The Original Marvel Universe was created in 1961 with the publication of the first issue of the comic book series The Fantastic Four, and it began a slow, agonized death almost exactly 30 years later.
Martin Goodman, the publisher of the company that would soon become known as the Marvel Comics Group, saw that his main competitor, National Periodical Publications (now known as DC Comics), was riding a wave of success on a new line of superhero titles. Extremely popular during World War II, superhero comics had fallen by the wayside during the 1950s, and Goodman’s company had found a niche putting out various science-fiction and monster themed comics. Hoping to cash in on the budding superhero revival, Goodman instructed his writer/editor, Stan Lee, to come up with something to compete with Justice League of America. Lee and his primary artistic collaborator, Jack Kirby, devised a family of squabbling heroes who had neither masks nor secret identities, which they named the Fantastic Four. The follow-up to this was The Incredible Hulk, which presented a bad-tempered, antisocial, monstrous brute as the protagonist.
Having grown bored with the hack writing of the formulaic monthly comics that Goodman preferred, Stan Lee was already considering a career change, and so he adopted a nothing-to-lose attitude toward these new projects. He decided to buck the conventions of the superhero comic, which had seen little variation since their inception some twenty years earlier. The heroes he created with Kirby and his other main artist, Steve Ditko, suffered from self-doubt, romantic anxieties, and financial woes. They had distinctive personalities. Over the next year, their roster grew to include Spider-Man, Thor, and Ant-Man. Then, with relatively little fanfare, Lee, Kirby, and Ditko did something really revolutionary.
At the end of 1962, the various Marvel characters began turning up in each other’s stories, to a degree previously unheard of. In the first issue of his own title, Spider-Man went to the headquarters of the Fantastic Four and made a halfhearted attempt to join their team. That same month, in their own title, the Fantastic Four flew out to the deserts of the American southwest and encountered the Hulk. Suddenly, it was clear that all three inhabited the same fictional world. A few months later, the F.F. teamed up with Ant-Man as well. Then, the following summer saw the publication of the first issues of The Avengers, in which just about everyone made an appearance.
Crossovers and team-ups of this type were very rare during the so-called “Golden Age of Comics,” though Goodman’s company, known then as Timely Comics, was an early pioneer of the “shared universe” concept. Beginning with Marvel Mystery Comics #7 (May 1940), the company’s breakout characters, the Human Torch and the Sub-Mariner, encountered each other semi-regularly. But for the most part, the early superheroes seemed to exist independently of each other, and even when they did happen to meet, little attention was paid to matters of continuity. However, Stan Lee seemed determined that all Marvel’s heroes should exist in the same internally consistent fictional world. Soon the heroes were routinely battling each other’s villains, and certain supporting characters wandered from title to title, weaving all the stories together into what was eventually called “the Marvel Universe.”
As the years went by and more and more characters were introduced, and more and more titles were published, the Marvel Universe grew ever more complex, but continuity violations were kept to a minimum, almost as a matter of pride—and when such violations were noticed, they were quickly explained away one way or another. Continuity became a guiding principle at Marvel, and it was that continuity that lifted superhero comics out of the “juvenile literature” trap and captured the interest of college kids (and older) in the late ’60s and on into the 1970s. People who were reading Tolkien and Asimov and the like discovered an even more complex, detailed, convoluted, and ever-evolving fictional universe in Marvel Comics. Additionally, readers could even write in to Stan Lee or Chris Claremont or whoever and actually exert some level of influence over the direction the stories would take. And the letters would often be answered in a public forum—decades before the internet made that seem like a fundamental human right. Thus, the older fans of Marvel felt invested in the comics they were buying and the lives of the characters, who at that time were growing up, getting older, getting married—evolving as people—albeit very slowly. That led the fans who now run the various Marvel chronology websites—such as the Marvel Chronology Project and the Appendix to the Handbook of the Marvel Universe—to buy every “Marvel Universe” comic that came out, no matter how lousy the story and/or art or how ridiculous the characters were—because they were obsessed with this overarching continuity.
Unfortunately, that continuity has now been smashed, rebuilt, and smashed again more times than Hulkbuster Base. Numerous relaunches, revisions, and “retcons” (retroactive continuity) have garbled the characters’ histories to such a degree that all internal cohesion has been lost. And so, the Original Marvel Universe—the one devised by Stan Lee and built up over thirty years by the writers and artists that followed—has been long since abandoned.
As Marvel Comics—variously known as Marvel Entertainment, Inc. or Marvel Characters, Inc.—has grown bigger and bigger as a company, they have adopted other guiding principles, and continuity has fallen out of favor. The end began in 1991, as, Stepford-like, the Original Marvel Universe was replaced by an overlapping second Marvel Universe—although nobody realized it at the time. In this world, the characters began to act bizarrely. The formerly demure Invisible Woman became a slutty exhibitionist. Wolverine devolved into a noseless caricature with gnarly bone claws. Spider-Man endured the much-maligned “Spider Clone Saga.” Iron Man suddenly became 19 years old again. The heroes of the preceding thirty years soon became all but unrecognizable.
That second version has also since been abandoned for the ever-changing “retcons” that have followed. Now there appear to be three or four simultaneous but mutually exclusive Marvel Universes, and keeping track of what happens in which is well-nigh impossible. It used to be that you could take an adventure the X-Men were having and figure out what the Fantastic Four were doing at the same time. Not anymore. Now you have multiple versions of the X-Men being published every month. In fact, there is no “Marvel Universe” anymore, just a bunch of characters being published in various titles with splashy yet interchangeable covers. Now Marvel just publishes whatever the hell they want with no regard to what has come before. Sometimes this can be liberating, but sometimes it just makes the audience say “who cares?”
Digging down through the piles of crappy comics that have been shoveled on top of it, though, we discover that the Original Marvel Universe still exists, perfectly preserved, and like the site of any archeological excavation, is waiting to be explored, to see what secrets it may yet contain.
Next Issue: Exploring the Original Marvel Universe!
Hi! Just discovered your blog - Wow - great stuff. I'm also working on a continuity-driven Marvel Universe blog, trying to make it "condensed", but jeez, it ain't easy! Now, I personally only followed Marvel till about the mid-80s and after that it gets foggy. But if I look at the racks now I have no idea what the hell is going on and what - if any of it - is "canon". I assume there MUST be some kind of consistency - but I have no idea how to tell. Now, reading your "1st blast" above, I'm wondering if it really is a disaster after 1991...do you still think that's so? Of course if I pick up any random modern issue, say a Deadpool comic - WTF? Was Deadpool really a Herald of Galactus for a day?
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cheers!
Thanks! I recognize that there are plenty of fans who enjoy the stories Marvel published after 1991, including their most current stuff, but I don't think any of it can compare to the "big story" of the Original Marvel Universe as I've defined it here. Nowadays, the writing may be less corny and hyperbolic, the art may be far more detailed and realistic, and the coloring technology is light years beyond where it was even in the 1980s, so the individual issues are certainly much slicker than in the OMU days. But I look past what's on the comic book page to the universe they're describing, and in that sense, nothing rivals what Marvel created between 1961 and 1991. As far as canon goes, I think Marvel pretty much considers everything they've published to be more or less canonical, so I think it's really up to each reader to construct their own personal canon. That's what I'm doing here, laying out my version of the Marvel Universe. I think the approach you're taking on your blog is just as valid, and as I've seen a lot of requests for a straightforward year-by-year list of major events in the MU, I'm glad to see somebody's finally doing it!
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