FACT #13
Spider-Man’s name has
a hyphen because Stan Lee, who created the comic character with Steve Ditko,
apparently wanted to distinguish him from Superman.
In a Feb. 24, 2010,
comment on Twitter, Lee wrote: “Spidey’s official name has a hyphen—‘Spider-Man.’ Know why? When I first dreamed him up I didn’t want
anyone confusing him with Superman!”
However, Lee’s memory
may have been playing tricks. His superhero’s name appeared as two words,
“SPIDER MAN,” when it first showed up in 1962 on the cover of the final issue
of Amazing Fantasy (a magazine previously known as Amazing Adult Fantasy).
And clarity may not
have been the only reason for distinguishing Spider-Man from Superman. We’ve read
that Lee, a former president of Marvel Comics, may have wanted to avoid
infringing on the DC Comics trademarks for the unhyphenated Superman.
(“Stan Lee,” by the
way, is the pen name of Stanley Martin Lieber.)
Interestingly, the
word “spider-man” had been around (with and without a hyphen) before the Stan
Lee character showed up.
The first published
reference in the Oxford English Dictionary is from the Britannica Book of the
Year (1955): “Spiderman, an erector of building structures.”
The OED’s entry for
“spider-man” (Oxford uses a hyphen) defines the term as “one employed to work
on high structures; a steeple-jack.”
We’ll end with a 1958
citation from the Radio Times, a British magazine that features broadcast
program listings:
“These spider-men and
steel-erectors work at great heights, often where there are no means of
protection. They walk along girders at dizzy heights as though they were
strolling along Piccadilly.”
FACT #13
Reviewed by Admin
on
September 10, 2019
Rating: