Would comic book superheroes (the non-magical ones, of course) be considered sci-fi? I'm more of a Marvel fan, so I first think of Iron Man as a prime example in the "yes" camp, but I wonder what would others like Superman, Green Lantern, et cetera where their powers are not clearly rooted in technology and understood scientifically.

Looking forward to your answers.

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migrated from scifi.stackexchange.com Jan 20 '11 at 3:48

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5 Answers

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I've always been a fan of superhero comics and I've always considered it a sub-genre of science fiction. Some characters are certainly more "hard" sci-fi than others, of course.

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It depends on the comic, and what part of the work is being asked about.

Some superheroes, like Batman or Spider-Man, have mundane or fairly flimsy technobabble-based orgins ("I will train and dress up as a Bat", Peter Parker is bitten by a radioactive Stan Lee) and others like Green Lantern or the Fantastic Four, are clearly science-fiction (cosmic police, a flight into space to gain their powers). Also, pretty much all superheroes have been in some sort of cosmic event storyline at some point (The Infinity Gem saga, Crisis on Infinite Earths).

At the same time, there['s really not a clear dividing line. If a question asks, say, about Galactus's origin, sure, that's on-topic. Asking about how nobody recognizes Clark Kent to be Superman with a squint would be clearly off-topic. Superman's origin is clearly SF, but his work at the Daily Planet kinda isn't.

In summary, I suggest we err on the side of being inclusive, and in general allow questions that ask about the science-fiction aspects of comic books.

(If the comic book proposal becomes a site, we can migrate questions there at that time.)

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Great answer, especially the point about not just the comic but about the question. – Tony Meyer Jan 20 '11 at 7:58
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+1 for "radioactive Stan Lee", lol – Ian Pugsley Jun 5 '11 at 19:13
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Doctor Manhattan from Watchmen would be a good candidate.

In contrast to other superheroes who lacked scientific exploration of their origins, Moore sought to delve into nuclear physics and quantum physics in constructing the character of Dr. Manhattan. The writer believed that a character living in a quantum universe would not perceive time with a linear perspective, which would influence the character's perception of human affairs.

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Certainly would. – Rodger Cooley Jan 14 '11 at 18:49
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I think it depends on the comic.

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There's a comic proposal in Area 51 right now. http://area51.stackexchange.com/proposals/3972/comic-books

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