an essay about Lee, not Ditko, but I couldn’t let this moment pass without
pointing out the profound irony of Ditko insisting his co-creation of Spiderman
justified him using the character as a Randian mouthpiece, given that Parker’s
refusal to stop a criminal because there wasn’t anything in it for him proves
to be the foundational mistake atop which his entire character is built. Spidey
is an asshole about stopping a criminal, and a half hour later his beloved uncle
is dead. No, libertarianism, fuck you.)
I realise
much of the above comes across as quite critical of Lee, but the truth is the
worst that can be said of his political philosophy is that he wanted to do
good, to be a force for tolerance in the world, but simply wasn't sufficiently
interested in politics to manage this consistently, or without actually working
against it on multiple occasions. His chaotic, contradictory political stance
is exactly the sort one expects from someone who doesn't really believe they
have a political stance, or at least one who insists a person's writing can be
apolitical.
There's certainly some evidence that politics just isn't something Lee finds important, at least in comparison to whether or not he likes political figures personally. In Amazing Fantastic Incredible he spends as much time fondly reminiscing about meeting George W Bush as he does the Clintons, which both get approximately the same amount of space as Lee running into George Clooney (Lee's trip to the Carter Whitehouse gets more space, but only because the US Secret Service tried to shoot Green Goblin in the face for scaring Amy). That Clinton was far closer to the kind of politics Lee tended to subconsciously gravitate towards, and Bush very much wasn’t, doesn’t seem to have mattered in the slightest.
There's certainly some evidence that politics just isn't something Lee finds important, at least in comparison to whether or not he likes political figures personally. In Amazing Fantastic Incredible he spends as much time fondly reminiscing about meeting George W Bush as he does the Clintons, which both get approximately the same amount of space as Lee running into George Clooney (Lee's trip to the Carter Whitehouse gets more space, but only because the US Secret Service tried to shoot Green Goblin in the face for scaring Amy). That Clinton was far closer to the kind of politics Lee tended to subconsciously gravitate towards, and Bush very much wasn’t, doesn’t seem to have mattered in the slightest.
Lee isn't
the only person who didn't take the chance to spit
in Dubyah's face when given the opportunity, of course. Perhaps he decided the
boost in visibility for his own brand of philanthropy was worth the implicit
endorsement of a war criminal. More likely, Lee never conceived of that
trade-off in the first place. Which makes things tricky. It's hard to choose
the right path out of a dilemma when you don't recognise that dilemma to begin
with.
I've
spent plenty of time above talking about how Lee's frequent failure to take or
even see the road less travelled led to some very problematic pronouncements
and publications. But perhaps it has been no less often that Lee has somehow
stumbled blindly onto precisely the correct path. The X-Men may only have been
intended to criticise the most obvious forms of racism, but over the years the
franchise has offered up no shortage of more cutting and more vital criticism,
of a kind of genuine value to those looking to understand and combat systemic
inequality (especially as the franchise is finally being wrested away from the stranglehold of cis-het white men). Lee might have created the Sentinels to claw at a potential
personal threat, but the story he generated can be picked up and used by any
number of people seeking to kick out against the spread of anti-left hysteria.
And whilst Sam Wilson only existed at all so Lee could strengthen his case
during a textbook example of whitesplaining, the Marvel Universe - first on
paper and then on celluloid - has become a more inclusive and interesting place
for his creation.
Stan Lee. He could have done so much more. Doesn't mean he didn't do plenty.