I'm doing research now on the Logan and Jessica Jones analyses, and I've read a bit of the book detailing the connection with mythology. I'll use this thread just to talk about general ideas concerning superheroes as I work through all of this.
I don't know the origin stories of many superheroes, but the ones I do all began with trauma. Superman and Batman both lost their parents as children (Superman lost his entire planet). At first I thought Spiderman didn't really have much trauma—he got bit by a spider and got superpowers—but then I remembered he didn't have parents. He was raised by his elderly aunt and uncle. So, while as far as I know there was no big deal made about it, he was also an orphan. Then his uncle was killed by a crminal he (Peter) could have stopped but didn't.
I said toward the end of the Daredevil thread that I wasn't sure if there was much psychology in the movie Logan, but of course, his life was filled with trauma. The story of how he got his bones laced with adamantium is a tale of extended torture. His memories before that are unreliable—apparently each time he suffers trauma his mutant healing abilities heal his mind but at the cost of creating amnesia. We do see his actual early life though in the movie X Men Origins: Wolverine, and it's filled with trauma. It's pretty convoluted, I can't remember who was whose dad, but one of the men he lived with (alongside his half-brother Sabertooth) was quite the abuser, which caused his and Sabertooth's mutant powers to manifest at a young age. I believe he lost his parents right then and there.
According to the Superhero/Mythology book most superheroes are orphans, as are most mythological heroes. I'll be writing a lot in here from that book to help me remember it better. And so when I forget I'll have a quick place to look it up. In fact, I'll get the dirt on Logan's childhood and make that the next post.
The Superhero Mega-thread
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