The first important similarity between the two is their view of man as an intermediary being. Kierkegaard sees man at an "intermediate stage" between what he once was and what he will become. He believes that to exist does not mean to be in an end state, but always striving for something more. Humans strive toward becoming subjective. For Kierkegaard, life is a transformation from essential to existential. Nietzsche sees man similar to this, He calls man a “bridge" rather than an “end". The important part of a man is his potential. Man is striving, but for something different. Nietzsche says that for man Ubermensch, the ideal man or Superman, is the goal. It’s a representation of man at a constant battle to overcome itself. The Superman must…
Personal anecdotes and repetition are featured very predominantly in Sherman Alexie’s ‘The Joy of Reading and Writing: Superman and Me’ to stress the challenges that Alexie had to overcome to not be a stereotype. Alexie immediately begins his essay with a story about Superman comics, while some readers may find it to be an unfitting addition to his essay, but it actually serves to address the limited resources for early education that he had. It is crucial to address that point so readers could comprehend the diligence and obstacles he had, as a Native American, to overcome his difficulties to become a great writer. In addition, Alexie further addresses these difficulties when he refers to his childhood economic condition as “poor” and “[living]…
Bruce lost both of his parents on the same night while he was barely ten years old; Peter lost Uncle Ben as a teenager and leaves him with only his Aunt as the remaining parental figure. An interesting contrast in this similarity is that Spider-Man’s story doesn’t romanticize the death of his parents in the ways that Bruce's does. The death of Batman’s parents is a tragedy, and it has to be horrible in order to be the catalyst for what sends him down the path to spending his entire life fighting crime, but it’s also something that frees him. It’s what gives him his fortune, and gets him out of school so that he can travel the world learning to be awesome. Spider-Man's history doesn’t read like a super-hero origin, or at least, not one that you would’ve expected in 1962. There’s no triumph, no Batman posing on the rooftop; not even a vow to use his powers to benefit mankind. Instead, the last panel of Spider-Man’s first appearance is a teenager walking alone down a dark street, crying because his uncle died and it’s all his…
In his essay “The Joy of Reading and Writing: Superman and Me” Sherman Alexie claimed that it was reading and knowledge which saved his life. Because, besides reading and books, his family and background was the same as other Indians who lived in the reservation: poor and underprivileged. Alexie then recalled how his father read as many books as possible, which made himself a role model to the author. Under his father’s influence, Alexie picked up books before he could read. Although he couldn’t understand the meanings, he had the concept of paragraph and related it to reality that paragraphs were fences that separated different groups of people. Just like Indians were separated from the main society belonged to white people. The first time Alexie learned to read was by assuming what might Superman said in a comic picture. He learned to read in this way and became very talented while others kids couldn’t read as he did. However, when he grew up into a man, he often spoke his story in the third person in order to dull the pain for his miserable childhood while Indians were expected to be stupid and fail in non-Indian world. Nevertheless, Alexie was smart, arrogant and lucky. His family has many books and he read as much as he could so that he could save his life. Now, as a successful writer, Alexie visited schools in reservations as often as possible. By reading, Alexie had his own voice and saved his life. Now he tried hard to save other Indian children’s life.…
The article Superman and Me by Sherman Alexie tell us the meaning of the reading. Explain how an Indian child developed his reading skills at young age. The article says "My father loved books, and since I loved my father with an aching devotion, I decided to love books as well" (1). We can infer that he wanted to be as his father. They were fan of reading.…
1. Lois lane was introduced as a more adventurous woman compared to the stay at home wives.…
Have you ever compared yourself to someone or something that you thought was more inferior than you? In the story “Superman and Me” by Sherman Alexie, he creates an extended metaphor to show the reader the connection between Superman and himself. There are many ways in which Superman and Alexie are compared. Three ways that they are alike are they save lives of others, break down doors, and they are both smart and arrogant.…
When Bruce was a child he watched his parents get murdered. Thomas and Martha Wayne were walking home from the one night with Bruce, when a mugger held them up at gunpoint.…
