Abstract
It seems reasonable enough to assume that superheroes are heroes. First, heroes act to safeguard others. Second, heroes safeguard those around them, near or far, in a manner that's moral. Third, heroes safeguard those around them in an altruistic manner; they selflessly help others. Fourth, heroes safeguard those around them in a manner that is atypical, in ways that the unheroic are unwilling to act. Wonder Woman performs her daring feats, that is, with the agility of Mercury and the steel sinews of a Hercules. Wonder Woman was always intended to be inspirational, to be an ideal toward which we could aspire. Her roots in feminism are testimony to this. This chapter considers the feminism that Marston reflects in Wonder Woman, freed and strengthened by supporting one another, women develop enormous physical and mental power, for using it to save the world from the hatreds and wars of men, and help humanity to find maturity.