Superman as Immigrant in “Superman Smashes the Klan”

Cover of Superman Smashes the Klan #1, in which Superman hoists a car next to the book’s other main protagonist, Roberta aka Lan-Shin Lee.

“Superman Smashes the Klan” is inspired by a story from the 1940s #Superman radio show, which also coined the catchphrase saying he stands for “Truth, Justice, and the American Way.” But SStK presents Superman as both a patriot and secret immigrant—a literal illegal alien. 1/12

Caricatures of Superman’s creators, Jerry Siegel and Joe Shuster.

Superman’s immigrant identity is both textual & historical, given the character’s creators and the time period he was created. Jerry Siegel and Joe Shuster were sons of Jewish immigrants, and Superman debuted in 1938, less than a year before the official start of WWII. 2/12

Cover of Superman #14 from 1942 by Fred Ray, in which Superman is standing in front of an American flag emblazoned shield, holding a bald eagle. Andrew Fogel’s article, “Is Superman Jewish?” appeared on PopMatters on June 11, 2025.
In an essay for PopMatters, Andrew Fogel argues it is risky to “seek out Jewishness where it does not exist, as with Superman.” Notes Fogel: “WASPs constituted the racial standard, and Superman’s Jewish creators projected the prototypical image of the ‘all-American’ hero.” 3/12
The cover of Danny Fingeroth’s 2008 book Disguised as Clark Kent: Jews, Comics, and the Creation of the Superhero.

But Danny Fingeroth argues this masking is an element of Superman’s Jewishness. For him, Superman represents: “The fantasy of the totally accepted immigrant… the welcome that the immigrant & the immigrant’s introverted, traumatized, fiction-dwelling son could only imagine.” 4/12

A Ku Klux Klan member tells Superman that if he loved his race and nation, he would oppose the multicultural community centre.

Superman Smashes the Klan bridges these perspectives. On one hand, writer Gene Luen Yang highlights the potential for Superman, who visually represents Aryan ideals and does tend to solve problems with an iron (or steel) fist, to resonate with white supremacy and/or facism. 5/12

As described above, the local Ku Klux Klan leader describes Superman as “one of us” because of his perceived physical perfection, which he associates with ideal Americanism, saying, “That’s why the whole country admires you! You’re living proof of how superior a white man can be!”

In this scene, the leader of the local Ku Klux Klan describes Superman as “one of us” because of his perceived physical perfection, which he associates with ideal Americanism: “That’s why the whole country admires you! You’re living proof of how superior a white man can be!” 6/12

A young Clark tosses a recording of his alien parents into the lake, declaring he wants to be ordinary and perfect.

On the other hand, Yang and artist Gurihiru thoughtfully underscore Superman’s alien-ness, both in terms of his sense of self and in terms of how his material difference affects the ways people react to him, which in turn influences how he presents himself. 7/12

Clark looks in the mirror and starts to panic when he sees a green-skinned, bug-eyed alien staring back at him.

Early in the story, an encounter with Kryptonite–a toxic rock from Superman’s destroyed home planet–causes Superman to see visions of himself as a very different type of alien: green-skinned and bug-like. He later has dreams and visions of green-skinned alien parents. 8/12

As a child, Clark flies and unleashes his heat vision to defend his friend against a pair of bullies.

Eventually, Superman learns about his alien origins & accepts them. But not before Yang explores the consequences of being dislocated from one’s heritage. After accidentally unleashing his powers as a child and being branded a demon, Clark begins to deny aspects of himself. 9/12

Lan-Shin Lee accuses Superman of denying aspects of himself to be accepted, and says she wishes it was okay for him to fly.

Importantly, it is Lan-Shin Lee who notices and articulates this denial–and its potentially deadly consequences. She also says she wishes it was okay for him to fly, i.e., she wishes he could embrace and be embraced for his difference, which is part of his strength. 10/12

Superman reveals his alien origins to a crowd, and is met with fear and accusations of impurity by the Ku Klux Klan leader.

To fly, Superman, a refugee from a world destroyed by a holocaust, must access the strength of his difference. And he needs to fly to save American communities, and America itself, and the world, from threats both urgent & existential–including facism & white supremacy. 11/12

Close up of a Daily Planet newspaper declaring that Superman is an “immigrant from Krypton, citizen of Metropolis.”

Ultimately, then, Superman’s immigrant identity is presented not as a threat to American sovereignty or identity, but rather its savior–fitting for a hero who became deeply associated with American patriotism through years fighting Hitler while disguising his Jewish roots. 12/12