He was born to Jor-El, his Kryptonian father, and Lara his Kryptonian mother. One journal points out that “El” is the Hebrew word for “God, Lord” which implies the divinity of Jor-El and Kal-El but not Lara. This possibly relates to Jesus’ family with God being his heavenly father and Jesus being the divine son but the mother he was born to, being Mary, was, in fact, not divine. It is also interesting how Jor-El also promises to watch over Kal-El just as God the father watches over Jesus, and Jor-El also appears in Man of Steel late in the movie as a holograph to guide him through the decisions of life just as the Holy Spirit led Jesus through his life, showing the Trinitarian themes hidden within the story (Kozlovic Holy). In Man of Steel Kal-El is sent to earth as a baby and right before he leaves his father even says “He will be like a god to them” (Man of Steel), which parallels Christ being sent from heaven to earth by his father. Superman’s home is not earth, his home is above in Krypton, paralleling Jesus’ being from heaven, a place above the…
Sherman Alexie’s, “Superman and Me” helped me remember how I developed my passion for reading as a child. From the moment I was able to read, I cherished this form of media. While other children my age viewed reading as a chore or a burden, I read for the endless possibilities it provided my imagination. Reading gives an individual the opportunity to learn new information, while creating new thoughts. My parents worked multiple jobs to provide my sisters and me with what they considered necessary for us. Given out circumstances, we found other means of entertainment. When we did not have luxuries such as cable, my sisters and I would have to find other ways to keep ourselves entertained. When we weren’t riding our bikes around the block, we would collect old books from our friends and…
Intolerance on the basis of color, gender, religion, sexual orientation, social status, wealth, and other factors has caused the undue suffering of millions around the world. Even as early as the colonial era, Native Americans have been a prominent target of discrimination; the treatment of the American Indians portrays how modernization can open the door to oppression. Sherman Alexie, a Spokane author, illustrates how past prejudice continues to obstruct his fellow people from attaining success. The underlying theme in Alexie’s writing is his cognizant awareness that intolerance left unchecked makes oppression inevitable. In "The Joy of Reading and Writing: Superman and Me,” he tells the story of how he developed his love of reading, and how he uses his gifts to challenge the boundaries that society has set for…
Superman is a beloved hero. He is loved by many. He got his start in DC comics. He is commonly associated with Louis Lane. He was brought to life by highschool students in Cleveland, Ohio in 1933. The students later sold him to DC comics in 1938. Superman is so loved because he gives people hope and provides safety. Superman is an alien from the planet krypton therefore he has superhuman abilities. His powers include but are not limited to Superhuman strength. Limitless speed, Superhuman vision (including X-ray, microscopic, telescopic, and infrared), Superhuman hearing, Nigh-Invulnerability, Heat vision, Flight, Super breath and freeze breath. Superman's weakness is kryptonite.Superman is most vulnerable to green Kryptonite, mineral debris…
Batman was, and still is a huge icon in the comic world. There are 8 movies on him, including multiple T.V. shows. For Halloween, his costume is one of the top outfits “trick-or-treators” wear every year. Batman’s real identity is Bruce Wayne, an eccentric billionaire that lives in the city of Gotham. He wasn’t always rich though. When he was a child both of his parents were shot and killed in an alleyway but a druggie. In his near future he ended up leaving the country and were stealing and robbing in different countries. He ended up going to jail but then escaped. He wandered upon a martial arts training dojo in Asia in the middle of nowhere led by the infamous Ra's Al Ghul. He trains Bruce and makes him embrace the Bat as the animal that represents him. When he gets back to Gotham he decides to get his act together and end up creating Wayne enterprises. He gets millions and then billions of dollars and creates the dark knight: Batman. He fights many villain’s including his own master. Some of the bigger villains that most people know include the Joker, Bane, Talia Al Ghul, the Penguin, Mr. Freeze, Saz, Scarecrow, the Riddler,…
Wayne has formed various relationships in his life that have exposed his "hobbies". Most of these relationships developed based off of poor judgement and endangered the lives of those involved with him. Batman throughout his years of crime stopping has given himself the opportunity to find apprentices in order to keep his legacy going. issue with these apprentices is that they are all children and normally one would avoid putting children into the line of fire but not Batman. According to Robin D Rosenberg (Ph.D), Batman believes in investing in kids and developing them into perfect inheritors of the future but his methods on unorthodox.…
As mentioned earlier, Batman and Superman eventually start to fight, as Batman calls him a sellout for letting the government abuse of his powers. In the scene batman utters, “And it has to end here on this filthy patch street, where my parents died” (190, 4). Batman is referring to crime alley where he eventually dies of a heart attack, the same place where his origin or initially “birth” began. It was the heart drive and tenacity that made him who he is Batman. However, in this cased his own will and heart has failed to make him achieve another victory. Ironically, on his return to crime alley, he received a loss where he is portrayed as the “criminal” and has been defeated by the national heroic figure of Superman that that the government prefers. All births eventually come to an end, making batman’s physical mortality genuine and the termination of his heroic cycle.…