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article expansion/overhaul. trimmed down the excessive focus on plot summary (which is more appropriate for the fandom wiki) and spilt the endless list of alt Caps into Alternative versions of Captain America. could probably use a copyedit
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{{short description|Comic book superhero}}
{{short description|Comic book superhero}}
{{use mdy dates|date=June 2023}}
{{redirect|Steve Rogers|the film character|Steve Rogers (Marvel Cinematic Universe)||Steve Rogers (disambiguation)|and|Captain America (disambiguation)}}
{{redirect|Steve Rogers|the film character|Steve Rogers (Marvel Cinematic Universe)||Steve Rogers (disambiguation)|and|Captain America (disambiguation)}}
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{{use mdy dates|date=July 2021}}
{{Infobox comics character <!--Wikipedia:WikiProject Comics-->
{{Infobox comics character <!--Wikipedia:WikiProject Comics-->
| character_name = Steve Rogers<br />{{small|'''Captain America'''}}
| character_name = Captain America
| image = Captain America (Steve Rogers).png
| image = [[File:CaptainAmericaHughes.jpg]]
| converted =
| converted =
| caption = Captain America, as he appeared on the cover of ''[[Tales of Suspense]]'' #74 (February 1966)<br />Art by [[Jack Kirby]]
| caption = Variant cover of ''Captain America'' #1 (2018),<br />with art by [[Adam Hughes]]
| alt = Captain America bursting through a page of newspaper
| alt = Captain America bursting through a page of newspaper
| alter_ego = Steven Rogers
| alter_ego = Steven "Steve" Rogers
| publisher = [[Marvel Comics]]
| publisher = [[Marvel Comics]]
| debut = ''[[#Golden Age|Captain America Comics]]'' #1 (March 1941)
| debut = ''Captain America Comics'' #1 (December 20, 1940){{efn|[[Cover date]]d as March 1941.}}
| creators = {{plainlist|
| creators = [[Joe Simon]] & [[Jack Kirby]]
*[[Joe Simon]]
*[[Jack Kirby]]}}
| alliances = {{Plain list |
| alliances = {{Plain list |
* [[Avengers (comics)|Avengers]]
* [[Avengers (comics)|Avengers]]
* [[Uncanny Avengers|Avengers Unity Division]]
* [[All-Winners Squad]]
* [[Illuminati (comics)|Illuminati]]
* [[Invaders (comics)|Invaders]]
* [[Invaders (comics)|Invaders]]
* [[Landau, Luckman, and Lake]]
* [[The New Avengers (comics)|New Avengers]]
* [[Weapon Plus#Weapon I|Project: Rebirth]]
* [[Redeemers (comics)|Redeemers]]
* [[S.H.I.E.L.D.]]
* [[S.H.I.E.L.D.]]
* [[Secret Avengers]]
* [[Uncanny Avengers]]
* [[Secret Defenders]]
* [[United States Army|U.S. Army]]
* [[United States Army|U.S. Army]]
}}
}}
| aliases = [[Nomad (comics)|Nomad]]<br />The Captain
| aliases = [[Nomad (comics)|Nomad]], The Captain
| homeworld = [[New York City]]
| partners = {{Plain list |
| partners = {{Plain list |
* [[Bucky Barnes]]
* [[Bucky Barnes]]
* [[Falcon (comics)|Falcon]]
* [[Falcon (comics)|Sam Wilson]]
* [[Sharon Carter]]
* [[Sharon Carter]]
}}
}}
| supports = <!--optional-->
| supports = <!--optional-->
| powers =
| powers =
* Enhanced to the peak of physical perfection by the Super-Soldier Serum
*Enhanced strength, speed, stamina, durability, agility, reflexes, senses, and mental processing via the super soldier serum
* Master [[Martial arts|martial artist]] and [[Hand-to-hand combat|hand-to-hand combatant]]
*Accelerated healing
*Master martial artist and hand-to-hand combatant
* Master [[tactician]] and [[strategist]]
* Wields [[Captain America's shield|a virtually indestructible shield]]
*Master tactician, strategist, and field commander
*Using [[Captain America's shield|Vibranium-steel alloy shield]]
| cat = super
| cat = super
| subcat = Marvel Comics
| subcat = Marvel Comics
| hero =
| hero =
| sortkey = Captain America
| sortkey = Captain America
}}
|species=Human mutate}}


'''Captain America''' is a <!--Do not add "fictional" as it is tautological; superheroes (and characters in general) are by definition implied to be fictionalized to some extent.-->[[superhero]] appearing in [[American comic book]]s published by [[Marvel Comics]]. Created by [[cartoonist]]s [[Joe Simon]] and [[Jack Kirby]], the character [[First appearance|first appeared]] in ''[[#Golden Age|Captain America Comics]]'' #1 ([[cover date]]d March 1941) from [[Timely Comics]], a predecessor of Marvel Comics. Captain America was designed as a patriotic [[supersoldier]] who often fought the [[Axis powers]] of [[World War II]] and was Timely Comics' most popular character during the wartime period. The popularity of superheroes waned following the war, and the ''Captain America'' comic book was discontinued in 1950, with a short-lived revival in 1953. Since Marvel Comics revived the character in 1964, Captain America has remained in publication.
'''Captain America''' is a [[superhero]] created by [[Joe Simon]] and [[Jack Kirby]] who appears in [[American comic books]] published by [[Marvel Comics]]. The character first appeared in ''Captain America Comics'' #1, published on December 20, 1940 by [[Timely Comics]], a corporate predecessor to Marvel. Captain America's civilian identity is '''Steve Rogers''', a frail man enhanced to the peak of human physical perfection by an experimental "[[Supersoldier|super-soldier]] serum" after joining the [[United States Army]] to aid the country's efforts in [[World War II]]. Equipped with an [[Flag of the United States|American flag]]-inspired costume and [[Captain America's shield|a virtually indestructible shield]], Captain America and his [[sidekick]] [[Bucky Barnes]] clashed frequently with the villainous [[Red Skull]] and other members of the [[Axis powers]]. In the final days of the war, an accident left Captain America frozen in a state of [[suspended animation]] until he was revived in modern times. He resumes his exploits as a costumed hero and becomes leader of the superhero team the [[Avengers (comics)|Avengers]], but frequently struggles as a "man out of time" to adjust to the new era.


The character quickly emerged as Timely's most popular and commercially successful wartime creation, though as the popularity of superheroes in general began to wane towards the end of the war and into the post-war period, ''Captain America Comics'' was discontinued in 1950. The character saw a short-lived revival in 1953 before returning to comics in 1964, and has since remained in continuous publication. Captain America's creation as an explicitly [[Anti-fascism|anti-Nazi]] figure was consciously political: Simon was was stridently opposed to the actions of [[Nazi Germany]] and a supporter of U.S. intervention in World War II, and conceived of the character in response to the American [[United States non-interventionism#Non-interventionism before entering World War II|non-interventionism movement]]. Political messages have subsequently remained a defining feature of Captain America stories, with writers regularly using the character to comment on the state of American society and government.
The character wears a costume bearing an [[Flag of the United States|American flag]] [[motif (visual arts)|motif]], and he carries a [[Captain America's shield|nearly-indestructible shield]] that he throws as a projectile. Captain America is the [[alter ego]] of '''Steve Rogers''', a frail young artist enhanced to the peak of human perfection by an experimental "[[Captain America#Super Soldier Serum|super-soldier serum]]" after joining the military to aid the [[United States]] government's efforts in World War II. Near the end of the war, he was trapped in ice and survived in [[Cryopreservation|suspended animation]] until he was revived in modern times. Although Captain America often struggles to maintain his ideals as a man out of his time, he remains a highly respected figure both with the American public and in the superhero community, which includes becoming the long-time leader of the [[Avengers (comics)|Avengers]].


Captain America was the first Marvel Comics character to appear in media outside comics with the release of the 1944 [[Serial (film)|movie serial]], ''[[Captain America (serial)|Captain America]]''. Since then, the character has been featured in [[Captain America in film|a variety of films]] and [[Captain America in other media|other media]]. In the [[Marvel Cinematic Universe]], [[Steve Rogers (Marvel Cinematic Universe)|Steve Rogers]] was portrayed by [[Chris Evans (actor)|Chris Evans]].
Captain America is one of the most popular and recognized Marvel Comics characters and has been described as an icon of [[American popular culture]], having appeared in more than ten thousand stories in more than five thousand media formats. Though Captain America was not the first [[List of United States-themed superheroes|United States-themed superhero]], he would become the most popular and enduring of the many patriotic American superheroes created during World War II. Captain America was the first Marvel character to appear in a medium outside of comic books, in the 1944 [[serial film]] ''[[Captain America (serial)|Captain America]]''; the character has subsequently appeared [[Captain America in film|in a variety of films]] and [[Captain America in other media|other media]], including the [[Marvel Cinematic Universe]], where he is portrayed by actor [[Chris Evans (actor)|Chris Evans]].

{{TOC limit|3}}


==Publication history==
==Publication history==
{{further|List of Captain America titles}}
{{see also|List of Captain America titles}}
===Creation and development===
{{Quote box
|quote = "It was a time of deep passion. Hitler was grabbing all of Europe, we had Nazis in America, Nazis holding [[1939 Nazi rally at Madison Square Garden|mass meetings in Madison Square Garden]]. [...] Captain America was created in that atmosphere, he was a natural outgrowth of the passionate mood of the country."
|author = – [[Jack Kirby]]<ref name="KirbyInterview"/>
|width = 30%
|align = left
|border = none
}}


In 1940, [[Timely Comics]] publisher [[Martin Goodman (publisher)|Martin Goodman]] responded to the growing popularity of [[superhero comics]] – particularly [[Superman]] at rival publisher [[National Comics Publications]], the corporate predecessor to [[DC Comics]] – by hiring freelancer [[Joe Simon]] to create a new superhero for the company.{{sfn|Dutter|1990|pp=10–11}} Simon began to develop the character by determining who their nemesis could be, noting that the most successful superheroes were defined by their relationship with a compelling villain, and eventually settled on [[Adolf Hitler]].{{sfn|Morse|2007|p=32}}{{sfn|Dutter|1990|p=11}} He rationalized that Hitler was the "best villain of them all" as he was "hated by everyone in the free world",{{sfn|Dutter|1990|p=11}} and that it would be a unique approach for a superhero to face a real-life adversary rather than a fictional one.{{sfn|Morse|2007|p=32}}
===Creation===
In 1940, writer Joe Simon conceived the idea for Captain America and made a sketch of the character in costume.<ref>1974 [[Comic Art Convention]] program, cover</ref> "I wrote the name 'Super American' at the bottom of the page," Simon said in his autobiography, and then decided:


This approach was also consciously political: Simon was stridently opposed to the actions of [[Nazi Germany]] and supported U.S. intervention in [[World War II]], and intended the hero to be a response to the American [[United States non-interventionism#Non-interventionism before entering World War II|non-interventionism movement]].{{sfn|Wright|2001|p=36}} Simon initially considered "Super American" for the hero's name, but felt there were already multiple comic book characters with "super" in their names.{{sfn|Simon|Simon|2003|pp=50–51}} He worked out the details of the character, who was eventually named "Captain America", after he completed sketches in consultation with Goodman.{{sfn|Dutter|1990|pp=10–11}} The hero's civilian name "Steve Rogers" was derived from the telegraphy term "[[Roger (radio communications)|roger]]", meaning "message received".{{sfn|Dutter|1990|pp=10–11}}
{{blockquote|No, it didn't work. There were too many "Supers" around. "Captain America" had a good sound to it. There weren't a lot of captains in comics. It was as easy as that. The boy companion was simply named Bucky, after my friend Bucky Pierson, a star on our high school basketball team.<ref name=joesimonp50>{{cite book |last= Simon|first= Joe|author2=Simon, Jim|title= The Comic Book Makers|publisher= Crestwood/II|year= 1990|page= 50|isbn= 978-1-887591-35-5}} Reissued by Vanguard Productions in 2003.</ref>}}


Goodman elected to launch Captain America with his own self-titled comic book, making him the first Timely character to debut with his own [[ongoing series]] without having first appeared in an [[Comics anthology|anthology]].{{sfn|Dutter|1990|p=11}} Simon sought to have [[Jack Kirby]] be the primary artist on the series: the two developed a working relationship and friendship in the late 1930s after working together at [[Fox Feature Syndicate]], and had previously developed characters for Timely together.<ref name="GraphicNYC"/>{{sfn|Harvey|1996|p=31}} Kirby also shared Simon's pro-intervention views, and was particularly drawn to the character in this regard.{{sfn|Dutter|1990|p=11}} Goodman, conversely, wanted a team of artists on the series; it was ultimately determined that Kirby would serve as [[penciller]], with [[Al Avison]] and [[Al Gabriele]] assisting as [[inker]]s.{{sfn|Dutter|1990|p=11}} Simon negotiated so that he and Kirby would receive 25 percent of the profits from the comic{{sfn|Ro|2004|p=25}} and notes that he regards Kirby as a co-creator of Captain America, stating that "if Kirby hadn't drawn it, it might not have been much of anything."{{sfn|Dutter|1990|p=11}}
Simon recalled in his autobiography that [[Timely Comics]] publisher [[Martin Goodman (publisher)|Martin Goodman]] gave him the go-ahead and directed that a Captain America solo comic book series be published as soon as possible. Needing to fill a full comic with primarily one character's stories, Simon did not believe that his regular creative partner, artist [[Jack Kirby]], could handle the workload alone:


===1940 – 1944: Debut and early success===
{{blockquote|I didn't have a lot of objections to putting a crew on the first issue&nbsp;... There were two young artists from [[Connecticut]] that had made a strong impression on me. [[Al Avison]] and [[Al Gabriele]] often worked together and were quite successful in adapting their individual styles to each other. Actually, their work was not too far from [that of] Kirby's. If they worked on it, and if one inker tied the three styles together, I believed the final product would emerge as quite uniform. The two Als were eager to join in on the new ''Captain America'' book, but Jack Kirby was visibly upset. "You're still number one, Jack," I assured him. "It's just a matter of a quick deadline for the first issue."
[[File:Captain America Comics-1 (March 1941 Timely Comics).jpg|thumb|Cover of ''Captain America Comics'' #1 (December 1940, [[cover date]]d March 1941). Art by [[Joe Simon]] and [[Jack Kirby]].|alt=The front page of the first Captain America comic depicts Captain America punching [[Adolf Hitler]] in the jaw. A Nazi soldier's bullet deflects from Captain America's shield, while Adolf Hitler falls onto a map of the [[United States|United States of America]] and a document reading 'SABOTAGE PLANS FOR U.S.A.']]


