Spiderman is a fictional character, a comic book superhero that appears in comic books released by Marvel Comics. Developed by writer-editor Stan Lee and writer-artist Steve Ditko, he first appeared in Amazing Fantasy #15 (cover-dated Aug. 1962).
Ditko and Lee conceived the type as an orphan being raised by his Aunt May and Uncle Ben, so that as an adolescent, suffering the ordinary fights of adolescence in addition to those of a costumed crime-fighter. Spider man's originators gave him superhuman strength and agility, the capability to cling to many surfaces, shoot spider webs using hand-installed apparatuses of his own invention (which he called "internet-shots"), and respond to danger rapidly with his "index-perception", empowering him to battle his foes.
When Spider-Man first appeared in the early sixties, teenagers in super-hero comic books were typically relegated to the part of partner to the protagonist. The Spider Man set broke earth by featuring Peter Parker, a teenage high school pupil and man behind Spider Man's secret id to whose "self-fixations with rejection, insufficiency, and loneliness" young readers might link. Unlike previous adolescent heroes such as for instance Bucky and Robin, Spider Man did not benefit from being the protege of any adult super-hero mentors like Captain America and Superman, and so needed to discover for themself that "with great power there must come great responsibility"--a line contained in a text box in the last panel of the leading Spider-Man story, but later retroactively credited to his protector, the overdue Uncle Ben.
Wonder has featured Spider Man in a number of comic book series, the primary and greatest-enduring which is entitled The Incredible Spider Man. Over time, the Peter Parker character has grown from timid, nerdy high school pupil to troubled but outgoing college student, to married high school instructor to, in the late two thousands, a single independent photographer, his most common adult part. In the 2010s, he ties the Avengers as well as the Fantastic Four, Marvel's flagship super-hero teams. In current storylines, Peter Parker expires while his head is in the body of his foe Physician
Ditko and Lee conceived the type as an orphan being raised by his Aunt May and Uncle Ben, so that as an adolescent, suffering the ordinary fights of adolescence in addition to those of a costumed crime-fighter. Spider man's originators gave him superhuman strength and agility, the capability to cling to many surfaces, shoot spider webs using hand-installed apparatuses of his own invention (which he called "internet-shots"), and respond to danger rapidly with his "index-perception", empowering him to battle his foes.
When Spider-Man first appeared in the early sixties, teenagers in super-hero comic books were typically relegated to the part of partner to the protagonist. The Spider Man set broke earth by featuring Peter Parker, a teenage high school pupil and man behind Spider Man's secret id to whose "self-fixations with rejection, insufficiency, and loneliness" young readers might link. Unlike previous adolescent heroes such as for instance Bucky and Robin, Spider Man did not benefit from being the protege of any adult super-hero mentors like Captain America and Superman, and so needed to discover for themself that "with great power there must come great responsibility"--a line contained in a text box in the last panel of the leading Spider-Man story, but later retroactively credited to his protector, the overdue Uncle Ben.
Wonder has featured Spider Man in a number of comic book series, the primary and greatest-enduring which is entitled The Incredible Spider Man. Over time, the Peter Parker character has grown from timid, nerdy high school pupil to troubled but outgoing college student, to married high school instructor to, in the late two thousands, a single independent photographer, his most common adult part. In the 2010s, he ties the Avengers as well as the Fantastic Four, Marvel's flagship super-hero teams. In current storylines, Peter Parker expires while his head is in the body of his foe Physician
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