DC had a long history of acknowledging and building on its past, but Watchmen, and Dark Knight Returns, changed things, moving forward. It suddenly became more important to present a truly lived-in landscape, where the past wasn’t just a colorful lineage or fodder for some crisis, but a tapestry just waiting to be tapped. In a lot of ways, Geoff Johns, James Robinson, and David S. Goyer were the ones to finally do so in the pages of JSA. Robinson had, of course, gotten the ball rolling (along with Mark Waid’s Flash and Ron Marz’s Green Lantern, although neither tends to get credit) in the pages of Starman, an elegiac monthly comic thst explored the adventures of Jack Knight, and all the others who bore that name, including his father and brother. But that was on an intentionally limited scope. Grant Morrison’s JLA had revived the popular appeal of teams at DC, and the Justice Society at long last got a new shot at fame because of it. This version acknowledged the past but was determined to build on it, with a new generation of generational heroes (Johns had already created the hero who would become known as Stargirl, and Morrison had introduced the new Hourman, and of course Jack, and in these pages we meet the new Hawkgirl and Mr. Terrific, a name that will always be tough to swallow but a hero still waiting his due as perhaps the most recent great creation at the company).
And the villains! The most important here are two that look at the immediate past and future of the company. Closing out this volume is a return engagement with Extant, the other villain of Zero Hour, who had accidentally played a significant part in the decade preceding the launch of this series. He had assumed the role of Monarch when trigger-shy editors chose Hawk over Captain Atom as the hero who turns bad, and then as Extant, effectively, the murderer of the original Society.
Then there’s Black Adam. Here’s a guy who has become only more significant in the past two decades, not only within the pages of JSA itself but well beyond, including an unexpected defining role in the seminal weekly series 52, but now poised to revamp the DC cinematic landscape in a much-anticipated film debut with Dwayne Johnson playing him.
The storytelling in these fifteen-and-change issues can be a little simplistic, but it was all foundation for Johns, and DC, work that even longtime fans still don’t entirely appreciate (such as when the New 52 tried to start the whole thing over, for the whole line, with the same integrated feel), although Rebirth has since woven the tapestry even tighter, despite renewed concerns about continuity, the old superhero comics curse, which of course Johns himself has attempted to alleviate (Doomsday Clock, which of course is a sequel to Watchmen).
This was the first time I read the majority of this material. Hourman, and Jack Knight truly do depart, following the final issue in the collection, which is a shame, for both of them. But I have read some of the later material. It only gets wilder from here. The stuff I most want to revisit is the Justice Society of America (the series got a reboot along the way, because: modern comics) arc “Thy Kingdom Come,” which revisits the ‘90s material that most directly led to all this. I hope I don’t have to spell that out.