''Captain America Comics'' #1 was published on December 20, 1940,{{sfn|Rizzo|Licari|2021|p=20}} with a [[cover date]] of March 1941.{{sfn|Rhoades|2008|p=33}} While the front cover of the issue featured Captain America punching Hitler, the comic itself established the [[Red Skull]] as Captain America's primary adversary, and also introduced [[Bucky Barnes]] as Captain America's teenaged [[sidekick]].{{sfn|DiFruscio|2010|p=46}} Simon stated that he personally regarded Captain America's [[origin story]], in which the frail Steve Rogers becomes a [[supersoldier]] after receiving an experimental serum, as "the weakest part of the character", and that he and Kirby "didn't put too much thought into the origin. We just wanted to get to the action."{{sfn|Dutter|1990|p=11}} Kirby designed the series' action scenes with an emphasis on a sense of continuity across panels, saying that he "choreographed" the sequences as one would a ballet, with a focus on exaggerated character movement. Kirby's layouts in ''Captain America Comics'' are characterized by their distorted perspectives, irregularly shaped panels, and the heavy use of [[speed line]]s.{{sfn|Harvey|1996|p=33}}
"I'll make the deadline," Jack promised. "I'll pencil it [all] myself and make the deadline." I hadn't expected this kind of reaction&nbsp;... but I acceded to Kirby's wishes and, it turned out, was lucky that I did. There might have been two Als, but there was only one Jack Kirby&nbsp;... I wrote the first ''Captain America'' book with penciled lettering right on the drawing boards, with very rough sketches for figures and backgrounds. Kirby did his thing, building the muscular anatomy, adding ideas and popping up the action as only he could. Then he tightened up the penciled drawings, adding detailed backgrounds, faces and figures."<ref name=joesimonp50 />}}
[[File:1974ComicArtCon book.jpg|thumb|left|1974 [[Comic Art Convention]] program featuring Simon's original sketch of Captain America]]
Al Liederman would ink that first issue, which was lettered by Simon and Kirby's regular letterer, Howard Ferguson.<ref>Simon, p. 51.</ref>


The first issue of ''Captain America Comics'' sold out in a matter of days, and the second issue's print run was set at over one million copies.{{sfn|Fromm|2005|p=4}}{{sfn|Jones|2004|p=200}} Captain America quickly became Timely's most popular character, with the publisher creating an official Captain America [[fan club]] called the "Sentinels of Liberty".{{sfn|Wright|2001|p=36}}{{efn|Members of the Sentinels of Liberty received a membership card and a metal Captain America badge in exchange for a ten cent membership fee, though badge distribution was later discontinued due to wartime [[Salvage for Victory|salvage efforts]]; Timely instead began to match all ten cent donations made to [[US Department of War]].{{sfn|Steranko|1970|p=55}}}} Circulation figures remained close to a million copies per month after the debut issue, which outstripped even the circulation of news magazines such as ''[[Time (magazine)|Time]]'' during the same period.{{sfn|Daniels|1991|p=37}} ''Captain America Comics'' was additionally one of 189 periodicals that the [[US Department of War]] deemed appropriate to distribute to its soldiers without prior screening.{{sfn|Lawrence|2009|p=2}} The character would also make appearances in several of Timely's other comic titles, including ''[[All Winners Comics]]'', ''[[Marvel Mystery Comics]]'', ''[[U.S.A. Comics]]'', and ''[[All Select Comics]]''.{{sfn|Fromm|2005|pp=9–10}}
Simon said Captain America was a consciously political creation; he and Kirby were morally repulsed by the actions of [[Nazi Germany]] in the years leading up to the United States' involvement in [[World War II]] and felt war was inevitable: "The opponents to the war were all quite well organized. We wanted to have our say too."<ref name="Wright 36">{{Cite book |last= Wright| first= Bradford W.|title=Comic Book Nation: The Transformation of Youth Culture in America | publisher= [[Johns Hopkins University Press]]|year= 2001|location= Baltimore, Maryland|isbn= 978-0-8018-7450-5|page= 36}}</ref> It has been observed that the Captain America character has numerous elements of Jewish iconography as a variant of the idea of the [[Golem]], an automaton who protects the Jewish community who was created by an elder of that community, Dr. Irkstine.<ref>{{cite web |last1=Isaak |first1=Joshua |title=Captain America Is A Jewish Golem - Theory Explained |url=https://screenrant.com/captain-america-jewish-golem-jack-kirby-joe-simon/ |website=Screenrant |date=December 3, 2021 |access-date=17 September 2022}}</ref>


Though Captain America was not the first [[List of United States-themed superheroes|United States-themed superhero]] – a distinction that belongs to [[The Shield (Archie)|The Shield]] at [[Archie Comics|MLJ Comics]]{{sfn|Cronin|2009|p=134}} – he would become the most popular patriotic American superhero of those created during World War II.{{sfn|Dowsett|2008|p=18}} Captain America's popularity drew a complaint from MLJ that the character's triangular heater shield too closely resembled the chest symbol of The Shield, prompting Goodman to direct Simon and Kirby to change the design beginning with ''Captain America Comics'' #2. The revised round shield went on to become an iconic element of the character;{{sfn|Cronin|2009|p=134}} its use as a [[Discus throw|discus]]-like throwing weapon originated in a short prose story in ''Captain America Comics'' #3, written by [[Stan Lee]] in his professional debut as a writer.{{sfn|Moser|2009|p=30}}{{sfn|Thomas|2011|p=11}} Timely's publication of ''Captain America Comics'' led the company to be targeted with threatening letters and phone calls from the [[German American Bund]], an American Nazi organization. When members began loitering on the streets outside the company's office, police protection was posted and New York mayor [[Fiorello La Guardia]] personally contacted Simon and Kirby to guarantee the safety of the publisher's employees.{{sfn|Cronin|2009|pp=135–136}}
===Golden Age<!--'Captain America Comics' and 'Captain America's Weird Tales' redirect here-->===
[[File:Captain America Comics-1 (March 1941 Timely Comics).jpg|thumb|''Captain America Comics'' #1 (March 1941). Cover art by [[Joe Simon]] (inks and pencils) and [[Jack Kirby]] (pencils).|alt=The front page of the first Captain America comic depicts Captain America punching [[Adolf Hitler]] in the jaw. A Nazi soldier's bullet deflects from Captain America's shield, while Adolf Hitler falls onto a map of the [[United States|United States of America]] and a document reading 'Sabotage plans for U.S.A.']]
'''''Captain America Comics'''''<!--boldface per WP:R#PLA--> #1 – [[cover-date]]d March 1941<ref>[http://www.comics.org/issue/1313/ ''Captain America Comics'' #1] {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20130510051122/http://www.comics.org/issue/1313/ |date=2013-05-10 }} at the Grand Comics Database</ref> and on sale December 20, 1940,<ref>{{cite book|last = Evanier|first = Mark|author-link = Mark Evanier|title = Kirby: King of Comics|publisher = [[Abrams Books]]|year = 2008|location= New York, New York|page = 50|isbn = 978-0-8109-9447-8}}</ref><ref>{{cite book|last1= Thomas|first1= Roy|author-link= Roy Thomas|last2=Sanderson|first2=Peter|author-link2=Peter Sanderson|title= The Marvel Vault: A Museum-in-a-Book with Rare Collectibles from the World of Marvel|publisher= [[Running Press]]|year= 2007|location= Philadelphia, Pennsylvania|page= 21|isbn= 978-0-7624-2844-1|quote= ''Captain America Comics'' #1 went on sale around the end of 1940, with a March 1941 cover date.}}</ref> a year before the [[attack on Pearl Harbor]], but a full year into World War II – showed the protagonist punching Nazi leader [[Adolf Hitler]]; it sold nearly one million copies.<ref name="fromm">{{cite journal|last= Fromm|first= Keif|title= The Privacy Act Of Carl Burgos|journal= [[Alter Ego (magazine)|Alter Ego]]|volume= 3|issue= 49|page= 4|publisher= [[TwoMorrows Publishing]]|date= June 2005|location= Raleigh, North Carolina}}</ref> While most readers responded favorably to the comic, some took objection. Simon noted, "When the first issue came out we got a lot of&nbsp; ... threatening letters and hate mail. Some people really opposed what Cap stood for."<ref name="Wright 36"/> The threats, which included menacing groups of people loitering out on the street outside of the offices, proved so serious that police protection was posted, with [[Mayor of New York City|New York Mayor]] [[Fiorello La Guardia]] personally contacting Simon and Kirby to give his support.<ref>{{cite book|last = Cronin|first = Brian|title = Was Superman a Spy?: And Other Comic Book Legends Revealed|publisher = [[Plume (publisher)|Plume]]|year = 2009|location= New York, New York|pages = 135–136|isbn = 978-0-452-29532-2}}</ref>


Simon wrote the first two issues of ''Captain America Comics'' before becoming the editor for the series; they would be the only Captain America stories he would ever directly write.{{sfn|Dutter|1990|p=11}} While Captain America generated acclaim and industry fame for Simon and Kirby, the pair believed that Goodman was withholding the promised percentage of profits for the series, prompting Simon to seek employment for himself and Kirby at National Comics Publications.{{sfn|Ro|2004|p=25}} When Goodman learned of Simon and Kirby's intentions, he effectively fired them from Timely Comics, telling them they were to leave the company after they completed work on ''Captain America Comics'' #10.{{sfn|Ro|2004|p=27}} The authorship of ''Captain America Comics'' was subsequently assumed by a variety of individuals, including [[Otto Binder]], [[Bill Finger]], and [[Manly Wade Wellman]] as writers, and Al Avison, [[Vince Alascia]], and [[Syd Shores]] as pencilers.{{sfn|Steranko|1970|p=55}}
Though preceded as a "patriotically themed superhero" by [[Archie Comics|MLJ]]'s [[The Shield (Archie)|The Shield]], Captain America immediately became the most prominent and enduring of the wave of superheroes introduced in American comic books prior to and during World War II,<ref name="Sanderson18">{{cite book|last1 = Sanderson|first1 = Peter|author-link = Peter Sanderson|last2= Gilbert|first2= Laura|chapter= 1940s|title = Marvel Chronicle A Year by Year History|publisher = [[Dorling Kindersley]]|year = 2008|location= London, United Kingdom|page = 18|isbn =978-0756641238|quote= Cap was not the first patriotically themed super hero, but he would become the most enduring. He was Timely's most popular hero with nearly a million copies of his comic sold per month.}}</ref> as evidenced by the unusual move at the time of premiering the character in his own title instead of an anthology title first. This popularity drew the attention and a complaint from MLJ that the character's triangular shield too closely resembled the chest symbol of their Shield character. In response, Goodman had Simon and Kirby create a distinctive round shield for issue 2, which went on to become an iconic element of the character.<ref>Cronin, p. 134</ref> With his sidekick [[Bucky (Marvel Comics)|Bucky]], Captain America faced villains from [[Nazi Germany]], [[Empire of Japan]], and other threats to wartime America and the [[Allies of World War II|Allies]]. Stanley Lieber, now better known as [[Stan Lee]], in his first professional fiction writing task, contributed to the character in issue #3 in the filler text story "Captain America Foils the Traitor's Revenge", which introduced the character's use of his shield as a returning throwing weapon.<ref name="AmazingMarvelUniverse">{{Cite book |last= Thomas|first= Roy|author-link = Roy Thomas|title= Stan Lee's Amazing Marvel Universe| publisher= [[Sterling Publishing]]|location= New York, New York|year= 2006|page= 11|isbn= 978-1-4027-4225-5|quote= The line reads: "With the speed of thought, he sent his shield spinning through the air to the other end of the tent, where it smacked the knife out of Haines' hand!" It became a convention starting the following issue, in which the art in a Simon and Kirby comics story illustrates the following caption: "Captain America's speed of thought and action save Bucky's life – as he hurls his shield across the room.}}</ref> Captain America soon became Timely's most popular character and even had a fan-club called the "Sentinels of Liberty".<ref name="Wright 36"/>


===1944 – 1950s: Decline in popularity===
Circulation figures remained close to a million copies per month after the debut issue, which outstripped even the circulation of news magazines such as ''[[Time (magazine)|Time]]'' during the period.<ref name="Sanderson18" /><ref>{{cite book|last = Daniels|first = Les|author-link = Les Daniels|title = Marvel: Five Fabulous Decades of the World's Greatest Comics|publisher = [[Abrams Books|Harry N. Abrams]]|year = 1991|location= New York, New York|page = 37|isbn = 9780810938212}}</ref> The character was widely imitated by other comics publishers, with around 40 red-white-and-blue patriotic heroes debuting in 1941 alone.<ref>{{cite book |last1=Mitchell |first1=Kurt |last2=Thomas |first2=Roy |title=American Comic Book Chronicles: 1940-1944 |date=2019 |publisher=TwoMorrows Publishing |isbn=978-1605490892 |page=63}}</ref> After the Simon and Kirby team moved to [[DC Comics]] in late 1941, having produced ''Captain America Comics'' through issue #10 (January 1942), [[Al Avison]] and [[Syd Shores]] became regular [[penciller]]s of the celebrated title, with one generally [[inker|inking]] over the other. The character was featured in ''[[All Winners Comics]]'' #1–19 (Summer 1941 – Fall 1946), ''[[Marvel Mystery Comics]]'' #80–84 and #86–92, ''[[USA Comics]]'' #6–17 (December 1942 – Fall 1945), and ''[[All Select Comics]]'' #1–10 (Fall 1943 – Summer 1946).
Superhero comics began to decline in popularity in the final years of the war and into the post-war period.{{sfn|Wright|2001|p=72}} This prompted a variety of attempts to reposition Captain America, including having the character fight gangsters rather than wartime enemies in ''Captain America Comics'' #42 (October 1944), appearing as a high school teacher in ''Captain America Comics'' #59 (August 1946), and joining Timely's first superhero team, the [[All-Winners Squad]], in ''All Winners Comics'' #19 (Fall 1946).{{sfn|Steranko|1970|p=55}} The series nevertheless continued to face dwindling sales, and ''Captain America Comics'' ended with its 75th issue in February 1950.{{sfn|Steranko|1970|p=55}} [[Horror comics]] were ascendant as a popular comic genre during this period; in keeping with the trend, the final two issues of ''Captain America Comics'' were published under the title ''Captain America's Weird Tales''.{{sfn|Steranko|1970|p=55}}


Timely's corporate successor [[Atlas Comics (1950s)|Atlas Comics]] relaunched the character in 1953 in ''Young Men'' #24, where Captain America appears alongside the wartime heroes [[Human Torch (android)|Human Torch]] and [[Toro (comics)|Toro]], which was followed by a revival of ''Captain America Comics'' in 1954 written by Stan Lee and drawn by [[John Romita Sr.|John Romita]].{{Sfn|Wright|2001|p=121}} In the spirit of the [[Cold War]] and [[McCarthyism]], the character was billed as "Captain America, Commie Smasher" and faced enemies associated with the [[Soviet Union]].{{Sfn|Wright|2001|p=123}} The series was a commercial failure, and was cancelled after just three issues.{{Sfn|Wright|2001|p=123}} Romita attributed the series' failure to the changing political climate, particularly the public opposition to the [[Korean War]]; the character subsequently fell out of active publication for nearly a decade, with Romita noting that "for a while, 'Captain America' was a dirty word".{{Sfn|Amash|2004|p=24}}
In the post-war era, with the popularity of superheroes fading, Captain America led Timely's first superhero team, the [[All-Winners Squad]], in its two published adventures, in ''[[All Winners Comics]]'' #19 and #21 (Fall–Winter 1946; there was no issue #20). After Bucky was shot and wounded in a 1948 ''Captain America'' story, he was succeeded by Captain America's girlfriend, Betsy Ross, who became the superheroine [[Golden Girl (Timely Comics)|Golden Girl]]. ''Captain America Comics'' ran until issue #73 (July 1949),<ref>{{gcdb series|id= 237|title= Captain America Comics}}</ref> at which time the series was retitled '''''Captain America's Weird Tales'''''<!--boldface per WP:R#PLA--> for two issues,<ref>{{gcdb series|id= 238|title= Captain America's Weird Tales}}</ref> with the finale being a horror/suspense anthology issue with no superheroes.


===1960s: Return to comics===
[[Atlas Comics (1950s)|Atlas Comics]] attempted to revive its superhero titles when it reintroduced Captain America, along with the original Human Torch and the Sub-Mariner, in ''Young Men'' #24 (December 1953). Billed as "Captain America, Commie Smasher!"<!--note: This is a cover nickname on all his 1950s comics, and presented in all caps like "Daredevil, The Man Without Fear". And in any case, "Commie," short for "Communist," a proper noun, is always capped--> Captain America appeared during the next year in ''Young Men'' #24–28 and ''Men's Adventures'' #27–28, as well as in issues #76–78 of an eponymous title. Atlas' attempted superhero revival was a commercial failure,<ref>Wright, p. 123.</ref> and the character's title was canceled with ''Captain America'' #78 (September 1954).
[[File:Avengers (1964) March poster 4.jpg|thumb|right|Cover of ''[[Avengers (comics)|The Avengers]]'' #4 (March 1964). Art by Jack Kirby and [[George Roussos]].|alt=The front page of The Avengers #4, depicting Captain America leading Avengers members Thor, Iron Man, Ant-Man and The Wasp under the subtitle "CAPTAIN AMERICA LIVES AGAIN!". An inset image indicates that Namor the Sub-Mariner also appears in the issue.]]


