
We actually saw that scenario play out in 1988, when the Joker, abetted by a telephone vote by readers, murdered the second Jason Todd. However, it was forecast in Frank Miller’s “out of continuity” 1986 miniseries The Dark Knight Returns, in which the death of Jason is one event that led an aging Bruce Wayne to give up being Batman.
That series and Jason’s death are often taken as signal events opening the “Dark Age” of American superhero comics, when almost all stories became more gritty and less idealistic.


- Because Robin and Batman are partners, not solo heroes, the Batman magazines can last past Robin’s death, but that loss will affect the Caped Crusader forever.
- As the older, bigger, and stronger partner, Batman feels the responsibility to look after Robin.
- The Boy Wonder being unable to grow up seems more dire and unfair than for a mature adult to die. A dead Robin is a symbol of lost potential.

The apparent murder of Stephanie Brown in late 2004 didn’t tear at the Batman mythos nearly as much. There were several reasons: she hadn’t been Robin for that long, she was no longer serving in the role, she didn’t have the same familial relationship with Bruce Wayne, the editors had planned her death for a while—and she was a girl. It’s probably impossible to separate that last factor from the others.

Such is the symbolism of Robin, however, that a vocal contingent of fans mourned Stephanie as a symbol of lost potential—not just the potential inherent in any Robin character, but also the wasted potential of female leads in comic books.
Just after Stephanie’s departure from the scene, Jason Todd came back from the dead—apparently there can be only one dead Robin at a time. But he continues to represent Batman’s greatest failure: impetuous, murderous, and resentful. As a former Robin, Jason now represents the corruption of the character’s potential.

For the first time in twenty years, therefore, we have no dead Robins. But as always, the danger remains.
It's funny to note that even in the context of "deaths" the Robins are characterized differently. Dick dies in one shot there after having "sacrificing himself...on an alien world." Jason died when he disobeyed Batman's orders, Stephanie when she tried to impress Batman. When DC came close to killing Dick in Infinite Crisis, it was again because he was saving Batman's life. But of course, the fans and certain writers would not accept his death. Guess you can't keep a Robin, good or bad, down.
ReplyDeleteYes, the deaths and near-deaths of Robins reflect the individual teens' personalities. But they also carry an implicit message: disobey or defy Batman, and you're dead, or at least more likely to be dead for a while.
ReplyDeleteExcept Jason hadn't disobeyed Batman's orders. He simply went to talk to his long lost birth mother, and revealed he was Robin to her. The two of them were effectively ambushed by the Joker and his henchmen who had been involved in a crooked deal with Jason's mother, which had nothing to do with Robin or Jason. The Joker killed Jason because he had the opportunity to do so and Batman wasn't around. Jason really hadn't disobeyed anyone. (icon_uk)
ReplyDeleteThe second Jason Todd hadn’t disobeyed Batman at that moment, to be sure, but he’d done so regularly in the preceding months in Batman, had been pulled from the field as a result, and was on his own when the Joker found him.
ReplyDeleteThe story was written to make Jason a noble victim at that moment—the only “death in the family” could have been his treacherous mother’s, and he could have survived, though he would have stopped being Robin.
Instead, readers voted by a narrow margin to see Jason killed, and I think they did so because of his earlier disobedience. There’s an unmistakable connection between seriously disobeying Batman and dying. And that defiance has ended up defining Jason’s personality ever since.
He actually did disobey Batman. Batman gets in the gyro, tells Jason to stay put, and leaves. Jason says something to the effect of, "Sorry, Batman," and changes into his costume and confronts his mother. The whole time Batman is hoping that Jason stayed where he told him too, but has that sinking feeling.
ReplyDelete