Batman Popular Culture

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The Dark Knight rose first in March 1939, in the 27th Issue of Detective Comics, which later became the name of the famous DC Comics for more than 70 years, Batman has been guarding the night in Gotham. But nowadays, people rarely encounter the Dark Knight for the first time, through his original medium, the comic book. In those seventy years Batman, and quote a few of other superheroes, branched out into other media. Beginning with cartoons and a live-action series, the comic book hero became a house hold franchise name. An array of movies throughout the decades, a multitude of video games and even fashion. There are not many media left for it to conquer. But the series also developed quite a lot in its original media, as Batman collected …show more content…

But how come DC Comics and Batman became immensely popular and wide spread, far over the borders of the US, while other comic books did not receive the same amount of attention, even those issued by the same company? The explanation is popular culture as John Storey suggests in his fifth definition which he builds on the originally political concept of hegemony, first brought forward by Antonio Gramsci (p.10). He further suggests that „[p]opular culture […] is not the imposed culture of the mass culture theorists, nor is it an emerging from below, spontaneously oppositional culture of ‘the people’ – it is a terrain of exchange and negotiation …show more content…

Black hair, blue eyes, and most importantly light skin color is the most common portrayal for all four of the male Robins. While we have to take into account that slight differences between different artists and colorists appear, it is undeniable that the overall design is dictated by the publishing company. Many of the characters have a few decades on their shoulders, were age-uped to keep pace with their aging target audience and redesigned so that their outfits and hairstyles are more appropriate for the day and age the comic is

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