Captain America made his ostensible return in the anthology ''[[Strange Tales]]'' #114 (November 1963), published by Atlas' corporate successor [[Marvel Comics]]. In an 18-page story written by Lee and illustrated by Kirby,{{efn|Kirby returned to the company as a freelancer in 1956.{{sfn|Ro|2004|p=60}}}} Captain America reemerges following years of apparent retirement, though he is revealed as an impostor who is defeated by [[Johnny Storm]] of the [[Fantastic Four]]. A caption in the final panel indicates that the story was a "test" to gauge interest in a potential return for Captain America;{{Sfn|Cunningham|2009|p=188}} the reader response to the story was enthusiastic,{{Sfn|Thomas|2011|p=9}} and the character was formally reintroduced in ''[[Avengers (comics)|The Avengers]]'' #4 (March 1964). The issue [[Retroactive continuity|retroactively established]] that Captain America had fallen into the [[Atlantic Ocean]] in the final days of World War II, where he spent decades frozen in ice in a state of [[suspended animation]].{{Sfn|Wright|2001|p=215}}{{efn|This revised backstory did not acknowledge the 1950s "Commie Smasher" incarnation of the character, who in the 1970s would be retconned as [[William Burnside (character)|an imposter]].{{Sfn|Hayton|Albright|2009|pp=17–18}}}} Captain America solo stories written by Lee with Kirby as the primary penciller were published in the anthology ''[[Tales of Suspense]]'' alongside solo stories focused on fellow Avengers member [[Iron Man]] beginning in November 1964; the character also appeared in Lee and Kirby's World War II-set ''[[Sgt. Fury and his Howling Commandos]]'' beginning in December same year. These runs introduced and retroactively established several new companions of Captain America, including [[Nick Fury]], [[Peggy Carter]], and [[Sharon Carter]].{{sfn|Dowsett|2008|p=103}}
===Silver and Bronze Age===
[[File:Avengers (1964) March poster 4.jpg|thumb|right|''Avengers'' #4 (March 1964). Cover art by [[Jack Kirby]] and [[George Roussos]].]]
In the [[Human Torch]] story titled "Captain America" in Marvel Comics' ''[[Strange Tales]]'' #114 (November 1963),<ref>[[Tom DeFalco|DeFalco, Tom]] "1960s" in Gilbert (2008), p. 95: "As the Human Torch had been instrumental in bringing back the Sub-Mariner in ''The Fantastic Four'' #4 (May 1962), it seemed only natural that he would help usher in Captain America."</ref> writer-editor [[Stan Lee]] and artist and co-plotter [[Jack Kirby]] depicted the brash young [[Fantastic Four]] member Johnny Storm, the Human Torch, in an exhibition performance with Captain America, described as a legendary World War II and 1950s superhero who has returned after many years of apparent retirement. The 18-page story ends with this Captain America revealed as an impostor: it was actually the villain the Acrobat, a former circus performer the Torch had defeated in ''Strange Tales'' #106, who broke two thieves out of jail, hoping to draw the police away while trying to rob the local bank. Afterward, Storm digs out an old comic book in which Captain America is shown to be Steve Rogers. A caption in the final panel says this story was a test to see if readers would like Captain America to return. According to Lee, fan response to the tryout was very enthusiastic.<ref>{{cite journal|last= Thomas|first= Roy|date= August 2011|title= Stan Lee's Amazing Marvel Interview!|journal= [[Alter Ego (magazine)|Alter Ego]]|issue= 104| page= 9|publisher= [[TwoMorrows Publishing]]|location= Raleigh, North Carolina}}</ref>

[[File:CaptainAmerica109.jpg|thumb|upright|left|''Captain America'' #109 (January 1969).<br />Cover art by [[Jack Kirby]] and [[Syd Shores]].]]
Captain America was then formally reintroduced in ''[[Avengers (comics)|The Avengers]]'' #4 (March 1964),<ref>DeFalco "1960s" in Gilbert (2008), p. 99: "'Captain America lives again!' announced the cover of ''The Avengers'' #4. A mere [four] months after his imposter had appeared in ''Strange Tales'' #114, the real Cap was back."</ref> which explained that in the final days of World War II, he had fallen from an experimental [[unmanned aerial vehicle|drone plane]] into the [[Atlantic Ocean|North Atlantic Ocean]] and spent decades frozen in a block of ice in a state of [[suspended animation]]. The hero found a new generation of readers as leader of that superhero team. Following the success of other Marvel characters introduced during the 1960s, Captain America was recast as a hero "haunted by past memories, and trying to adapt to 1960s society".<ref>Wright, p. 215.</ref>

After then guest-starring in the feature "[[Iron Man]]" in ''[[Tales of Suspense]]'' #58 (October 1964), Captain America gained his own solo feature in that "split book", beginning the following issue.<ref>DeFalco "1960s" in Gilbert (2008), p. 103</ref> Issue #63 (March 1965), which retold Captain America's origin, through issue #71 (November 1965) was a period feature set during World War II and co-starred Captain America's Golden Age sidekick, Bucky. Kirby drew all but two of the stories in ''Tales of Suspense,'' which became ''[[Captain America (comic book)|Captain America]]'' with #100 (April 1968);<ref>DeFalco "1960s" in Gilbert (2008), p. 128: "Hailing 1968 as the beginning of the 'Second Age of Marvel Comics,' and with more titles to play with, editor Stan Lee discarded his split books and gave more characters their own titles: ''Tales of Suspense'' #99 was followed by ''Captain America'' #100."</ref> [[Gil Kane]] and [[John Romita Sr.]], each filled in once. Several stories were finished by penciller-inker [[George Tuska]] over Kirby layouts, with one finished by Romita Sr. and another by penciller [[Dick Ayers]] and inker [[John Tartaglione]]. Kirby's regular inkers on the series were [[Frank Giacoia]] (as "Frank Ray") and [[Joe Sinnott]], though [[Don Heck]] and Golden Age Captain America artist [[Syd Shores]] inked one story each. A story in issue #155-157 revealed the 1950s "Commie Smasher" Captain America and Bucky to be imposters.

This series – considered ''Captain America'' volume one by comics researchers and historians,<ref>{{cite web | url=http://www.maelmill-insi.de/UHBMCC/capamer2.htm#S35 | title=''Captain America'' (1968–1996) | publisher=The Unofficial Handbook of Marvel Comics Creators | access-date=2010-11-11 | archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110224173534/http://www.maelmill-insi.de/UHBMCC/capamer2.htm#S35 | archive-date=2011-02-24 | url-status=live }} and {{gcdb series|id= 1860|title= Captain America}}</ref> following the 1940s ''Captain America Comics'' and its 1950s numbering continuation of ''Tales of Suspense'' – ended with #454 (August 1996).

This series was almost immediately followed by the 13-issue ''Captain America'' vol. 2 (November 1996 – November 1997, part of the "[[Heroes Reborn (1996 comics)|Heroes Reborn]]" crossover),<ref>{{cite web| url=http://www.maelmill-insi.de/UHBMCC/capamer5.htm#S380| title=''Captain America'' (II) (1996–1997)| publisher=The Unofficial Handbook of Marvel Comics Creators| access-date=2010-11-11| archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110525132021/http://www.maelmill-insi.de/UHBMCC/capamer5.htm#S380| archive-date=2011-05-25| url-status=live}} and {{gcdb series|id= 5542|title= Captain America vol. 2}}</ref> the 50-issue ''Captain America'' vol. 3 (January 1998 – February 2002),<ref>{{cite web | url=http://www.maelmill-insi.de/UHBMCC/capamer5.htm#S460 | title=''Captain America'' (III) (1998–2002) | publisher=The Unofficial Handbook of Marvel Comics Creators | access-date=2010-11-11 | archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110525132021/http://www.maelmill-insi.de/UHBMCC/capamer5.htm#S460 | archive-date=2011-05-25 | url-status=live }} and {{gcdb series|id= 6023|title=Captain America vol. 3}}</ref> the 32-issue ''Captain America'' vol. 4 (June 2002 – December 2004),<ref>{{cite web| url= http://www.maelmill-insi.de/UHBMCC/capamer9.htm#S3485| title= ''Captain America'' (IV) (2002–2004)| publisher= The Unofficial Handbook of Marvel Comics Creators| access-date= 2014-12-01| archive-url= https://web.archive.org/web/20141006192542/http://www.maelmill-insi.de/UHBMCC/capamer9.htm#S3485| archive-date= 2014-10-06| url-status=live}} and {{gcdb series|id= 9818|title= Captain America vol. 4}}</ref> and ''Captain America'' vol. 5 (January 2005 – August 2011).<ref>{{cite web | url=http://www.maelmill-insi.de/UHBMCC/capamer7.htm#S4744 | title=''Captain America'' (V) (2005–2007) | publisher=The Unofficial Handbook of Marvel Comics Creators | access-date=2010-11-11 | archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110226043737/http://www.maelmill-insi.de/UHBMCC/capamer7.htm#S4744 | archive-date=2011-02-26 | url-status=live }} and {{gcdb series|id= 12466|title= Captain America vol. 5}}</ref> Beginning with the 600th overall issue (August 2009), ''Captain America'' resumed its original numbering, as if the series numbering had continued uninterrupted after #454.

===Modern Age===
As part of the aftermath of Marvel Comics' company-crossover storyline "[[Civil War (comics)|Civil War]]",<!--the CROSSOVER STORY ARC is in quote marks; the actual one comic book SERIES titled is in italics--> Steve Rogers was ostensibly killed in ''Captain America'' vol. 5, #25 (March 2007). The storyline of Rogers' return began in issue #600.<ref>{{cite news |url=http://www.newsarama.com/comics/060915-Cap-Reborn.html |title=Updated: Captain America Speculation Over |first=Matt |last=Brady |date=June 15, 2009 |work=Newsarama |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20130122133343/http://www.newsarama.com/comics/060915-Cap-Reborn.html |archive-date=January 22, 2013 |url-status=live |access-date=December 28, 2010 }}</ref><ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.nydailynews.com/entertainment/music-arts/captain-america-steve-rogers-coming-back-life-years-marvel-comics-killed-article-1.376815 |title=Captain America, a.k.a. Steve Rogers is coming back to life two years after Marvel Comics killed him |first=Ethan |last=Sacks |date=June 16, 2009 |work=[[New York Daily News]] |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20130525053824/http://www.nydailynews.com/entertainment/music-arts/captain-america-steve-rogers-coming-back-life-years-marvel-comics-killed-article-1.376815 |archive-date=May 25, 2013 |url-status=live |access-date=December 28, 2010}}</ref> Rogers, who was not dead but caroming through time, returned to the present day in the six-issue miniseries ''[[Captain America: Reborn]]'' (September 2009 – March 2010).<ref>{{cite news |url=http://www.cnn.com/2009/SHOWBIZ/06/15/captain.america/index.html |title=Captain America, thought dead, comes back to life |first=Chris |last=Kokenes |date=June 15, 2009 |publisher=CNN |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20130530075755/http://www.cnn.com/2009/SHOWBIZ/06/15/captain.america/index.html |archive-date=May 30, 2013 |url-status=live |access-date=April 28, 2010}}</ref>

After Rogers' return, Barnes, at Rogers' insistence, continued as Captain America, beginning in the [[one-shot (comics)|one-shot]] comic ''Captain America: Who Will Wield the Shield?'' (February 2010). While Bucky Barnes continued adventuring in the pages of ''Captain America'', Steve Rogers received his own miniseries (''Steve Rogers: Super-Soldier'') as well as taking on the leadership position in a new ''Secret Avengers'' ongoing series. Spinoff series included ''Captain America Sentinel of Liberty'' (September 1998 – August 1999) and ''[[Captain America and the Falcon]]'' (May 2004 – June 2005). The 1940s Captain America appeared alongside the 1940s [[Human Torch (android)|Human Torch]] and [[Sub-Mariner]] in the 12-issue [[miniseries]] ''Avengers/Invaders''.<ref>{{cite web |url=http://marvel.com/news/comics/1385/wizard_world_chicago_2007_alex_ross_returns_to_marvel |title=Wizard World Chicago 2007: Alex Ross Returns to Marvel |first=Ryan |last=Penagos |date=August 11, 2007 |publisher=Marvel Comics |archive-url=https://www.webcitation.org/6lnd8Gd7W?url=http://marvel.com/news/comics/1385/wizard_world_chicago_2007_alex_ross_returns_to_marvel |archive-date=2016-11-05 |url-status=dead |access-date=2016-11-05 }}</ref><ref>{{cite web|url= http://www.comicbookresources.com/?page=article&id=11195|title= Ross' Return = ''Avengers/Invaders''|first= Jonah|last= Weiland|date= August 14, 2007|website= [[Comic Book Resources]]|archive-url= https://web.archive.org/web/20130521040830/http://www.comicbookresources.com/?page=article&id=11195|archive-date= May 21, 2013|url-status=live|access-date= January 14, 2009}}</ref> The 2007 [[Limited series (comics)|mini-series]] ''Captain America: The Chosen'', written by [[David Morrell]] and penciled by Mitchell Breitweiser, depicts a dying Steve Rogers' final minutes, at [[S.H.I.E.L.D.]] headquarters, as his spirit guides James Newman, a young American Marine fighting in [[Afghanistan]]. ''The Chosen'' is not part of the main Marvel Universe continuity.<ref>{{cite news |url= http://forum.newsarama.com/showthread.php?t=116612|title= David Morrell Talks Captain America: The Chosen|first= Matt|last= Brady|date= June 14, 2007|work= Newsarama|archive-url= https://web.archive.org/web/20071009221318/http://forum.newsarama.com/showthread.php?t=116612|archive-date=October 9, 2007 |url-status=dead|access-date= January 14, 2009}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|url= http://www.comicbookresources.com/?page=article&id=11191|title= The Four Virtues: Morrell Talks ''Captain America: The Chosen''|first= Dave|last= Richards|date= August 13, 2007|website= Comic Book Resources|archive-url= https://web.archive.org/web/20130521090020/http://www.comicbookresources.com/?page=article&id=11191|archive-date= May 21, 2013|url-status=live|access-date= January 14, 2009}}</ref>

During the "Two Americas" storyline that ran in issues #602-605, the series drew controversy for the similarity between protesters depicted in the comic and the [[Tea Party movement]]. Particularly drawing scorn was a panel of a protester holding sign that read "Tea Bag the Libs Before They Tea Bag You!"<ref>{{cite web|first=Kerry |last=Picket |url=http://washingtontimes.com/weblogs/watercooler/2010/feb/10/marvel-admits-mistake-captain-america-comic/ |title=Marvel admits to 'mistake' in controversial Captain America comic |work=Watercooler |publisher=[[The Washington Times]] |date=February 10, 2010 |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20100214003603/http://www.washingtontimes.com/weblogs/watercooler/2010/feb/10/marvel-admits-mistake-captain-america-comic/ |archive-date=February 14, 2010}}</ref> Also drawing controversy were remarks made by the Falcon implying that the crowd is racist.<ref>{{cite web |first=Dave |last=Itzkoff |url=http://artsbeat.blogs.nytimes.com/2010/02/10/stars-and-gripes-tea-party-protests-captain-america-comic/ |title=Stars and Gripes: Tea Party Protests Captain America Comic |work=Arts Beat |publisher=[[The New York Times]] |date=February 10, 2010 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20170609055857/https://artsbeat.blogs.nytimes.com/2010/02/10/stars-and-gripes-tea-party-protests-captain-america-comic/ |archive-date=June 9, 2017 |url-status=live }}</ref> In his column on [[Comic Book Resources]], Marvel Comics Editor-in-Chief [[Joe Quesada]] apologized for the sign, claiming that it was a mistake, added by the letterer at the last minute.<ref>{{cite web |first=Joe |last=Quesada |author-link=Joe Quesada |url=http://comicbookresources.com/?page=article&id=24784 |title=Political Controversy & The Heroic Age |access-date=2017-03-02 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20160805195906/http://www.comicbookresources.com/?page=article&id=24784 |archive-date=2016-08-05 |url-status=live }}</ref>

The character, first as agent Steve Rogers and later after resuming his identity as Captain America, appeared as a regular character throughout the 2010–2013 ''Avengers'' series, from issue #1 (July 2010) through its final issue #34 (January 2013). The character appeared as agent Steve Rogers as a regular character in the 2010–2013 ''Secret Avengers'' series, from issue #1 (July 2010) through issue #21 (March 2012); the character made guest appearances as Captain America in issues #21.1, #22–23, #35, and the final issue of the series #37 (March 2013). Marvel stated in May 2011 that Rogers, following the public death of Bucky Barnes in the ''[[Fear Itself (comics)|Fear Itself]]'' miniseries, would resume his Captain America identity in a sixth volume of ''Captain America'', by writer [[Ed Brubaker]] and artist [[Steve McNiven]].<ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.comicsalliance.com/2011/05/30/captain-america-brubaker-mcniven-preview |title=Steve Rogers Returns to Duty with Brubaker & McNiven in ''Captain America'' #1 |first=Andy |last=Khouri |date=May 30, 2011 |publisher=[[Townsquare Media|ComicsAlliance]] |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20130523183430/http://www.comicsalliance.com/2011/05/30/captain-america-brubaker-mcniven-preview |archive-date=May 23, 2013 |url-status=dead |access-date=June 14, 2011}}</ref><ref>{{gcdb series|id= 59241|title= Captain America vol. 6}}</ref>

The ''Captain America'' title continued from issue #620 featuring team up stories with Bucky (#620-#628),<ref>{{gcdb series|id= 59240|title= Captain America and Bucky}}</ref> Hawkeye (#629-#632),<ref>{{gcdb series|id= 64742|title= Captain America and Hawkeye}}</ref> Iron Man (#633–635),<ref>{{gcdb series|id= 66557|title= Captain America and Iron Man}}</ref> Namor (#635.1),<ref>{{gcdb series|id= 68207|title= Captain America and Namor}}</ref> and Black Widow (#636-#640),<ref>{{gcdb series|id= 68401|title= Captain America and Black Widow}}</ref> and the title ended its print run with issue #640. Captain America is a regular character in ''[[Uncanny Avengers]]'' (2012), beginning with issue #1 as part of [[Marvel NOW!]]. ''Captain America'' vol. 7 was launched in November 2012 with a January 2013 cover date by writer [[Rick Remender]] and artist [[John Romita Jr.]]<ref>{{gcdb series|id= 68655|title= Captain America vol. 7}}</ref>

On July 16, 2014, Marvel Comics announced that the mantle of Captain America would be passed on by Rogers (who in the most recent storyline has been turned into a 90-year-old man) to his long-time ally [[Falcon (comics)|The Falcon]], with the series being relaunched as ''All-New Captain America''.<ref>{{cite web |url= http://www.nydailynews.com/entertainment/theater-arts/new-captain-america-african-american-article-1.1869686|title= New Captain America will be African-American, as the Falcon takes over the star-spangled mantle in the comic books|first= Ethan|last= Sacks|date= July 17, 2014|work= New York Daily News|archive-url= https://web.archive.org/web/20141022031235/http://www.nydailynews.com/entertainment/theater-arts/new-captain-america-african-american-article-1.1869686|archive-date= October 22, 2014|url-status=live}}</ref> Marvel announced that Rogers will become Captain America once again in the comic series ''Captain America: Steve Rogers''.<ref>{{cite web |url=http://marvel.com/news/comics/25640/the_original_captain_america_returns |title=The Original Captain America Returns |publisher=Marvel Comics |last=Parkin |first=JK |date=January 19, 2016 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20160122173128/http://marvel.com/news/comics/25640/the_original_captain_america_returns |archive-date=2016-01-22 |url-status=dead |access-date=2016-01-20 }}</ref> This new series follows the events of "[[Avengers: Standoff!]]," in which Captain America is restored to his youthful state following an encounter with the sentient Cosmic Cube, Kobik, and his past is drastically rewritten under the instructions of the Red Skull.

