Superman's Origins Possibly Born from Star Explosion
NEW YORK — One of the brightest stellar explosions of the 20th century may have inspired Superman's origin story, one scholar says.
Nova Herculis — the cataclysmic explosion in the constellation Hercules that captivated the public for several years during the mid-1930s — could have given rise to the superhero's now-famous birth on Krypton.
"I think that Nova Herculis may have played a role in turning Superman from a time travel story into an astronomical one," Brad Ricca, an English professor at Case Western Reserve University, said in a presentation Wednesday (July 10) during the Inspiration of Astronomical Phenomena Conference held here at the American Museum of Natural History. "Krypton is a planet, not a star — so it's not exploding — but the way it is presented echoes the popular articles about the nova." [See Photos of Superman Meeting an Astrophysicist]
Superman's arrival on Earth is commonly known as an escape from his exploding home planet of Krypton. But this was not Superman's original origin story. In the very first rendition of the comic strip in the early 1930s, writer Jerry Siegel and artist Joe Shuster had Superman come from the future on Earth, and arrive in the present through time travel.
In search of an explanation for this shift in storyline, Ricca, who teaches a course on superhero comics and recently published the Superman book "Super Boys: The Amazing Adventures of Jerry Siegel and Joe Shuster — the Creators of Superman"(St. Martin's Press, 2013), scoured through newspaper archives and records of Siegel and Shuster's career from the 1930s. He found a plausible answer in media coverage of Nova Herculis.
Ricca pointed out early language from the strip that paralleled newspaper accounts of the exploding star. Siegel described Krypton's destruction, for example, as an "internal cataclysm" that "explodes into fragments" and becomes "rocked by … explosion." While the specifics are not exactly the same, this language aligns closely with newspaper descriptions of the nova.
Ricca also pointed out that Siegel appears to have been an astronomy nerd, with records showing that the aspiring writer spearheaded a neighborhood astronomy club at the age of 14. This would suggest that Siegel likely had his eyes on the sky during the Herculis event. This final piece of evidence, Siegel told SPACE.com, helped solidify his conviction that the nova inspired Krypton.
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The widespread public captivation in Nova Herculis in the 1930s may have helped initially popularize Superman, Ricca believes.
"One of the reasons the character lasted so long is that they created it from what was going on around then," Ricca said during his talk. Aside from the Nova Herculis connection, other subtle details resonated with the culture at the time. "It was kind of a cultural Frankenstein. It was the Great Depression, there's a lot of crime, so of course there are characters beating up criminals. He's kind of well-dressed, and he looks like Tarzan a little bit."
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Residing in Portland, Maine Laura is a seasoned science and environmental journalist whose work has appeared in the New York Times, Smithsonian, Scientific American, Wired, Audubon, National Geographic, Science, and on Space.com and Live Science. Her work at Live Science focused on earth and environmental news. She has a graduate certificate in science communication from the University of California, Santa Cruz, and a Bachelor of Science degree in geology from Bates College in Lewiston, Maine. Laura has a good eye for finding fossils in unlikely places, will pull over to examine sedimentary layers in highway roadcuts, and has gone swimming in the Arctic Ocean.