Monday, May 26, 2014

The Incredible Hulk is born from the ashes of World War II


The Incredible Hulk #1 (1962)
Stan Lee created the Incredible Hulk with the most obvious use of the message of war in his origin. First appearing in The Incredible Hulk #1 (1962), the Hulk begins his tale as Dr. Bruce Banner, scientist, on the day of a test detonation of the country’s newest weapon, the “Gamma” bomb. A meek atomic scientist named Dr. Bruce Banner has constructed a powerful new “gamma” bomb to be tested at the US Army base in New Mexico. The cigar chomping General “Thunderbolt” Ross barks at him to hurry up with the preparations. but Banner warns that they are tampering with “powerful forces.” With only moments till detonation, Banner see a reckless teenager that has wandered onto the desert test site. He runs out to the site himself and leads the youth to safety but before Banner can protect himself, the bomb explodes and bathes him in mysterious gamma radiation. Later that same night, Banner finds himself transformed into a hulk, a giant monster with only destruction left in his path. Banner’s fate is to forever be chained to this monster, just as society entered the era of possible nuclear armageddon
Banner's first transformation into the Hulk

In the beginning, Banner would undergo his startling transformation in the Hulk every night. In the excerpt below, the Hulk, with geiger counter clicking, even represented the famous Doomsday Clock of that era with it ever “clicking” toward midnight representing how close the planet may be veering towards disaster. His initial transformations were also accompanied by a clicking geiger counter, which also reinforces the idea of a ticking bomb about to be unleashed. Within a few issues though, Lee changed the transformation to be one activated by anger, a change making the unpredictable nature of the Hulk even that much more dangerous.

A modern Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde, the Hulk truly represents much more a casual dual personality. The Hulk encapsulates some of the worst fears of mankind. He erupts literally from the ashes of nuclear weapons and he exists only to destroy. With his anger and power, the Hulk embodies nuclear war totally out of control. This imagery is an idea easily on the minds of many readers of the era of the 1960’s.

Lee’s central use of the word “radiation” centrally in the Hulk’s origin has huge overtones during the age of nuclear war.  Thermal and ionizing radiation is a major byproduct of a nuclear detonation which in turn caused massive destruction and deaths in Hiroshima and Nagasaki even after the initial nuclear blast wave.  The key word of “radiation” identifies and labels the Hulk as a product of the atomic age. Stan Lee said he thought up the name gamma for the bomb because he had “heard it before and it sounded kinda scientific.” So he used it! In truth, gamma rays are part of the ionizing radiation in a nuclear burst, so it is relevant. Still though, the image of the bomb site recalls immediately upon the test detonation of the atomic bomb at the culmination of the Manhattan Project in World War II.

Even though the image of the atomic bomb ties heavily into the origin of the creature, Lee goes beyond that to add a cold war element of a Communist spy hiding at the Gamma Bomb test site, trying to steal America’s “scientific secrets.” This spy’s presence along with all the nuclear imagery verifies the Hulk as a product of both the atomic age and the Cold War.



The Gamma Bomb explodes and exposes Banner to the mysterious radiation 

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