Afterwards, Captain America plots to set himself and Hydra in a position where they can conquer America in Marvel's event "[[Secret Empire (comic book)|Secret Empire]]".<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.ign.com/articles/2016/03/30/how-does-steve-rogers-become-captain-america-again|title=How Does Steve Rogers Become Captain America Again?|last=Schedeen|first=Jesse|date=2016-03-30|website=IGN|language=en-US|access-date=2017-04-18|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20170419111146/http://www.ign.com/articles/2016/03/30/how-does-steve-rogers-become-captain-america-again|archive-date=2017-04-19|url-status=live}}</ref> This is an alternate timeline Captain America who is fond of Nazis, joining Hydra before World War II, and was later defeated by numerous superheroes during Hydra's takeover of the United States. Following this, the original Rogers returns as Captain America and Wilson returns as the Falcon. As part of Marvel's [[Fresh Start (comics)|Fresh Start]] rebrand, a new ''Captain America'' series starring Rogers and written by [[Ta-Nehisi Coates]] and art by [[Leinil Francis Yu]]. The series ran from July 2018 to June 2021, the 80th anniversary of the character.

==Legal status==
In 1966, Joe Simon sued the owners of Marvel Comics, asserting that he—not Marvel—was legally entitled to renew the [[copyright]] upon the expiration of the original 28-year term. The two parties settled out of court, with Simon agreeing to a statement that the character had been created under terms of employment by the publisher, and therefore it was [[work for hire]] owned by them.<ref name=philly>{{cite web|url=http://www.philadelphiabar.org/page/TPLSummer03CaptainAmerica|work=The Philadelphia Lawyer| publisher= Philadelphia Bar Association |access-date= August 6, 2013|title=The Struggle for Captain America|last=Lovitz|first=Michael | archive-date= December 2, 2013 | archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20131202222355/http://www.philadelphiabar.org/page/TPLSummer03CaptainAmerica | url-status=live}}</ref>

In 1999, Simon filed to claim the copyright to Captain America under a provision of the [[Copyright Act of 1976]], which allowed the original creators of works that had been sold to corporations to reclaim them after the original 56-year copyright term (but not the longer term enacted by the new legislation) had expired. Marvel Entertainment challenged the claim, arguing that the settlement of Simon's 1966 suit made the character ineligible for termination of the copyright transfer. Simon and Marvel settled out of court in 2003, in a deal that paid Simon royalties for merchandising and licensing use of the character.<ref name=philly/><ref>{{cite news|title= Joe Simon, a Creator of Captain America, Fighting On|url= https://www.nytimes.com/2008/04/16/books/16gust.html?pagewanted=all&_r=0|work= [[The New York Times]]|first= George Gene|last= Gustines|date= April 16, 2008|archive-url= https://web.archive.org/web/20181102081658/https://www.nytimes.com/2008/04/16/books/16gust.html?pagewanted=all&_r=0|archive-date= November 2, 2018|url-status=dead|access-date= August 6, 2013}}</ref>

==Fictional character biography==

===20th century===
====1940s====
[[File:Captain America Comics 1 (March 1941) page 1.jpg|thumb|upright|Captain America and Bucky's debuts, in ''Captain America Comics'' #1 (March 1941 Timely Comics). Art by [[Jack Kirby]].]]
Steven Rogers was born in the [[Lower East Side]] of [[Manhattan]], [[New York City]], in 1920 to poor [[Irish people|Irish]] immigrants, Sarah and Joseph Rogers.<ref name="sentinel">{{cite comic |writer=[[Fabian Nicieza|Nicieza, Fabian]] |penciller=[[Kevin Maguire (artist)|Maguire, Kevin]] |inker=[[Josef Rubinstein|Rubinstein, Joe]] |story=First Flight of the Eagle |title=The Adventures of Captain America |issue=1 |date=September 1991}}</ref> Joseph died when Steve was a child, and Sarah died of pneumonia while Steve was a teen. By early 1940, before America's entry into [[World War II]], Rogers is a tall, scrawny [[fine art]]s student specializing in illustration and a comic book writer and artist while also participating in the [[Works Progress Administration]]'s [[Federal Arts Project]].<ref>{{citation |last1=Nicieza |first1=Fabian |last2=Maguire |first2=Kevin |title=The Adventures of Captain America |date=September 1991 |issue=1 |page=9 <!--|access-date=11 March 2023-->}}</ref>

Disturbed by the devastation of Europe by the Nazis, Rogers attempts to enlist but is rejected due to his frail body. His resolution attracts the notice of U.S. Army General [[Chester Phillips]] and "Project: Rebirth". Rogers is used as a test subject for the [[Supersoldier|Super-Soldier]] project, receiving a special serum made by "Dr. Josef Reinstein",<ref name="captainamericacomics1">{{cite comic |writer=[[Joe Simon|Simon, Joe]]; [[Jack Kirby|Kirby, Jack]] |penciller=Kirby, Jack |inker=Liederman, Al |story=Case No. 1. Meet Captain America |title=Captain America Comics |issue=1 |date=March 1941}}</ref><ref name="modernorigin">{{cite comic |writer=[[Stan Lee|Lee, Stan]] |penciller=Kirby, Jack |inker=[[Syd Shores|Shores, Syd]] |story=The Hero That Was!|title= Captain America |issue=109 |date=January 1969}}</ref> later [[Retroactive continuity|retroactively changed]] to a code name for the scientist [[Abraham Erskine]].<ref name="stern origin">{{cite comic |writer= [[Roger Stern|Stern, Roger]] |penciller=[[John Byrne (comics)|Byrne, John]]|inker= Rubinstein, Joe |story=The Living Legend |title=Captain America |issue=255 |date=March 1981}}</ref>

The serum is a success and transforms Steve Rogers into a nearly perfect human being with peak strength, agility, stamina, and intelligence. The success of the program leaves Erskine wondering about replicating the experiment on other human beings.<ref name="modernorigin"/> The process itself has been inconsistently detailed: While in the original material Rogers is shown receiving injections of the Super-Serum, when the origin was retold in the 1960s, the [[Comic Code Authority]] had already put a veto over graphic description of drug intake and abuse, and thus the Super-Serum was [[Retroactive continuity|retconned]] into an oral formula.<ref name="tos origin">{{cite comic |writer=Lee, Stan |penciller=Kirby, Jack |inker=[[Frank Giacoia|Giacoia, Frank]] |story=The Origin of Captain America! |title=[[Tales of Suspense]] |issue=63 |date=March 1965}}</ref> A later revision of the origin had Dr. Erskine subject Rogers to a special radiological treatment where the subject is bombarded by Vita-Rays to safely activate and stabilize the drug treatment on Rogers' physiology.<ref>{{cite journal |last1=Lee |first1=Stan |last2=Kirby |first2=Jack |title=The Hero that Was |journal=Captain America |date=1969 |volume=1 |issue=109 |page=15}}</ref>

Erskine refused to write down every crucial element of the treatment, leaving behind a flawed, imperfect knowledge of the steps. Thus, when the Nazi [[secret agent|spy]] [[Heinz Kruger]] killed him, Erskine's method of creating new Super-Soldiers died. Captain America, in his first act after his transformation, avenges Erskine. In the 1941 origin story and in ''Tales of Suspense'' #63, Kruger dies when running into machinery but is not killed by Rogers; in the ''Captain America'' #109 and #255 revisions, Rogers causes the spy's death by punching him into machinery.<ref name="modernorigin"/>

Unable to create new Super-Soldiers and willing to hide the Project Rebirth fiasco, the American government casts Rogers as a patriotic superhero, able to counter the menace of the [[Red Skull]] as a [[counter-intelligence]] agent. He is supplied with a patriotic uniform of his own design,<ref name="sentinel"/> a bulletproof shield, a personal [[Sidearm (weapon)|side arm]], and the codename Captain America, while posing as a clumsy [[infantry]] private at Camp Lehigh in Virginia. He forms a friendship with the camp's teenage [[mascot]], James Buchanan "Bucky" Barnes.<ref name="captainamericacomics1"/>

Barnes learns of Rogers' [[secret identity|dual identity]] and offers to keep the secret if he can become Captain America's [[sidekick]]. During their adventures, [[Franklin D. Roosevelt]] presents Captain America with [[Captain America's shield|a new shield]], forged from an alloy of [[steel]] and [[vibranium]], fused by an unknown catalyst, so effective that it replaces his own firearm.<ref name="stern origin"/> Throughout World War II, Captain America and Bucky fight the Nazi menace both on their own and as members of the superhero team the [[Invaders (comics)|Invaders]] as seen in the 1970s comic of the same name.<ref name="invaders">{{cite comic| writer= [[Roy Thomas|Thomas, Roy]]|penciller= [[Frank Robbins|Robbins, Frank]]|inker= [[Vince Colletta|Colletta, Vince]]|story= A Captain Called America|title= [[Invaders (comics)|Giant-Size Invaders]]|issue= 1|date= June 1975}}</ref> Captain America fights in numerous battles in World War II, primarily as a member of 1st Battalion, [[26th Infantry Regiment]] "Blue Spaders".<ref>{{cite web|url= http://www.army.mil/article/142301/|title= From 'Blue Spader' to Avenger: Marvel superhero Captain America served with the 'Big Red One'|first= J. Parker|last= Roberts|date= February 5, 2015|publisher= [[United States Army]]|archive-url= https://web.archive.org/web/20151117064208/http://www.army.mil/article/142301/|archive-date= November 17, 2015|url-status=live|quote= Steve Rogers, known to fans worldwide as Captain America, served with the 1st Infantry Division's 26th Infantry Regiment, also known as the 'Blue Spaders,' during World War II, as shown in ''Mythos: Captain America,'' a 2008 comic written by Paul Jenkins with art by Paolo Rivera.}}</ref> Captain America battles a number of criminal menaces on American soil, including a wide variety of costumed villains: the Wax Man,<ref>{{cite comic| writer= Simon, Joe; Kirby, Jack|penciller= Simon, Joe; Kirby, Jack|inker= Simon, Joe|story= The Wax Statue That Struck Death|title= Captain America Comics|issue= 2|date= April 1941}}</ref> the Hangman,<ref>{{cite comic| writer= Simon, Joe; Kirby, Jack|penciller= Simon, Joe; Kirby, Jack|inker= Simon, Joe|story= The Strange Case of Captain America and The Hangman: Who Killed Doctor Vordoff|title= Captain America Comics|issue= 6|date= September 1941}}</ref> the Fang,<ref>{{cite comic| writer= Simon, Joe; Kirby, Jack|penciller= Simon, Joe; Kirby, Jack|inker= Simon, Joe|story= Meet the Fang, Arch-Fiend of the Orient|title= Captain America Comics|issue= 6|date= September 1941}}</ref> the Black Talon,<ref>{{cite comic| writer= [[Otto Binder|Binder, Otto]]|penciller= Kirby, Jack|inker= Shores, Syd|story= The Case of the Black Talon|title= Captain America Comics|issue= 9|date= December 1941}}</ref> and the White Death,<ref>{{cite comic| writer= Simon, Joe; Kirby, Jack|penciller= Kirby, Jack|inker= Simon, Joe|story= The White Death|title= Captain America Comics|issue= 9|date= December 1941}}</ref> among others.

In addition to Bucky, Captain America was occasionally assisted by the [[Sentinels of Liberty]].<ref>{{cite journal|last=Dittmer|first=Jason|title= 'America is safe while its boys and girls believe in its creeds!': Captain America and American identity prior to World War 2|journal= [[Environment and Planning|Environment and Planning D: Society and Space]]|date=March 23, 2007|volume=25|issue=3|pages=401–423|doi=10.1068/d1905|s2cid=143346525}}</ref> Sentinels of Liberty was the title given to members of the ''Captain America Comics'' fan club who Captain America sometimes addressed as an aside, or as characters in the ''Captain America Comics'' stories.

In late April 1945, during the closing days of World War II, Captain America and Bucky try to stop the villainous [[Baron Heinrich Zemo|Baron Zemo]] from destroying an experimental drone plane. Zemo launches the plane with an armed explosive on it with Rogers and Barnes in hot pursuit. The pair reaches the plane just before takeoff. When Bucky tries to defuse the bomb, it explodes in mid-air. Rogers is hurled into the freezing waters of the North Atlantic. Both are presumed dead, though it is later revealed that neither had died.<ref name="theavengers4"/>

====Late 1940s to 1950s====
Captain America appeared in comics for the next few years, changing from World War II-era hero fighting the Nazis to confronting the United States' newest enemy, [[Communism]]. The revival of the character in the mid-1950s was short-lived, and events during that time period are later retconned to show that multiple people operated using the code name to explain the changes in the character. These post World War II successors are listed as [[Spirit of '76 (Marvel Comics)|William Naslund]] and [[Jeffrey Mace]]. They are assisted by [[Bucky (Marvel Comics)#Fred Davis|Fred Davis]] continuing the role of Bucky.

The last of these other official Captains, [[Captain America (William Burnside)|William Burnside]],<ref name="cap602">{{cite comic| writer= [[Ed Brubaker|Brubaker, Ed]]|penciller= [[Luke Ross|Ross, Luke]]|inker= [[Jackson Guice|Guice, Butch]]; Ross, Luke|story= Two Americas Part 1|title= Captain America|issue= 602|date= March 2010}}</ref> was a history graduate enamored with the Captain America mythos, having his appearance surgically altered to resemble Rogers and legally changing his name to "Steve Rogers", becoming the new "1950s Captain America".<ref name="CA153">{{cite comic| writer= [[Steve Englehart|Englehart, Steve]]|penciller= [[Sal Buscema|Buscema, Sal]]|inker= [[Jim Mooney|Mooney, Jim]]|story= Captain America—Hero Or Hoax?|title= Captain America|issue= 153|date= September 1972}}</ref> He administered to himself and his pupil [[Jack Monroe (comics)|James "Jack" Monroe]] a flawed, incomplete copy of the Super-Serum, which made no mention about the necessary Vita-Ray portion of the treatment. As a result, while Burnside and Monroe became the new Captain America and Bucky, they became violently paranoid, often raving about innocent people being communist sympathizers during the height of the [[Red Scare]] of the 1950s. Their insanity forced the U.S. government to place them in indefinite cryogenic storage until they could be cured of their mental illness.<ref name="CA156">{{cite comic| writer= Englehart, Steve|penciller= Buscema, Sal|inker= [[Frank McLaughlin (artist)|McLaughlin, Frank]]|story= One Into Two Won't Go!|title= Captain America|issue= 156|date= December 1972}}</ref> Monroe would later be cured and assume the Nomad identity.<ref>{{cite comic| writer= [[J. M. DeMatteis|DeMatteis, J. M.]]|penciller= [[Mike Zeck|Zeck, Mike]]|inker= [[John Beatty (illustrator)|Beatty, John]]|story= Before the Fall!|title= Captain America|issue= 281|date= May 1983}}</ref>

====1960s to 1970s====
Years later, the superhero team the [[Avengers (comics)|Avengers]] composed by [[Iron Man]] [[Hank Pym|Giant-Man]], [[Wasp (character)|Wasp]] and [[Thor (Marvel Comics)|Thor]] discovers Steve Rogers' body in the North Atlantic. After he revives, they piece together that Rogers has been preserved in a block of ice since 1945, surviving because of his enhancements from Project: Rebirth. The block began to melt after the [[Namor|Sub-Mariner]], enraged that an [[Inuit]] tribe is worshipping the frozen figure, throws it into the ocean.<ref name="theavengers4">{{cite comic| writer= Lee, Stan|penciller= Kirby, Jack|inker= [[George Roussos|Roussos, George]]|story= Captain America Joins&nbsp; ... The Avengers!|title= The [[Avengers (comics)|Avengers]]|issue= 4|date= March 1964}}</ref> Rogers accepts membership in the Avengers, and his experience in individual combat service and his time with the Invaders makes him a valuable asset. He quickly assumes leadership<ref>{{cite comic| writer= Lee, Stan|penciller= Kirby, Jack|inker= [[Dick Ayers|Ayers, Dick]]|story= The Old Order Changeth|title= The Avengers|issue= 16|date= May 1965}}</ref> and has typically returned to that position throughout the team's history.

