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    • Batman. Batman aka Bruce Wayne is a fictional superhero appearing in American comic books published by DC Comics. The character was created by artist Bob Kane and writer Bill Finger, and first appeared in Detective Comics #27.
    • Harry Potter. Harry James Potter is the title character of J. K. Rowling's Harry Potter series. The majority of the books' plot covers seven years in the life of the orphan Potter, who, on his eleventh birthday, learns he is a wizard.
    • Superman. Superman is a comic character. And probably the first powerful superhero in the fictional world. The character was created by writer Jerry Siegel and artist Joe Shuster, high school students living in Cleveland, Ohio, in 1933.
    • Spiderman. Spider-Man is a fictional superhero appearing in American comic books published by Marvel Comics existing in its shared universe. The character was created by writer-editor Stan Lee and writer-artist Steve Ditko, and first appeared in the anthology comic book Amazing Fantasy #15 (August 1962) in the Silver Age of Comic Books...
  1. Jun 15, 2024 · From the classic detective Sherlock Holmes to the modern, complex heroes of today, the evolution of fictional characters reflects the changing dynamics of society and the ever-shifting landscape of storytelling.

    • Thomas Cromwell, from Wolf Hall
    • The Babadook, from The Babadook
    • Mindy Lahiri, from The Mindy Project
    • Milkshake Duck, from The Tweet by @pixelatedboat
    • Sarah Koenig, from Serial
    • Thomas Jefferson, from Hamilton
    • The Rock, from The WWE
    • Angel Dumott Schunard, from Rent
    • Bridget Jones, from Bridget Jones’s Diary
    • Omar Little, from The Wire

    He knows your secrets. He’s 11 moves ahead of you on the chessboard. He “can draft a contract, train a falcon, draw a map, stop a street fight, furnish a house, and fix a jury.” Hilary Mantel’s duo of Tudor novels (soon to be a trilogy), the crowning literary achievement of the past quarter-century, reimagines Cromwell from the blunt villain of Rob...

    No recent villain has left us so shook As Jennifer Kent’s Mister Babadook. Horror’s brand new golden age is fact. But the monsters are all so very abstract. Take It Follows, or Paranormal Activity: In each, the spook’s only name is “The Entity.” In Get Out, no one dude’s most menace-y; Really the foe is white supremacy. But here one soul scares the...

    Greater representation of minority groups tends to happen in phases: First come the role models, then the flawed characters, and finally the antiheroes. Mindy Kaling skipped a couple of steps when she created Mindy Lahiri, her alter ego on The Mindy Project. The first sitcom led by an Indian American woman, the series could be miserably uneven, but...

    It typically takes an artist thousands of words, hours of screen time, or buckets of paint to craft a zeitgeist-defining character. On June 12, 2016, comedian Ben Ward, aka @pixelatedboat, did it in a single tweet: Milkshake Duck, Ward’s imagined character representing how swiftly the internet can make a star and then unmask them as reprehensible, ...

    Who among us does not secretly believe that we would make a great detective? Yes, the appeal of this breakthrough podcast came from its unfolding nature, the sensation that each new episode might yield the one bit of information that, scrutinized by the right intellect, could clear or condemn Adnan Syed of the 1999 murder of his high school girlfri...

    While Lin-Manuel Miranda’s Pulitzer Prize–winning, Billboard chart–topping musical may have helped restore its title character’s place on the $10 billand in many Americans’ hearts, it threatens to make an even more dramatic impact on the way we remember his nemesis in George Washington’s Cabinet, redefining Jefferson in the cultural imagination as ...

    Dwayne Johnson sometimes describes the Rock, the persona that catapulted him to wrestling superstardom and a future atop Forbes’ all-time highest-paid movie stars list, as a version of himself “with the volume turned way up.” That sells his own creation a bit short. Outside the ring, Johnson exudes warmth and charm. Inside it, he was a masterful tr...

    Among the strivers and artists of Jonathan Larson’s musical, Angel alights like a fairy godmother, introduced in a whirl of sequins and platform pumps as she doles out cash and comfort without a whiff of selfishness. Flouting conventions of gender and tidings of death, she is an embodiment of the furious and defiant celebration of life embraced by ...

    Breezy, female-focused, and wildly popular (a jaw-dropping 2 million copies reported sold worldwide), Helen Fielding’s novel inspired both a genre—the much-maligned “chick lit”—and an archetype: the single young professional woman who is both messy and ambitious, empowered and insecure. We have Bridget in part to thank for Rebecca Bunch and Fleabag...

    That Omar (Michael K. Williams) is The Wire’s greatest characterhas been established by countless listicles,by bracket, and even by executive order. The Robin Hood of Baltimore, he has his own theme song, hisowncatchphrases, and some of the best lines in television history (“You come at the king, you best not miss”). But Omar isn’t just the show’s ...

  2. Mar 8, 2018 · You can help your kids to embrace the best of these characters – and the actors portraying the heroes – by highlighting the lessons we can learn from them. Black Panther T'Challa, king of the technologically advanced Wakanda, rises to the throne and must make hard decisions on how to lead his country and what to do with its resources that ...

  3. Dec 19, 2019 · I’d have liked to read in more detail how Child sees the different types of hero, what commonalities the hero has across various stories, how the shape of ancient myth and oral tradition has been recast in modern genres.

  4. Jun 4, 2015 · These heroes of yours are always ridiculously good looking, they're built like a tank and they always have some distinctive outfit or cape which sets them apart from the rest of the group.

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  6. Dec 8, 2021 · These archetypes are: (1) the underdog hero, (2) the hero’s secret royal heritage, (3) the hero’s redemption, (4) the heroic transformation, and (5) the hero’s mentor. 1. The Underdog Hero.