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Who's Who in the DC Universe
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Who's Who in the DC Universe : ウィキペディア英語版
Who's Who in the DC Universe

''Who's Who: The Definitive Directory of the DC Universe'' (usually referred to as ''Who's Who'') is the umbrella title for a number of comic book series which DC Comics published to catalogue the wide variety of fictional characters in their imaginary universe, the DC Universe.
==History==
''Who's Who'' was the creation of Len Wein, Marv Wolfman, and Robert Greenberger, and its first incarnation (''Who's Who: The Definitive Directory of the DC Universe'') debuted in the last month of 1984 (cover dated March 1985) and ran 26 issues until 1987 (cover dated April 1987). It was essentially an encyclopedia in comic book form, listing the characters, places, and things in the DC Universe. It began one month before the 12-issue limited series ''Crisis on Infinite Earths'' began, and therefore it is of interest to note that the earlier issues discuss pre-''Crisis'' versions of the characters, whereas issues released subsequent to the conclusion of the limited series discuss the post-''Crisis'' universe. For example, while both the Flash (Barry Allen) and Supergirl died during the ''Crisis'', the Flash's death is not mentioned as issue #8 predates his death, but Supergirl's death is recounted 14 months later in issue #22. Also, entries for characters such as the Silver Age Superman and Wonder Woman recounted their post-''Crisis'' histories only, which at the time were only a few months old, while their entire Silver Age histories (and all the unique elements of those characters during that time, such as Superman's Fortress of Solitude and Wonder Woman's powerless period) were ignored.
''Who's Who'' was DC's answer to ''The Official Handbook of the Marvel Universe'', which was published a few years earlier. The DC version had a less formal style than its Marvel counterpart. Each character had an individualized logo instead of a standard typeface; figures were shown in action poses rather than full-body portraits; character histories and power descriptions were more vague; and characters from all of DC's publishing domain were included (such as out-of-continuity series like ''Camelot 3000'' and ''Watchmen''), not just those from its shared universe (although the ''Who's Who Update '88'' did limit its entries to in-continuity series only).
Various updated versions of the ''Who's Who'' have appeared over the years, including ''Who's Who Update '87'' (five issues, cover dated August to December 1987) and ''Who's Who Update '88'' (four issues, cover dated August to November 1988). Both books featured new entries and revised entries for characters in previous volumes, as well as an Appendix which included minor updates and corrections for previous entries. In 1989, most of the DC annuals released that year included ''Who's Who'' entries. Some of these were revised versions of entries in the regular ''Who's Who'' series, but there were several new entries (particularly for supporting characters).
DC Comics also put out two ''Who's Who'' spin-off series in the 1980s. The first was ''Who's Who in Star Trek'', a 2 issue series (cover dated March and April 1987) which profiled many of the people and places from not only the 1960s ''Star Trek'' series (and subsequent movies), but also the 1980s ''Star Trek'' comic book published by DC. As the series was released prior to the premiere of ''Star Trek: The Next Generation'', no information from that series was included.
The second spin-off was ''Who's Who in the Legion of Super-Heroes'', a 7 issue series (cover dated April to November 1988) which expanded on the Legion information included in the regular ''Who's Who'' and featured profiles on the various supporting characters, organizations, locations, and villains which have appeared in Legion stories over the years. Some of the information contained in this book was post-''Crisis'' instead of pre-''Crisis''. For example, the Superboy profile relates the post-''Crisis'' origin of the character as a creation of the Time Trapper, and there is no profile for Supergirl, despite her many adventures with the Legion, since by this time she was written out of continuity.
In 1990, DC started over with a new ''Who's Who'' series titled ''Who's Who in the DC Universe'' (16 loose-leaf issues with binders sold separately, cover dated August 1990 to February 1992). This book was not as comprehensive as the previous ''Who's Who'' (for example, there was no entry for the Atom, even though his character was undergoing major changes in the comic ''Suicide Squad''), and some of the entries took on a less serious tone. One instance is an entry for Guy Gardner, which is written from the character's perspective. Another instance is a blank entry for Death, which has all the usual information headings crossed out and blue marker scrawl stating simply "Someday you'll meet her. You can find out for yourself."
This series was followed up by ''Who's Who in the DC Universe Update 1993'' (2 loose-leaf issues, cover dated December 1992 and January 1993). DC also released a ''Who's Who'' series for their Impact Comics line (3 loose-leaf issues, cover dated September 1991 to May 1992).
During the period from the late 1990s through the end of the 2000s, ''Who's Who'' was replaced with ''Secret Files and Origins'', a series of one-shots devoted to particular characters or events in the DC Universe and which feature ''Who's Who''-like profiles. DK Publishing has also released a number of ''Ultimate Guides'', as well as a book titled ''The DC Comics Encyclopedia'', which serve a similar purpose.
On December 10, 2009, DC announced that a new ''Who's Who'' series would be published in 2010 as part of the company's 75th anniversary celebration. The series was later announced for eighteen issues, 48 pages per issue, beginning in May 2010 with Bob Greenberger as sole writer and Bob Harras as editor.〔() 〕〔() 〕 The series launch was subsequently delayed,〔() 〕 but in October 2010 DC vice-president Dan DiDio stated that the series would be released after the 2011 DCU line-wide event, ''Flashpoint''. However, the history of the DC Universe received an extensive overhaul in the aftermath of said ''Flashpoint'' event. The resulting New 52 comics are set in a greatly altered continuity, making a new edition of ''Who's Who'' seem unlikely in the short term because the histories of many characters are in a state of flux.

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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