[[File:CaptainAmericaV1-180.jpg|thumb|left|''Captain America'' #180 (December 1974). Captain America becomes "Nomad". Cover art by [[Gil Kane]] and [[Frank Giacoia]].]]
Captain America is plagued by guilt for having been unable to prevent Bucky's death. Although he takes the young [[Rick Jones (comics)|Rick Jones]] (who closely resembles Bucky) under his tutelage, he refuses for some time to allow Jones to take up the Bucky identity, not wishing to be responsible for another youth's death. Insisting that his hero move on from that loss, Jones convinces Rogers to let him don the Bucky costume,<ref>{{cite comic| writer= Lee, Stan|penciller= [[Jim Steranko|Steranko, Jim]]|inker= [[Joe Sinnott|Sinnott, Joe]]|story= No Longer Alone!|title= Captain America|issue= 110|date= February 1969}}</ref> but this partnership lasts only a short time; a disguised [[Red Skull]], impersonating Rogers with the help of the [[Cosmic Cube]], drives Jones away.

Rogers reunites with his old war comrade [[Nick Fury]], who is similarly well-preserved due to the "Infinity Formula". As a result, Rogers regularly undertakes missions for the security agency [[S.H.I.E.L.D.]], for which Fury is public director.<ref name="tos78">{{cite comic| writer= Lee, Stan|penciller= Kirby, Jack|inker= Giacoia, Frank|story= Them!|title= Tales of Suspense|issue= 78|date= June 1966}}</ref> Through Fury, Rogers befriends [[Sharon Carter]], a S.H.I.E.L.D. agent,<ref>{{cite comic| writer= Lee, Stan|penciller= Kirby, Jack; Ayers, Dick|inker= [[John Tartaglione|Tartaglione, John]]|story= 30 Minutes to Live!|title= Tales of Suspense|issue= 75|date= March 1966}}</ref> with whom he eventually begins a romantic relationship.

Rogers later meets and trains Sam Wilson, who becomes the superhero the [[Falcon (comics)|Falcon]],<ref>{{cite comic| writer= Lee, Stan|penciller= [[Gene Colan|Colan, Gene]]|inker= Sinnott, Joe|story= The Coming of&nbsp; ... the Falcon!|title= Captain America|issue= 117|date= September 1969}}</ref> the first [[African-American]] superhero in mainstream comic books.<ref>{{cite web |url=http://marvel.com/news/comics/15240/a_marvel_black_history_lesson_pt_1#ixzz1QFnuw5Yi |title=A Marvel Black History Lesson Pt. 1 |first=David |last=Brothers |date=February 18, 2011 |publisher=Marvel Comics |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110223070024/http://marvel.com/news/story/15240/a_marvel_black_history_lesson_pt_1 |archive-date=February 23, 2011 |url-status=dead |quote=Quoting Marvel Senior Vice President of Publishing Tom Brevoort: 'The Falcon was the very first African-American super hero, as opposed to The Black Panther, who preceded him, but wasn't American.'}}</ref><ref>DeFalco "1960s" in Gilbert (2008), p. 137: "The Black Panther may have broken the mold as Marvel's first black super hero, but he was from Africa. The Falcon was the first black American super hero. Introduced by Stan Lee and artist Gene Colan, Sam 'Snap' Wilson was a former community volunteer."</ref><!--Black Panther is African, not African-American; Falcon predates Luke Cage and John Stewart Green Lantern. See [[List of African-American firsts]]. Lion Man debuted in 1947 in All-Negro Comics, but this book did not have national distribution and cannot be considered "mainstream"--> The characters established an enduring friendship and adventuring partnership, sharing the series title for some time as ''Captain America and the Falcon''.<ref name="Olshevsky">{{cite journal|last = Olshevsky|first = George|title = Heroes From ''Tales of Suspense'', Book One: Captain America|journal = The Marvel Comics Index|issue = 8A|pages = 64 and 93|publisher = G&T Enterprises|date = December 1979}}</ref> The two later encounter the revived but still insane [[Grand Director|1950s Captain America]].<ref name="CA153" /><ref name="CA156" /><ref>{{cite comic| writer= Englehart, Steve|penciller= Buscema, Sal|inker= [[John Verpoorten|Verpoorten, John]]; Mortellaro|story= The Falcon Fights Alone|title= Captain America|issue= 154|date= October 1972}}</ref><ref>{{cite comic| writer= Englehart, Steve|penciller= Buscema, Sal|inker= McLaughlin, Frank|story= The Incredible Origin of the Other Captain America|title= Captain America|issue= 155|date= November 1972}}</ref><ref>Sanderson "1970s" in Gilbert (2008), p. 156: "In his first story line as ''Captain America and the Falcon'' writer, Steve Englehart revealed that an unnamed teacher had rediscovered the 'Super Soldier Serum' in the 1950s and he and a student used it to turn themselves into new versions of Captain America and Bucky."</ref> Although Rogers and the Falcon defeat the faux Rogers and Jack Monroe, Rogers becomes deeply disturbed that he could have suffered his counterpart's fate. During this period, Rogers temporarily gains super strength.<ref name="CA159">{{cite comic| writer= Englehart, Steve|penciller= Buscema, Sal|inker= Verpoorten, John|story= Turning Point|title= Captain America|issue= 159|date= March 1972}}</ref>

The series dealt with the [[Marvel Universe]]'s version of the [[Watergate scandal]],<ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.steveenglehart.com/Comics/Captain%20America%20169-176.html |title=Captain America |first=Steve |last=Englehart |date=n.d. |publisher=SteveEnglehart.com |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20121225141326/http://www.steveenglehart.com/comics/captain%20america%20169-176.html |archive-date=December 25, 2012 |url-status=live |access-date=April 21, 2013 |quote=America was moving from the overarching Vietnam War toward the specific crimes of Watergate.}}</ref><ref>{{cite book|last = Englehart|first = Steve|author2=Buscema, Sal|title = Captain America and the Falcon: Secret Empire|publisher = Marvel Comics|year = 2005|page = 160|isbn = 978-0-7851-1836-7}}</ref><ref>Sanderson "1970s" in Gilbert (2008), p. 164: "Inspired by the real life Watergate scandals, writer Steve Englehart devised a story line about a conspiracy within the U.S. government."</ref> making Rogers so uncertain about his role that he abandons his Captain America identity in favor of one called [[Nomad (comics)|Nomad]],<ref>Sanderson "1970s" in Gilbert (2008), p. 167: "Shocked by learning the identity of Number One of the Secret Empire, Steve Rogers abandoned his Captain America role and adopted a new costumed identity, Nomad."</ref> emphasizing the word's meaning as "man without a country". During this time, several men unsuccessfully assume the Captain America identity.<ref>{{cite book|last = Englehart|first = Steve |author2=Buscema, Sal |author3=Robbins, Frank|title = Captain America and the Falcon: Nomad|publisher = Marvel Comics|year = 2007|page = 192|isbn = 978-0-7851-2197-8}}</ref> Rogers eventually re-assumes it after coming to consider that the identity could be a symbol of American ideals and not its government; it's a personal conviction epitomized when he later confronted a corrupt Army officer attempting to manipulate him by appealing to his loyalty, "I'm loyal to nothing, General&nbsp; ... except the [American] Dream." Jack Monroe, cured of his mental instability, later takes up the Nomad alias.<ref name="CA282">{{cite comic| writer= DeMatteis, J. M.|penciller= Zeck, Mike|inker= Beatty, John|story= On Your Belly You Shall Crawl, and Dust Shall You Eat!|title= Captain America|issue= 282|date= June 1983}}</ref> Sharon Carter is believed to have been killed while under the mind control of [[Doctor Faustus (comics)|Dr. Faustus]].<ref>{{cite comic| writer= [[Chris Claremont|Claremont, Chris]]; [[Roger McKenzie (comics)|McKenzie, Roger]]|penciller= Buscema, Sal; [[Don Perlin|Perlin, Don]]|inker= Perlin, Don|story= From the Ashes&nbsp; ... |title= Captain America|issue= 237|date= September 1979}}</ref>

====1980s to 1990s====
[[File:Captain America 350.jpg|thumb|''Captain America'' #350 (February 1989). Rogers as "the Captain" vs. John Walker as Captain America. Cover art by [[Kieron Dwyer]] and [[Al Milgrom]].]]
The 1980s included a run by writer [[Roger Stern]] and artist [[John Byrne (comics)|John Byrne]]. Stern had Rogers consider a run for President of the United States in ''Captain America'' #250 (June 1980),<ref>{{cite comic| writer= Stern, Roger|penciller= Byrne, John|inker= Rubinstein, Joe|story= Cap For President!|title= Captain America|issue= 250|date= October 1980}}</ref> an idea originally developed by [[Roger McKenzie (comics)|Roger McKenzie]] and [[Don Perlin]]. Stern, in his capacity as editor of the title, originally rejected the idea but later changed his mind about the concept.<ref name="Cronin">{{cite web |url=http://goodcomics.comicbookresources.com/2010/05/22/the-greatest-roger-stern-stories-ever-told/ |title=The Greatest Roger Stern Stories Ever Told! |first=Brian |last=Cronin |date=May 10, 2010 |website=Comic Book Resources |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20111026034402/http://goodcomics.comicbookresources.com/2010/05/22/the-greatest-roger-stern-stories-ever-told/ |archive-date=October 26, 2011 |url-status=live |access-date=February 20, 2012 }}</ref><ref>{{cite news |url= http://forum.newsarama.com/showthread.php?t=1046|title= Looking Back:Stern & Byrne's Captain America|first= Matt|last= Brady|date= November 28, 2002|work= Newsarama|archive-url= https://web.archive.org/web/20090125131416/http://forum.newsarama.com/showthread.php?t=1046|archive-date=January 25, 2009 |url-status=dead|access-date= February 20, 2012|quote= The story, according to Stern, began a year previously, when Roger McKenzie and Don Perlin were the creative team on Captain America, and Stern was an editor at Marvel. McKenzie and Perlin wanted Cap to run for office and win, setting up four years' worth of stories in and around Washington, D.C. and the duties of the president. While it could've made for a great pop-culture civics lesson, Stern 86'd the idea.}}</ref> McKenzie and Perlin received credit for the idea on the letters page at Stern's insistence.<ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.marvelmasterworks.com/features/int_stern_1006_2.html |title=The Roger Stern Interview: The Triumphs and Trials of the Writer |first=George |last=Khoury |publisher=Marvel Masterworks Resource Page |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20120309110856/http://www.marvelmasterworks.com/features/int_stern_1006_2.html |archive-date=March 9, 2012 |url-status=dead |access-date=February 20, 2012 |quote=I made sure that 1) Roger McK. and Don knew about it, and 2) they were credited with the idea on the letters page.}}</ref> Stern additionally introduced a new love interest, law student [[Bernie Rosenthal]], in ''Captain America'' #248 (August 1980).<ref>DeFalco "1980s" in Gilbert (2008), p. 198: "Bernie Rosenthal was a professional glass-blower and former college activist, who was created by writer Roger Stern and artist John Byrne."</ref>
In 1966, Joe Simon sued Marvel Comics, asserting that he was legally entitled to [[Copyright renewal in the United States|renew the copyright]] on the character upon the expiration of the original 28-year term. The two parties settled out of court, with Simon agreeing to a statement that the character had been created under terms of employment by the publisher, and was therefore [[work for hire]] owned by the company.<ref name="Lawsuit1"/> Captain America's [[Captain America (comic book)|self-titled ongoing series]] was relaunched in April 1968, with Lee as writer and Kirby as penciller; Kirby later departed the series, and was replaced by [[Gene Colan]].{{sfn|Kaplan|2006|p=56}} In 1969, writer and artist [[Jim Steranko]] authored a three-issue run of ''Captain America''. Despite the brevity of Steranko's time on the series, his contributions significantly influenced how Captain America would be represented in post-war comics, reestablishing the character's [[secret identity]] and positioning the character as deeply conflicted by the tension between America [[American Dream|as it idealizes itself to be]] and America in reality – a theme that would recur frequently in ''Captain America'' comics in the subsequent decades.{{sfn|Morse|2007|pp=33–34}}{{sfn|Hayton|Albright|2009|p=19}}
Writer [[J. M. DeMatteis]] revealed the true face and full origin of the [[Red Skull]] in ''Captain America'' #298–300, and had Captain America take on Jack Monroe, Nomad, as a partner for a time.<ref name="CA282"/> The heroes gathered by the [[Beyonder]] elect Rogers as leader during their stay on [[Battleworld]].{{r|secretwars1}} [[Homophobia]] is dealt with as Rogers runs into a childhood friend named [[Arnold Roth (Captain America)|Arnold Roth]] who is gay.<ref>{{cite comic| writer= DeMatteis, J. M.|penciller= Zeck, Mike|inker= Beatty, John; Colletta, Vince; Villamonte, Ricardo|story= Someone Who Cares|title= Captain America|issue= 270|date= June 1982}}</ref><ref>{{cite book|last = Witt|first = Lynn|author2 = Thomas, Sherry|author3 = Marcus, Eric|title = Out in All Directions: Almanac of Gay and Lesbian America|publisher = Warner Books|year = 1995|isbn = 978-0-446-51822-2|url-access = registration|url = https://archive.org/details/outinalldirectio00witt}}</ref>


===1970s: Political shifts===
[[Mark Gruenwald]] became the writer of the series with issue #307 (July 1985) and wrote 137 issues for 10 consecutive years from until #443 (September 1995),<ref>{{gcdb|type=writer|search= Mark+Gruenwald|title= Mark Gruenwald}}</ref> the most issues by any single author in the character's history. Gruenwald created several new foes, including Crossbones and the Serpent Society. Other Gruenwald characters included [[Diamondback (Rachel Leighton)|Diamondback]],<ref>{{cite comic| writer= [[Mark Gruenwald|Gruenwald, Mark]]|penciller= [[Paul Neary|Neary, Paul]]|inker= Janke, Dennis|story= Serpents of the World Unite|title= Captain America|issue= 310|date= October 1985}}</ref> [[U.S. Agent (comics)|Super Patriot]],<ref>{{cite comic| writer= Gruenwald, Mark|penciller= Neary, Paul|inker= Beatty John|story= Super-Patriot Is Here|title= Captain America|issue= 323|date= November 1986}}</ref> and [[Demolition Man (comics)|Demolition Man]].<ref>{{cite comic| writer= Gruenwald, Mark|penciller= Neary, Paul|inker= Colletta, Vince|story= The Hard Way!|title= Captain America|issue= 328|date= April 1987}}</ref> Gruenwald explored numerous political and social themes as well, such as extreme idealism when Captain America fights the anti-nationalist terrorist [[Flag-Smasher]];<ref name="flagsmasher">{{cite comic| writer= Gruenwald, Mark|penciller= Neary, Paul|inker= Janke, Dennis|story= Deface the Nation|title= Captain America|issue= 312|date= December 1985}}</ref> and [[vigilante|vigilantism]] when he hunts the murderous [[Scourge of the Underworld]].<ref name="Scourge">{{cite book|last = Gruenwald|first = Mark|author2=Neary, Paul|title = Captain America: Scourge of the Underworld|publisher = Marvel Comics|year = 2011|page = 296|isbn = 978-0-7851-4962-0}}</ref>
{{Quote box
|quote = "This was the '70s – prime [[Opposition to United States involvement in the Vietnam War|anti-war years]] – and here was a guy with a flag on his chest who was supposed to represent what most people distrusted. No one knew what to do with him."
|author = – [[Steve Englehart]]<ref name="Englehart"/>
|width = 30%
|align = left
|border = none
}}


In contrast to the character's enthusiastic participation in World War II, comics featuring Captain America rarely broached the topic of the [[Vietnam War]],{{sfn|Hayton|Albright|2009|p=17}} though the subject of Captain America's potential participation was frequently debated by readers in the letters to the editor section in ''Captain America''.{{sfn|Wright|2001|p=244}} Marvel maintained a position of neutrality on Vietnam; in 1971, Stan Lee wrote in an editorial that a poll indicated that a majority of readers did not want Captain America to be involved in Vietnam, adding that he believed the character "simply doesn't lend himself to the [[John Wayne]]-type character he once was" and that he could not "see any of our characters taking on a role of super-patriotism in the world as it is today".{{sfn|Wright|2001|p=244}}
Rogers receives a large back-pay reimbursement dating back to his disappearance at the end of World War II, and a [[Commission on Superhuman Activities|government commission]] orders him to work directly for the U.S. government. Already troubled by the corruption he had encountered with the Nuke incident in [[New York City]], where the gangster supervillain, [[The Kingpin]], used his corrupted contacts in the US military to have the psychopathic test subject of a secret failed attempt to recreate Project Rebirth's body enhancements, [[Nuke (Marvel Comics)|Nuke]], attack [[Hell's Kitchen]] in a murderous rampage to draw [[Daredevil (Marvel Comics character)|Daredevil]] out of hiding<ref>{{cite comic| writer= [[Frank Miller|Miller, Frank]]|penciller= [[David Mazzucchelli|Mazzucchelli, David]]|inker= Mazzucchelli, David|story= Armageddon|title= [[Daredevil (Marvel Comics series)|Daredevil]]|issue= 233|date= August 1986}}</ref> Rogers chooses instead to resign his identity,<ref>{{cite comic| writer= Gruenwald, Mark|penciller= [[Tom Morgan (comics)|Morgan, Tom]]|inker= [[Bob McLeod (comics)|McLeod, Bob]]|story= The Choice|title= Captain America|issue= 332|date= August 1987}}</ref><ref>DeFalco "1980s" in Gilbert (2008), p. 231: "This issue [#332] began a nineteen-part story arc called 'Captain America No More!'"</ref> and then takes the alias of "the Captain".<ref>{{cite comic| writer= Gruenwald, Mark|penciller= Morgan, Tom|inker= Hunt, Dave|story= The Long Road Back|title= Captain America|issue= 337|date= January 1988}}</ref> A replacement Captain America, John Walker, struggles to emulate Rogers' ideals until pressure from hidden enemies helps to drive Walker insane. Rogers returns to the Captain America identity<ref>{{cite comic| writer= Gruenwald, Mark|penciller= [[Kieron Dwyer|Dwyer, Kieron]]|inker= [[Al Milgrom|Milgrom, Al]]|story= Seeing Red|title= Captain America|issue= 350|date= February 1989}}</ref> while a recovered Walker becomes the [[U.S. Agent (comics)|U.S. Agent]].<ref>{{cite comic| writer= Gruenwald, Mark|penciller= Dwyer, Kieron|inker= Milgrom, Al|story= Reawakening|title= Captain America|issue= 354|date= June 1989}}</ref>


