THE TALE OF BEOWULF .mw-parser-output .wst-padded-pg-break{margin-top:1.6rem;margin-bottom:1.6rem}.mw-parser-output .wst-pagebreak{clear:both;display:block;break-after:page;page-break-after:always;text-align:center}.mw-parser-output .wst-pagebreak>span>span{clear:both;display:block;font-size:83%;border-color:#999999}.mw-parser-output .wst-pagebreak-top>span>span{border-top-width:1px;border-top-style:dashed}.mw-parser-output .wst-pagebreak-bottom>span>span{border-bottom-width:1px;border-bottom-style:dashed}
Beowulf’s masculinity is typical for most classical epic literature, he is strong and brave and a fighter before anything else. He is a typical brute-like heroic protagonist. While the modern hero breaks away from this stereotype, what they retain from Beowulf is supernatural powers. Beowulf has superhuman strength and unparalleled endurance, the basis of most modern heroes. While modern heroes add onto strength and endurance, even the simplest heroes will still possess a basis of superhuman strength. Often considered the first superhero, Superman, has superhuman strength, endurance, along with speed and invulnerability. Originally, he had a more grounded power set like classic heroes, he could not yet fly nor shoot lasers from his eyes nor did he have x-ray vision. In his debut he leapt instead of flying. It is clear to see how characters like Beowulf would later become inspiration for the superheroes we love today.
Something that has shifted from old heroism is how said hero gains their superhuman abilities. In many old epics, it's based in religion as stories were a way to enforce religious beliefs and religion was a vital part of society. As artists and society as a whole put less emphasis on religion, it no longer became the origin of our heroes' powers, instead it shifted to science. Superman never got his powers from God, but he got them from the sun. This makes since for the first of his kind, it's a mix of both sci-fi and religion in a wat. The sky, with an importance placed on the big yellow ball of gas, has been where the Gods have lived in most major religions. The Greek pantheon in Olympus, the Norse pantheon in Asgard, and the Abrahamic God in Heaven. When we get into the Silver Age of comics (1956-1970), new superheroes of the time are complete sci-fi based such as the X-men who gain their powers from a genetic mutation, Daredevil who is blinded and empowered by a chemical accident from Marvel, and the Flash, from DC, who gains the ability of super speed from a lad accident gone wrong. As religion became separated from daily life, so too did it separate from our heroes.
Roach, David, Sanderson, Peter. "the Flash". Encyclopedia Britannica, 25 Jun. 2023, https://www.britannica.com/topic/the-Flash. Accessed 15 May 2026. “Superman’s Powers over the Years – Comics Archeology.” Comicsarcheology.com, 19 Apr. 2025, comicsarcheology.com/index.php/2025/04/19/supermans-powers/. Accessed 15 May 2026.
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