• @Silverstrings
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    1110 months ago

    Superman’s primary villain is literally a white collar criminal that uses the system in order to stymie efforts to hold him accountable. A lot of superhero media could stand to be more critical of the police and prison system but it’s a little more complicated to dismantle capitalism than it is to foil violent crime and respond to accidents and disasters.

    • @uriel238
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      110 months ago

      Yes, and the society that Superman lives in is one that is inherently good and functional, and just needs to be groomed once in a while (or defended from exterior elements).

      Granted, they tried to get Superman to force nuclear disarmament, and that didn’t go so well.

      Superman is actually the zenith example of defenders of the status quo. Superman’s job is to return things back to normal which IRL we can no longer pretend is acceptable.

      • @Silverstrings
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        310 months ago

        I don’t think every piece of media has to promote revolutionary politics in order to justify its existence.

        • @uriel238
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          110 months ago

          Well, this was a point that was even made in Superman 1978, in which culture was recognizing the modern age as becoming too corrupt and complicated for a simple superhero. It’s still possible to enjoy it, but the Superman narrative, in failing to keep up with the times loses its relevance. That’s okay. People still like swashbucklers too.