Captain America stories in the 1970s began to increasingly focus on domestic American political issues, such as poverty, racism, pollution, and political corruption.{{sfn|Wright|2001|p=245}}{{efn|This shift was enabled by a change to the [[Comics Code Authority]] in 1971; the code had previously prohibited "respected institutions" from being "presented in such a way as to create disrespect for established authority", but was revised to permit depictions of illegal acts by these institutions so long as the individual responsible was made to "pay the legal price" and the act itself was "declared as an exceptional case".{{Sfn|Johnson|2018|p=83}}}} ''Captain America'' #117 (September 1969) introduced [[Falcon (comics)|The Falcon]] as the first African-American superhero in mainstream comic books{{sfn|Dowsett|2008|p=137}} and who would become Captain America's partner; the series was cover titled as ''Captain America and the Falcon'' beginning February 1971, which it would maintain for the next seven and a half years.{{sfn|Dalton|2011|p=137}} These political shifts were significantly shaped by comics created by writer [[Steve Englehart]] and artist [[Sal Buscema]], who joined the series in 1972.{{Sfn|Johnson|2018|pp=85, 90}}<ref name="Englehart"/> In a 1973 storyline written by Englehart directly inspired by the [[Watergate scandal]], Captain America is framed for murder by the fascistic [[Secret Empire (organization)|Secret Empire]], whose leader is ultimately revealed to be the president of the United States.{{sfn|Dowsett|2008|pp=164–168}} The incident causes a disillusioned Steve Rogers to briefly drop the moniker of Captain America to become "[[Nomad (comics)|Nomad]], the many without a country", though he later vowed to "reclaim the ideals of America, which its leaders have trampled upon" and again assumed the role of Captain America.{{sfn|Wright|2001|p=245}} Englehart and Buscema's run was highly acclaimed, bringing ''Captain America'' from one of Marvel's lowest-selling titles to its top-selling comic.{{Sfn|Johnson|2018|pp=85, 90}}<ref name="Englehart"/>
Sometime afterward, Rogers avoids the explosion of a [[methamphetamine]] lab, but the drug triggers a chemical reaction in the Super Soldier Serum in his system. To combat the reaction, Rogers has the serum removed from his body and trains constantly to maintain his physical condition.<ref name="CA378">{{cite comic| writer= Gruenwald, Mark|penciller= [[Ron Lim|Lim, Ron]]|inker= Bulanadi, Danny|story= Grand Stand Play!|title= Captain America|issue= 378|date= October 1990}}</ref> A [[Retroactive continuity|retcon]] later establishes that the serum was not a drug ''per se'', which would have metabolized out of his system, but in fact a virus-like organism that effected a biochemical and genetic change. This additionally explained how nemesis the [[Red Skull]], who at the time inhabited a body [[cloning|cloned]] from Rogers' cells, has the formula in his body.


In 1975, [[Roy Thomas]] created the comic book series ''[[Invaders (comics)|The Invaders]]''. Set during World War II, the comic focuses on a superhero team composed of Timely's wartime-era superheroes, with Captain America as its leader; Thomas, a fan of stories from the [[Golden Age of Comic Books]], drew inspiration for the series from Timely's All-Winners Squad.{{sfn|Dowsett|2008|p=170}} Jack Kirby wrote and illustrated run on ''Captain America and the Falcon'' from 1975 to 1977.{{sfn|Morse|2007|p=36}} This was followed by issues authored by a number of writers and artists, including Roy Thomas, [[Donald F. Glut]], [[Roger McKenzie (comics)|Roger McKenzie]], and Sal Buscema; the series was also re-titled ''Captain America'' beginning with issue 223 in 1978.{{sfn|DiFruscio|2010|pp=38–39}}
Because of his altered biochemistry, Rogers' body begins to deteriorate, and for a time he must wear a powered [[exoskeleton]] and is eventually placed again in suspended animation. During this time, he is given a transfusion of blood from the [[Red Skull]], which cures his condition and stabilizes the Super-Soldier virus in his system. Captain America returns to crime fighting and the Avengers.<ref>{{cite book|last = Gruenwald|first = Mark|author2=Hoover, Dave |author-link2=Dave Hoover |title = Captain America: Fighting Chance – Denial|publisher = Marvel Comics|year = 2009|page = 160|isbn = 978-0-7851-3738-2}}</ref><ref>{{cite book|last = Gruenwald|first = Mark|author2=Hoover, Dave|title = Captain America: Fighting Chance – Acceptance|publisher = Marvel Comics|year = 2009|page = 168|isbn = 978-0-7851-3739-9}}</ref>


===1980s and 1990s: Post-Vietnam and "Heroes Reborn"===
Following Gruenwald's departure from the series, Mark Waid took over and resurrected Sharon Carter as Cap's love interest. The title was then relaunched under Rob Liefeld as Cap became part of the [[Heroes Reborn (1996 comics)|Heroes Reborn]] universe for 13 issues<ref>Manning, Matthew K. "1990s" in Gilbert (2008), p. 280: "Steve Rogers earned a fresh start in the Heroes Reborn universe by writer Jeph Loeb and artist Rob Liefeld."</ref> before another relaunch restored Waid to the title<ref>Manning "1990s" in Gilbert (2008), p. 288: "Writer Mark Waid began what many fans still consider to be the ultimate run on the ''Captain America'' title with this series penciled by Ron Garney."</ref> in an arc that saw Cap lose his shield for a time using an energy based shield as a temporary replacement. Following Waid's run, Dan Jurgens took over and introduced new foe [[Protocide]], a failed recipient of the Super Soldier Serum prior to the experiment that successfully created Rogers. Some time after this, Rogers' original shield was retrieved, but subtle damage sustained during the battle with the Beyonder resulted in it being shattered and a 'vibranium cancer' being triggered that would destroy all vibranium in the world, with Rogers nearly being forced to destroy the shield before a confrontation with the villain [[Klaw (Marvel Comics)|Klaw]] saw Klaw's attacks unwittingly repair the shield's fractured molecular bonds and negate cancer.<ref>{{cite comic|writer= Waid, Mark|penciller= Kubert, Andy|inker= Delperdang, Jesse|story= Sacrifice Play|title= Captain America|volume= 3|issue= 22|date= September 1999}}</ref>
Owing to the series' lack of a regular writer, ''Captain America'' editor [[Roger Stern]] and artist [[John Byrne (comics)|John Byrne]] authored the series from 1980 to 1981, in a run that saw a storyline in which Captain America declines an offer to run for president of the United States.{{sfn|Morse|2007|pp=36–38}}<ref name="SternInterview"/> Following Stern and Byrne, ''Captain America'' was authored by writer [[J.M. Dematteis]] and artist [[Mike Zeck]] from 1981 to 1984.{{sfn|Morse|2007|p=38}} Their run featured a year-long storyline in which Captain America faced a crisis of confidence in the face of what Dematteis described as "[[Ronald Reagan|Reagan]] [[Cold War]] rhetoric"{{sfn|Morse|2007|p=38}} that was originally planned culminate in ''Captain America'' #300 with Captain America renunciating violence to become a [[pacifist]]; that ending was rejected by Marvel editor-in-chief [[Jim Shooter]], causing Dematteis to resign from the series in protest.{{sfn|Walton|2009|p=166}}


Writer [[Mark Gruenwald]], editor of ''Captain America'' from 1982 to 1985, served as writer on the series from 1985 to 1995. Various artists illustrated the series over the course of Gruenwald's decade-long run, notably [[Paul Neary]] from 1985 to 1987, and [[Kieron Dwyer]] from 1988 to 1990.{{sfn|Morse|2007|p=38}} In contrast to DeMatteis, Gruenwald placed less emphasis on Steve Rogers' life as a civilian, wishing to show "that Steve Rogers is Captain America first [...] he has no greater needs than being Captain America."<ref name="GruenwaldInterview"/> Among the most significant storylines appearing in Gruenwald's run was "[[Captain America: The Captain|The Choice]]" in 1987, in which Steve Rogers renounces the identity of Captain America to briefly become simply "The Captain" after the United States government orders him to continue his superheroic activities directly under their control.<ref name="FredEntertainment"/>
===21st century===
====2000s====
In the aftermath of the [[September 11 attacks|September 11 terrorist attacks]], Rogers reveals his identity to the world and establishes a residence in the [[Red Hook, Brooklyn|Red Hook]] neighborhood of [[Brooklyn]], [[New York (state)|New York]], as seen in ''Captain America'' vol. 4, #1–7 (June 2002 – February 2003).<ref>Manning "2000s" in Gilbert (2008), p. 312: "The darker Marvel Knights line of books accepted Steve Rogers under their umbrella as writer John Ney Rieber and artist John Cassaday restarted the series with a new first issue."</ref> Following the disbandment of the Avengers in the "[[Avengers Disassembled]]" story arc, Rogers, now employed by [[S.H.I.E.L.D.]], discovers Bucky is alive, having been saved and deployed by the [[Soviet Union|Soviets]] as the [[Winter Soldier (comics)|Winter Soldier]]. Rogers resumes his on-again, off-again relationship with S.H.I.E.L.D. agent [[Sharon Carter]]. After a mass supervillain break-out of the Raft, Rogers and Tony Stark assemble a [[New Avengers (comics)|new team of Avengers]] to hunt the escapees.


After Gruenwald departed the series, writer [[Mark Waid]] and artist [[Ron Garney]] began to author ''Captain America'' in 1995. Despite early acclaim, including the reintroduction of Captain America's love interest Sharon Carter, their run was terminated after ten issues as a result of Marvel's "[[Heroes Reborn (1996 comic)|Heroes Reborn]]" rebranding in 1996.{{sfn|Morse|2007|p=40}} The rebrand saw artists [[Jim Lee]] and [[Rob Liefeld]], who had left the company in the early 1990s to establish [[Image Comics]], return to Marvel to re-imagine several of the company's characters.{{sfn|Morse|2007|pp=40–41}} Marvel faced various financial difficulties in the 1990s, culminating in the company filing for [[Chapter 11, Title 11, United States Code|Chapter 11]] bankruptcy protection in 1996,<ref name="Bankrupt"/> and "Heroes Reborn" was introduced as part of an effort to increase sales.<ref name="WizardHeroesReborn"/> As part of the rebrand, Liefeld illustrated and co-wrote with [[Jeph Loeb]] a run on ''Captain America'' that was ultimately cancelled after six issues.<ref name="WizardHeroesReborn"/> Marvel stated that the series was cancelled due to low sales,<ref name="WizardHeroesReborn"/> though Liefeld has contended that he was fired after he refused to take a lower pay rate amid Marvel's bankruptcy proceedings.<ref name="LiefeldInterview"/> Waid would return to ''Captain America'' in 1998, initially with Garney as arist and later with [[Andy Kubert]].{{sfn|Morse|2007|p=40}}
In the 2006–2007 company-wide story arc "[[Civil War (comics)|Civil War]]", Rogers opposes the new mandatory [[2006 Superhuman Registration Act|federal registration of super-powered beings]], and leads the underground anti-registration movement. After significant rancor and danger to the public as the two sides clash, Captain America voluntarily surrenders and orders the Anti-Registration forces to stand down, feeling that the fight has reached a point where the principle originally cited by the anti-registration forces has been lost.<ref>[[Millar, Mark]] (w), [[McNiven, Steve]] (p), [[Vines, Dexter]], et al. (i). "Civil War, Parts One - Seven", ''[[Civil War (comics)|Civil War]]'' #1 - 7 (July 2006 - January 2007). Marvel Comics.</ref>


In 1999, Joe Simon filed to claim the copyright to Captain America under a provision of the [[Copyright Act of 1976]] that allows the original creators of works that have been sold to corporations to reclaim them after the original 56-year copyright term has expired. Marvel challenged the claim, arguing that Simon's 1966 settlement made the character ineligible for copyright transfer. Simon and Marvel settled out of court in 2003, in a deal that paid Simon royalties for merchandising and licensing of the character.<ref name="Lawsuit1"/><ref name="Lawsuit2"/>
In the story arc "[[The Death of Captain America]]", Rogers is fatally shot by Sharon Carter, whose actions are manipulated by the villain [[Doctor Faustus (comics)|Dr. Faustus]].<ref>''Captain America'' (vol. 5) #25 (April 2007). Marvel Comics.</ref><ref>Manning "2000s" in Gilbert (2008), p. 335: "Surprising an unsuspecting fan base who thought the worst was over for Steve Rogers, Captain America's death captured worldwide media attention."</ref> The miniseries ''[[Fallen Son: The Death of Captain America]]'' #1–5 (June–August 2007) examines the reaction of the stunned superhero community to Rogers' assassination, with each of the five issues focusing a different character's reaction. Bucky takes on the mantle of Captain America, per Rogers' [[wikt:antemortem|antemortem]] request.<ref>''Captain America'' vol. 5, #30 (September 2007). Marvel Comics.</ref><ref>{{cite comic|writer= [[J. Michael Straczynski|Straczynski, J. Michael]]|penciller= [[Olivier Coipel|Coipel, Olivier]]|inker= Morales, Mark; Miki, Danny; Lanning, Andy|story= Back to the Pit, Hogun!|title= Thor|volume= 3|issue= 11|date= November 2008}}</ref>


===2000s–present: Modern era===
''[[Captain America: Reborn]]'' #1 (August 2009) reveals that Rogers did not die, as the gun Sharon Carter had been hypnotized into firing at Rogers caused his consciousness to phase in and out of space and time, appearing at various points in his lifetime. Although Rogers manages to relay a message to the future by giving a time-delayed command to the [[Vision (Marvel Comics)|Vision]] during the [[Kree-Skrull War]], the Skull returns Rogers to the present, where he takes control of Rogers' mind and body. Rogers eventually regains control, and, with help from his allies, defeats the Skull.<ref>''[[Captain America: Reborn]]'' #1 - 4 (2009). Marvel Comics.</ref> In the subsequent [[one-shot (comics)|one-shot]] comic ''Captain America: Who Will Wield the Shield?'', Rogers formally grants Bucky his Captain America shield and asks him to continue as Captain America. The President of the United States grants Rogers a full [[pardon]] for his anti-registration actions.
Writer and artist [[Dan Jurgens]] took over ''Captain America'' from Waid in 2000, positioning the character in a world he described as "more cynical [...] in terms of how we view our government, our politicians and people's motives in general".{{sfn|Morse|2007|p=44}} In the wake of the [[September 11 attacks]], a new ''Captain America'' series written by [[John Ney Rieber]] with artwork by [[John Cassady]] was published under the [[Marvel Knights]] imprint from 2002 to 2003.{{sfn|Dowsett|2008|p=312}} The series depicted Captain America fighting terrorists modelled after [[Al-Qaeda]]; Cassady noted that while the series was criticized for its political content, he stated that the aim of the series was to depict "the emotions this hero was going through" in the wake of 9/11, and the "guilt and anger a man in his position would feel".{{sfn|Morse|2007|pp=44–46}}


In 2005, Marvel relaunched ''Captain America'' in [[Captain America (vol. 5)|a new volume]] written by [[Ed Brubaker]] and illustrated by [[Steve Epting]]. The run reintroduced Captain America's [[Comic book death|previously deceased]] partner Bucky Barnes as the Winter Soldier, a brainwashed cybernetic assassin.{{sfn|Morse|2007|p=48}} Contemporaneously, Captain America was a central character in the 2006 [[Fictional crossover|crossover event]] ''[[Civil War (comics)|Civil War]]'' written by [[Mark Millar]] and penciled by [[Steve McNiven]], which saw the character come into conflict with fellow Avengers member Iron Man over government efforts to regulate superheroes.{{sfn|Rizzo|Licari|2021|p=142}} The character was ultimately killed in the 2007 storyline "[[The Death of Captain America]]" written by Brubaker,{{sfn|Morse|2007|p=48}} which was accompanied by the miniseries ''[[Fallen Son: The Death of Captain America]]'' written by Jeph Loeb;<ref name="FallenSon"/> the character was later revived in the 2009 limited series ''[[Captain America: Reborn]]''.{{sfn|Rizzo|Licari|2021|p=162}} Brubaker's run on ''Captain America'', which ran across various titles until 2012, was critically and commercially acclaimed; ''Captain America'' #25 (which contains the character's death) was the best-selling comic of 2007,<ref name="DeathSales"/> and Brubaker won the [[Harvey Award]] for Best Writer for the series in 2006.<ref name="Harvey"/>
====2010s====
{{long plot|date=August 2016}}
[[File:Steve Rogers Super Soldier.jpg|thumb|right|Promotional art for ''Steve Rogers: Super Soldier'' #1 (September 2010) by [[Carlos Pacheco]] and Tim Townsend]]
Following the company-wide "[[Dark Reign (comics)|Dark Reign]]" and "[[Siege (comics)|Siege]]" story arcs, the Steve Rogers character became part of the "[[Heroic Age (comics)|Heroic Age]]" arc.<ref>{{cite web|first= Dave|last= Richards|url= http://www.comicbookresources.com/?page=article&id=26287|title= Storming Heaven: ''Siege'' #4|website= Comic Book Resources|date= May 18, 2010|archive-url= https://web.archive.org/web/20130403010542/http://www.comicbookresources.com/?page=article&id=26287|archive-date= April 3, 2013|url-status=live|access-date= September 26, 2010}}</ref>


After Brubaker's run on ''Captain America'' ended in 2012, a new volume of the series written by [[Rick Remender]] was published as part of the [[Marvel Now]] rebranding initiative, which saw Sam Wilson assume the mantle of Captain America in 2014.{{sfn|Rizzo|Licari|2021|pp=172, 176}} This was followed by a run written by [[Nick Spencer]] beginning in 2016, in which Captain America was replaced by a version of himself loyal to the villainous organization [[Hydra (comics)|Hydra]], culminating in the 2017 crossover event ''[[Secret Empire (comics)|Secret Empire]]''.{{sfn|Rizzo|Licari|2021|p=180}} As part of Marvel's [[Fresh Start (comics)|Fresh Start]] rebrand in 2018, a new ''Captain America'' series written by [[Ta-Nehisi Coates]] with art by [[Leinil Francis Yu]] was published from 2018 to 2021.<ref name="CoatesBegin"/><ref name="CoatesEnd"/>
The President of the United States appoints Rogers, in his civilian identity, as "''America's top cop''" and head of the nation's security,<ref>{{cite comic| writer= [[Brian Michael Bendis|Bendis, Brian Michael]]|penciller= [[Olivier Coipel|Coipel, Olivier]]|inker= Morales, Mark|story= The Siege of Asgard – The Fallen|title= [[Siege (comics)|Siege]]|issue= 4|date= June 2010}}</ref> replacing [[Norman Osborn]] as the tenth ''Executive Director of [[S.H.I.E.L.D.]]''. The [[Superhuman Registration Act]] is repealed and Rogers re-establishes the [[superhero]] team the [[Avengers (comics)|Avengers]], spearheaded by Iron Man, Thor, and Bucky as Captain America.{{Volume needed|c=y|date=January 2014}} In the [[miniseries]] ''Steve Rogers: Super Soldier'', he encounters Jacob Erskine, the grandson of Professor Abraham Erskine and the son of Tyler Paxton, one of Rogers' fellow volunteers in the Super-Soldier program.{{Volume needed|c=y|date=January 2014}} Shortly afterward, Rogers becomes leader of the [[Secret Avengers]], a [[black-op]]s superhero team.{{Volume needed|c=y|date=January 2014}}


==Characterization==
During the ''[[Fear Itself (comics)|Fear Itself]]'' storyline, Steve Rogers is present when the threat of the [[Serpent (comics)|Serpent]] is known.<ref>{{cite comic| writer= [[Matt Fraction|Fraction, Matt]]|penciller= [[Stuart Immonen|Immonen, Stuart]]|inker= Immonen, Stuart|story= The Serpent|title= [[Fear Itself (comics)|Fear Itself]]|issue= 1|date= June 2011}}</ref> Following the apparent death of Bucky at the hands of [[Sin (Marvel Comics)|Sin]] (in the form of [[Skadi]]), Steve Rogers changes into his Captain America uniform.<ref>{{cite comic| writer= Fraction, Matt|penciller= Immonen, Stuart|inker= [[Wade Von Grawbadger|Von Grawbadger, Wade]]|story= Fear Itself 4: Worlds on Fire|title= Fear Itself|issue= 4|date= September 2011}}</ref> When the Avengers and the New Avengers are fighting Skadi, the Serpent joins the battle and breaks Captain America's shield with his bare hands.<ref>{{cite comic| writer= Fraction, Matt|penciller= Immonen, Stuart|inker= Von Grawbadger, Wade|story= Fear Itself 5: Brawl|title= Fear Itself|issue= 5|date= October 2011}}</ref> Captain America and the Avengers teams form a militia for a last stand against the forces of the Serpent.<ref>{{cite comic| writer= Fraction, Matt|penciller= Immonen, Stuart|inker= Von Grawbadger, Wade|story= Fear Itself 6: Blood-Tied & Doomed|title= Fear Itself|issue= 6|date= November 2011}}</ref> In the final battle, Captain America uses Thor's hammer to fight Skadi until Thor manages to kill the Serpent. In the aftermath, Iron Man presents him with his reforged shield, now stronger for its uru-infused enhancements despite the scar it bears.<ref>{{cite comic| writer= Fraction, Matt|penciller= Immonen, Stuart|inker= Von Grawbadger, Wade; [[Dexter Vines|Vines, Dexter]]|story= Fear Itself 7: Thor's Day|title= Fear Itself|issue= 7|date= December 2011}}</ref> It is then revealed that Captain America, Nick Fury, and Black Widow are the only ones who know that Bucky actually survived the fight with Skadi as Bucky resumes his identity as Winter Soldier.<ref>{{cite comic| writer= Brubaker, Ed|penciller= Guice, Butch|inker= Guice, Butch|story= Bucky Barnes was the best brother-in-arms any&nbsp; ... |title= Fear Itself: Captain America|issue= 7.1|date= January 2012}}</ref>
===Fictional character biography===
{{see also|List of Captain America titles}}
{{As of|2015}}, Captain America has appeared in more than ten thousand stories in more than five thousand media formats, including comic books, books, and trade publications.{{Sfn|Stevens|2015|p=2}} The character's [[origin story]] has been retold and revised multiple times throughout his editorial history, though its broad details have remained generally consistent.{{sfn|Weiner|2013|p=101}} Steven "Steve" Rogers was born in the 1920s to an impoverished family on the [[Lower East Side]] of [[New York City]]. The frail and infirm Rogers attempts to join the [[U.S. Army]] in order to fight in the [[Second World War]], but is rejected after being deemed unfit for military service.{{sfn|Hack|2009|p=80}} His resolve is nevertheless noticed by the military, and he is recruited as the first test subject for "Project Rebirth", a secret government program that seeks to create [[super soldiers]] through the development of the "Super-Soldier Serum". Though the serum successfully enhances Rogers to the peak to human physical perfection, a Nazi spy posing as a military observer destroys the remaining supply of the serum and assassinates [[Abraham Erskine|its inventor]], foiling plans to produce additional super soldiers. Rogers is given a patriotic uniform and [[Captain America's shield|shield]] by the American government and becomes the costumed superhero Captain America, and goes on to fight the villainous [[Red Skull]] and other members of the [[Axis powers]] both domestically and abroad alongside his sidekick [[Bucky Barnes]] and as a member of the [[Invaders (comics)|Invaders]]. In the final days of the war, Rogers and Barnes seemingly perish after falling from an experimental [[unmanned aerial vehicle|drone plane]] into the northern [[Atlantic Ocean]].<ref name="FredEntertainment"/>


Rogers is found decades later by the superhero team the [[Avengers (comics)|Avengers]], the Super-Soldier Serum having allowed him to survive frozen in a block of ice in a state of [[suspended animation]].<ref name="FredEntertainment"/> Reawakened in modern times, Rogers resumes activities as a costumed hero, joining and later becoming leader of the Avengers.{{sfn|Weiner|2013|p=104}} Many of his exploits involve missions undertaken for the Avengers or for [[S.H.I.E.L.D.]], an espionage and international law enforcement agency operated by his former war comrade [[Nick Fury]]. Through Fury, Rogers befriends [[Sharon Carter]], a S.H.I.E.L.D. agent with whom he eventually begins a partnership and an on-again off-again romance. He meets and trains [[Falcon (comics)|Sam Wilson]], who becomes the superhero the Falcon, and they establish an enduring friendship and partnership.{{sfn|Weiner|2013|p=105}} After a conspiracy hatched by the [[Secret Empire (organization)|Secret Empire]] to discredit Rogers is revealed to have been personally orchestrated by the President of the United States, a disillusioned Rogers abandons the mantle of Captain America and assumes the title of "[[Nomad (Marvel Comics)|Nomad]]", the "man without a country".{{sfn|Weiner|2013|p=106}} He eventually re-assumes the title, and later declines an offer from the "New Populist Party" to run for president himself.{{sfn|Weiner|2013|p=106}} He again abandons the mantle of Captain America to briefly assume the aloas of "[[Captain America: The Captain|The Captain]]" when a [[Commission on Superhuman Activities|government commission]] orders him to work directly for the U.S. government.{{sfn|Rizzo|Licari|2021|p=106}}
During the "[[Spider-Island]]" storyline, Captain America had been captured turned into the Spider King by Spider Queen and [[Jackal (Marvel Comics character)|Jackal]].<ref>''The Amazing Spider-Man'' #666 (July 2011). Marvel Comics.</ref> He was restored to normal following his fight with [[Flash Thompson|Venom]].<ref>''Venom'' Vol. 2 #6 (August 2011). Marvel Comics.</ref><ref>''The Amazing Spider-Man'' #670 (September 2011). Marvel Comics.</ref>


In the aftermath of the [[September 11 attacks]], Rogers reveals his secret identity to the world.{{sfn|Weiner|2013|p=106}} Following the [[Avengers Disassembled|disbandment of the Avengers]], Rogers discovers that [[Captain America (vol. 5)|Bucky is still alive]], having been brainwashed by the Soviets to become the Winter Soldier.{{sfn|Dowsett|2008|p=325}} Later, in reaction to [[Civil War (comics)|government efforts to regulate superheroes]], Rogers becomes the leader of an underground anti-registration movement that clashes with a pro-registration faction led by fellow Avengers member [[Iron Man]].{{sfn|Dowsett|2008|p=332}} After significant rancor, he voluntarily surrenders and submits to arrest. At his trial, he is [[The Death of Captain America|shot and killed]] by Sharon Carter, whose actions are manipulated by the villainous [[Doctor Faustus (comics)|Dr. Faustus]]; in his absence, a recovered Bucky assumes the title of Captain America.{{sfn|Rizzo|Licari|2021|p=152}} Ultimately, it is revealed that [[Captain America: Reborn|Rogers did not die]], but became displaced in in space and time; he is ultimately able to return to the present.{{sfn|Rizzo|Licari|2021|pp=166–167}} He resumes his exploits as a superhero, though his public identity is briefly [[Secret Empire (comics)|supplanted by a sleeper agent]] from the terrorist organization [[Hydra (comics)|Hydra]].{{sfn|Rizzo|Licari|2021|p=190}}
In the ''[[Avengers vs. X-Men]]'' story arc, Captain America attempts to apprehend [[Hope Summers (comics)|Hope Summers]] of the [[X-Men]]. She is the targeted vessel for the [[Phoenix Force (comics)|Phoenix Force]], a destructive cosmic entity. Captain America believes that this Phoenix Force is too dangerous to entrust in one person and seeks to prevent Hope from having it. [[Cyclops (Marvel Comics)|Cyclops]] and the X-Men believe that the Phoenix Force will save their race, and oppose Captain America's wishes.<ref>{{cite comic| writer= [[Jason Aaron|Aaron, Jason]]; Bendis, Brian Michael; Brubaker, Ed; [[Jonathan Hickman|Hickman, Jonathan]]; Fraction, Matt|penciller= [[John Romita Jr.|Romita, John Jr.]]|inker= Hanna, Scott|story= Round 1|title= [[Avengers vs. X-Men]]|issue= 1|date= June 2012}}</ref> The result is a series of battles that eventually take both teams to the blue area of the moon.<ref>{{cite comic| writer= Aaron, Jason; Bendis, Brian Michael; Brubaker, Ed; Hickman, Jonathan; Fraction, Matt|penciller= Romita, John Jr.|inker= Hanna, Scott|story= Round 4 |title= Avengers vs. X-Men|issue= 4|date= July 2012}}</ref> The Phoenix Force eventually possesses the five X-Men present, leaving the Avengers at an extreme disadvantage.<ref>{{cite comic| writer= Aaron, Jason; Bendis, Brian Michael; Brubaker, Ed; Hickman, Jonathan; Fraction, Matt|penciller= Romita, John Jr.|inker= Hanna, Scott|story= Round 5|title= Avengers vs. X-Men|issue= 5|date= August 2012}}</ref> The ''Phoenix Five'', who become corrupted by the power of the Phoenix, are eventually defeated and scattered, with Cyclops imprisoned for turning the world into a police state and murdering [[Professor X|Charles Xavier]] after being pushed too far, only for him to note that, in the end, he was proven right about the Phoenix's intentions.<ref>{{cite comic| writer= Aaron, Jason; Bendis, Brian Michael; Brubaker, Ed; Hickman, Jonathan; Fraction, Matt|penciller= [[Adam Kubert|Kubert, Adam]]|inker= Dell, John; Morales, Mark; Kubert, Adam|story= Round 12|title= Avengers vs. X-Men|issue= 12|date= December 2012}}</ref> From there, Captain America proceeds to assemble the [[Uncanny Avengers|Avengers Unity Squad]], a new team of Avengers composed of both classic Avengers and X-Men.<ref>{{cite comic| writer= [[Rick Remender|Remender, Rick]]|penciller= [[John Cassaday|Cassaday, John]]|inker= Cassaday, John|story= New Union|title= [[Uncanny Avengers]]|issue= 1|date= December 2012}}</ref>


===Personality and motivations===
After Cyclops was incarcerated, and Steve accepted the Avengers should have done more to help mutants, and allowed the world to hate them, he started planning a new sub-team of Avengers in the hopes of unifying mutant and humankind alike. He chose [[Havok (comics)|Havok]] to lead his team and become the new face to represent mutants as [[Professor X]] and [[Cyclops (Marvel Comics)|Cyclops]] once were.{{Volume needed|c=y|date=September 2014}}
{{Quote box
|quote = "Rogers' transformation into Captain America is underwritten by the military. But, perhaps haunted by his own roots in powerlessness, he is a dissident just as likely to be feuding with his superiors in civilian and military governance as he is to be fighting with the supervillain Red Skull. [...] He is 'a man out of time,' a walking emblem of [[Greatest Generation|greatest-generation]] propaganda brought to life in this splintered postmodern time."
|author = – [[Ta-Nehisi Coates]]<ref name="CoatesAtlantic"/>
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Media scholar J. Richard Stevens notes that Steve Rogers' personality has shifted across his editorial history, a fact he sees as a natural consequence of the character being written and re-interpreted by many writers over the span of multiple decades. However, he identifies two aspects of the character's personality that have remained consistent across expressions: his "uncompromising purity" and "his ability to judge the character in others".{{Sfn|Stevens|2015|p=277}} Early Captain America stories typically paid little attention to Rogers' civilian identity; in his 1970 book ''[[The Steranko History of Comics]]'', Jim Steranko notes that the character was consequently often criticized as two-dimensional. He argues that this was an intentional device, writing that these critics "failed to grasp the true implication of his being. Steve Rogers never existed, except perhaps as an abstract device for the convenience of storytelling. Captain America was not an embodiment of human characteristics but a pure idea."{{sfn|Steranko|1970|p=51}}
Their first threat was the return of the [[Red Skull]]- more specifically, a clone of the Skull created in 1942 and kept in stasis in the event of the original's death- who usurped Professor X's body to provide himself with telepathic powers, which he would use to provoke citizens of New York into a mass assault against mutants, or anyone who could be one, and force the [[Scarlet Witch]] and [[Rogue (comics)|Rogue]] to allow themselves to be attacked. With the help of the [[S-Man]] Honest John, he managed to even manipulate [[Thor (Marvel Comics)|Thor]].{{Volume needed|c=y|date=September 2014}}


Following the character's return to comics in the 1960s, many stories began to focus on Rogers' civilian identity, particularly his struggles as a "man out of time" attempting to adjust to a new era.{{sfn|Stevens|2015|p=89}} Often these stories focus on a brooding or melancholic Rogers as he faces both a physical struggle as Captain America, and an ideological struggle as Steve Rogers to reconcile his social values with modern times.{{sfn|Stevens|2015|p=91}} The character is depicted as deeply conflicted by the anachronism of his World War II-era "good war" morality being challenged by the compromising demands of the post-war era.{{sfn|Stevens|2015|p=91}}{{sfn|Dittmer|2012|p=100}} Prior to Bucky Barnes' return to comics in the 2000s, many Captain America stories centered on Rogers' sense of guilt over Barnes' death. Culture scholar Robert G. Weiner notes that these stories mirror the [[post-traumatic stress disorder]] and [[survivor guilt]] held by many war veterans, and that this trauma distinguishes the character from other well-known superheroes such as [[Batman]] and [[Spider-Man]]; while those characters became heroes in response to traumatic incidents, Rogers carries on as a hero in spite of a traumatic incident, which Weiner argues serves to reinforce the "nobility" of the character.{{sfn|Weiner|2009|p=100}}
The Red Skull's skills were still erratic, and could not completely control Captain America, an attack against him was enough of a distraction to lose control of Rogue and the Scarlet Witch. After being overpowered by the rest of the Uncanny Avengers, the Red Skull escapes, but promises to return. In the aftermath, both Rogue and the Scarlet Witch joined the team.{{Volume needed|c=y|date=September 2014}}


===Political themes===
During a battle with an enemy called the Iron Nail, the Super Soldier Serum within Rogers's body was neutralized, causing him to age rapidly to match his chronological age of over 90 years.<ref>{{cite comic|writer= Remender, Rick|penciller= Klein, Nic|inker= Klein, Nic|story= Super-Soldier No More|title= Captain America|volume= 7|issue= 21|date= August 2014}}</ref> No longer able to take part in field missions but retaining his sharp mind, Rogers decided to take on a role as mission coordinator, organizing the Avengers' plans of attack from the mansion, while appointing Sam Wilson as his official "replacement" as Captain America.<ref>{{cite comic| writer= Remender, Rick|penciller= [[Carlos Pacheco|Pacheco, Carlos]]; [[Stuart Immonen|Immonen, Stuart]]|inker= Taibo, Mariano; [[Wade Von Grawbadger|Von Grawbadger, Wade]]|story= I remember the first time I met Sam Wilson ... |title= Captain America|volume= 7|issue= 25|date= December 2014}}</ref>
From the character's origins as an [[Anti-fascism|anti-fascist]] superhero, Captain America stories have frequently contained political messages.{{sfn|Wright|2001|p=32}} Though Marvel has historically trended away from making overt partisan political statements in the post-war period, writers have nevertheless regularly used Captain America to comment on the state of American society and government at particular moments in history.{{sfn|Weiner|2013|p=105}} For example, the conspiracy storyline of "Secret Empire" reflected what writer Steve Englehart saw as broad disillusionment with American institutions in the wake of the Vietnam War and the Watergate scandal,{{sfn|Weiner|2013|p=106}} the "Streets of Poison" storyline by Mark Gruenwald in the 1990s reflected debates around the [[war on drugs]],{{sfn|Weiner|2013|p=106}} and "Civil War" by Mark Millar was widely interpreted as an allegory for the [[Patriot Act]] and post-9/11 debates on the balance between national security and civil liberties.{{sfn|Dittmer|2012|p=12}} While the ideological orientation of Captain America stories has shifted in response to changing social and political attitudes, Stevens notes how a central component of Captain America's mythology is that the character himself does not change: when the character's attitudes have shifted, it is consistently framed as an evolution or a new understanding of his previously-held ideals. Stevens argues that the character's seeming paradoxical steadfastness is reflective of "the language of comics, where continuity is continually updated to fit the needs of the serialized present."{{Sfn|Stevens|2015|pp=3–4}}


Despite his status as patriotic superhero, Captain America is rarely depicted as an overly [[jingoistic]] figure. Stevens notes how the charcter's "patriotism is more focused on the universal rights of man as expressed through the [[American Dream]]" rather than "a position championing the specific cultural or political goals of the United States."{{Sfn|Stevens|2015|p=280}} Weiner similarly concurs that the character "embodies what America strives to be, not what it sometimes is".{{sfn|Weiner|2013|p=111}} Dittmer agrees that while the character sees himself "as the living embodiment of the American Dream (rather than a tool of the state)",{{sfn|Dittmer|2012|p=7}} his status as a patriotic superhero nevertheless tethers him to American foreign policy and hegemony.{{sfn|Dittmer|2012|p=8}} He notes how the character tends to skew away from foreign intervention during moments where the United States is criticized as being imperialist, specifically citing his non-participation in the Vietnam and Iraq wars,{{sfn|Dittmer|2012|p=135}} and that the character's inconsistent position on the use of deadly force across his editorial history "is perhaps a tacit acknowledgment of the violence, or the threat of violence, at the heart of American hegemony."{{sfn|Dittmer|2012|p=140}}
When various Avengers and X-Men were [[AXIS (comics)|inverted into villains and several villains inverted into heroism]] due to a miscast spell by the [[Scarlet Witch]] and [[Doctor Doom]],<ref>{{cite comic|writer= Remender, Rick|penciller= [[Leinil Francis Yu|Yu, Leinil Francis]]|inker= [[Gerry Alanguilan|Alanguilan, Gerry]]|story= The Red Supremacy: Chapter 3|title= [[AXIS (comics)|Avengers & X-Men: AXIS]]|issue= 3|date= December 2014}}</ref> Rogers not only coordinated the efforts of Spider-Man and the inverted villains, now called the "Astonishing Avengers",<ref>{{cite comic|writer= Remender, Rick|penciller= Yu, Leinil Francis|inker= Alanguilan, Gerry; Yu, Leinil Francis|story= Inversion: Chapter 1|title= Avengers & X-Men: AXIS|issue= 4|date= January 2015}}</ref> but also donned his old armor to battle the inverted Falcon,<ref>{{cite comic|writer= Remender, Rick|penciller= Yu, Leinil Francis|inker= Alanguilan, Gerry; Paz, Jason; Yu, Leinil Francis|story= New World Disorder: Chapter 2|title= Avengers & X-Men: AXIS|issue= 8|date= February 2015}}</ref> until the heroes and villains could be returned to normal with the aid of the White Skull (the inverted Red Skull).<ref>{{cite comic|writer= Remender, Rick|penciller= [[Jim Cheung|Cheung, Jim]]; [[Terry Dodson|Dodson, Terry]]; Yu, Leinil Francis; Kubert, Adam|inker= Morales, Mark; Meikis, Dave; Ortega, Guillermo; Roslan, Mark; [[Rachel Dodson|Dodson, Rachel]]; Cheung, Jim; Yu, Leinil Francis; Kubert, Adam|story= New World Disorder: Chapter 3|title= Avengers & X-Men: AXIS|issue= 9|date= February 2015}}</ref>


==Powers, abilities, and equipment==
During the "[[Time Runs Out]]" storyline, Steve Rogers wears armor when he confronts Iron Man. The ensuing fight led Steve Rogers to force Iron Man to admit that he had lied to him and all of their allies, when he had known about the incursions between alternate Earths all along, but Iron Man also confessed that he would not change a thing. The final incursion started and Earth-1610 started approaching Earth-616 while Iron Man and Steve Rogers kept fighting. Earth-1610's S.H.I.E.L.D. launched a full invasion to destroy Earth-616, where Tony Stark and Steve Rogers were crushed by a Helicarrier.<ref>{{cite comic|writer= Hickman, Jonathan|penciller= [[Stefano Caselli|Caselli, Stefano]]; [[Kev Walker|Walker, Kev]]|inker= Caselli, Stefano; Walker, Kev|story= One Was Life. One Was Death|title= Avengers|volume= 5|issue= 44 |date= June 2015}}</ref>
{{Quote box
|quote = "Cap is one of the hardest hero characters to write, because the writer cannot use some exotic super-power to make his episodes seem colorful. [...] All he has to serve him are his extraordinary combat skills, his shield, and his unquenchable love for freedom and justice."
|author = – [[Stan Lee]]<ref>{{cite book |last1=Lee |first1=Stan |last2=Heck |first2=Don |author1-link=Stan Lee |author2-link=Don Heck |title=The Avengers, Vol 3. (Marvel Masterworks) |date=2011 |publisher=Marvel Comics |isbn=9780785150565 |page=6 |chapter=Introduction by Stan Lee|oclc=666234797}}</ref>
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Captain America possesses no [[Superpower (ability)|superpower]]s, though the Super-Soldier Serum has enhanced his body's strength, speed, agility, endurance, reflexes, reaction time, and natural [[Self-healing|self-healing]] ability to the peak of human physical perfection. He is additionally an expert tactician and field commander, and has achieved mastery in a variety of hand-to-hand combat styles, including [[boxing]] and [[judo]].<ref name="Handbook"/> The precise parameters of Captain America's physical prowess varies across stories due to editorial dictates and artistic license taken by authors; Steve Englehart noted that he was given an editorial order to give the character [[superhuman strength]] in the 1970s, but the change did not remain permanent and was soon forgotten.<ref name="Englehart"/> Steve Rogers is also a skilled visual artist, having worked as a commercial illustrator prior to joining the military, and several storylines have depicted the character working as a freelance artist.<ref name="SteveArtist"/>
As part of the ''[[All-New, All-Different Marvel]]'', Steve Rogers became the new Chief of Civilian Oversight for S.H.I.E.L.D.<ref>{{cite comic|writer= [[Nick Spencer|Spencer, Nick]]|penciller= [[Daniel Acuña|Acuña, Daniel]]|inker= Acuña, Daniel|title= Captain America: Sam Wilson|issue= 2|date= December 2015}}</ref> He returned to the Uncanny Avengers where the team is now using the Schaefer Theater as their headquarters.<ref>{{cite comic|writer= [[Gerry Duggan (writer)|Duggan, Gerry]]|penciller= [[Ryan Stegman|Stegman, Ryan]]|inker= Stegman, Ryan|story= An Imperfect Union|title= Uncanny Avengers|volume= 3 |issue= 1|date= December 2015}}</ref>


===Costume===
Steve Rogers later has an encounter with an alternate [[Old Man Logan|Logan from Earth-807128]]. After defeating Logan and bringing him to Alberta, Canada, Rogers tried to "reassure" Logan that this was not "his" past by showing him the adamantium-frozen body of Earth-616's Logan. This sight reminds Logan of the need to enjoy being alive rather than brooding over the ghosts of his past. Although he told Steve Rogers what he had experienced in his timeline, Logan declined Steve's offer of help.<ref>{{cite comic|writer= [[Jeff Lemire|Lemire, Jeff]]|penciller= Sorrentino, Andrea|inker= Sorrentino, Andrea|story= Berserker: Part Four|title= Old Man Logan|volume= 2|issue= 4|date= June 2016}}</ref>
The basic design of Captain America's costume has remained largely consistent from its original incarnation in the 1940s. Designed by Joe Simon, the costume is based on the [[United States flag]], with Simon likening the character's appearance to that of "a modern-day crusader": chain mail armor, and a helmet adorned with wings in reference to the Roman god [[Mercury (mythology)|Mercury]].{{sfn|Steranko|1970|p=53}} Steve Rogers has worn other costumes when he has adopted alternate superhero alter egos: as Nomad he wears a [[domino mask]] and a black and gold suit that is cut to expose his bare chest and stomach,<ref name="NomadCostume"/> and as The Captain he wears a modified version of the Captain America suit with a red, white, and black design.<ref name="TheCaptainCostume"/>


Following Rogers' apparent death in 2008, the mantle of Captain America was taken over by Bucky Barnes, who wore a new costume designed by [[Alex Ross]] with input from Ed Brubaker, Steve Epting and [[Tom Brevoort]]. Ross aimed to maintain the elements he saw as symbols of Captain America, such as the winged helmet and the "A" emblem, while updating the costume to make it feel modern.<ref name="BuckyCostume2"/> The artist drew inspiration from Rogers' appearance in the 1940s, integrating the shape of the original triangular shield in the form of the breastplate of Barnes' costume,<ref name="BuckyCostume1"/> and replacing the chain mail with chrome armor, which Barnes wears over a plain black outfit.<ref name="BuckyCostume2"/>
==== Alternate timeline Hydra duplicate ====
{{long plot|date=January 2018}}
During the 2016 "[[Avengers: Standoff!]]" storyline, Steve Rogers learns from Rick Jones that S.H.I.E.L.D. has established Pleasant Hill, a gated community where they use Kobik to transform villains into ordinary citizens. When Rogers is brought to Pleasant Hill, he confronts Maria Hill about the Kobik project. Their argument is interrupted when Baron Helmut Zemo and Fixer restore the inmates to normal.<ref>{{cite comic|writer= Spencer, Nick|penciller= Saiz, Jesus|inker= Saiz, Jesus|title= [[Avengers: Standoff!]]: Assault on Pleasant Hill Alpha|issue= 1|date= May 2016}}</ref> After Hill is injured, Rogers convinces Zemo to let Hill get medical attention. Rogers is then escorted to Dr. [[Erik Selvig]]'s clinic by Father Patrick. Selvig tells Rogers that Kobik is at the Pleasant Hill Bowling Alley. During an attempt to reason with Kobik, Rogers is attacked by Crossbones. Before Rogers can be killed, Kobik uses her abilities to restore him back to his prime. Declaring that "It's good to be back," Steve defeats Crossbones as Captain America and the Winter Soldier catch up with him.<ref>{{cite comic|writer= Spencer, Nick|penciller= Acuña, Daniel|inker= Acuña, Daniel|story= Standoff|title= Captain America: Sam Wilson|issue= 7|date= May 2016}}</ref> They resume their search for Kobik, and discover that Baron Zemo had Fixer invent a device that would make Kobik subservient to them. Rogers rallies the heroes so that they can take the fight to Zemo.<ref>{{cite comic|writer= Spencer, Nick|penciller= [[Paul Renaud|Renaud, Paul]]|inker= Renaud, Paul|title= Captain America: Sam Wilson|issue= 8|date= June 2016}}</ref> In the aftermath of the incident, Steve and Sam plan to keep what happened at Pleasant Hill under wraps for the time being.<ref>{{cite comic|writer= Spencer, Nick|penciller= Acuña, Daniel|inker= Acuña, Daniel|title= Avengers: Standoff!: Assault on Pleasant Hill Omega|issue= 1|date= June 2016}}</ref>


===Shield===
In ''Captain America: Steve Rogers'' #1 (July 2016), the final panel apparently revealed that Rogers has been a [[Hydra (comics)|Hydra]] double-agent since his early youth.<ref>{{cite comic|writer= Spencer, Nick|penciller= Saiz, Jesus|inker= Saiz, Jesus|title= Captain America: Steve Rogers|issue= 1|date= July 2016}}</ref><ref>{{cite magazine|first= Eliana|last= Dockterman|url= http://time.com/4347224/captain-america-hydra-agent-marvel-tom-brevoort/|title= Captain America Is a Hydra Agent: Marvel Editor Explains|magazine= [[Time (magazine)|Time]]|date= May 25, 2016|archive-url= https://web.archive.org/web/20161010050418/http://time.com/4347224/captain-america-hydra-agent-marvel-tom-brevoort/|archive-date= October 10, 2016|url-status=live}}</ref><ref>{{cite magazine|url= http://www.ew.com/article/2016/05/25/captain-america-villain-hydra-nick-spencer-tom-brevoort?xid=entertainment-weekly_socialflow_twitter|title= Marvel's Nick Spencer, Tom Brevoort talk making Captain America a Hydra plant|first= Christian|last= Holub|date= May 25, 2016|magazine=[[Entertainment Weekly]]|archive-url= https://web.archive.org/web/20161105105650/http://www.ew.com/article/2016/05/25/captain-america-villain-hydra-nick-spencer-tom-brevoort?xid=entertainment-weekly_socialflow_twitter|archive-date= November 5, 2016|url-status=live}}</ref> This is subsequently revealed to be the result of Kobik's restoration of Rogers' youth, as she had been taught by the Red Skull that Hydra was good for the world, and having the mind of a four-year-old child, Kobik changed reality so that Rogers would be the greatest man he could be: believing Hydra to be good, Kobik permanently altered his memories so that Rogers believed that he had always been a member of Hydra.<ref>{{cite comic|writer= Spencer, Nick|penciller= Saiz, Jesus|inker= Saiz, Jesus|title= Captain America: Steve Rogers|issue= 2|date= August 2016}}</ref><ref>{{cite news|url=http://www.newsarama.com/29904-how-steve-rogers-became-a-hydra-agent-spoilers.html|title=How Steve Rogers Became a Hydra Agent – Spoilers |first= George|last= Marston|work=Newsarama|date= June 28, 2016|archive-url= https://web.archive.org/web/20160806221228/http://www.newsarama.com/29904-how-steve-rogers-became-a-hydra-agent-spoilers.html|archive-date= August 6, 2016|url-status=live}}</ref> Some of Rogers' original heroic attributes remain intact, such as covering the death of another Hydra member within S.H.I.E.L.D., [[Erik Selvig]], as well as knowing of [[Jack Flag]]'s tragic life and his immortality, which is why Steve pushes him from Zemo's airplane (resulting in coma, not death). Additionally, it is revealed that Rogers' abusive father, Joseph, was actually killed by Hydra, and that Hydra deceived him into thinking Joseph died of a heart attack.<ref>{{cite comic|writer= Spencer, Nick|penciller= Saiz, Jesus|inker= Saiz, Jesus|title= Captain America: Steve Rogers|issue= 3|date= September 2016}}</ref> It is also revealed that Rogers witnessed his mother, Sarah, being killed by Sinclair's Hydra goons and kidnapped him, which is the reason why Steve held a grudge towards Hydra's evilness and plans to kill the Red Skull's clone and restore Hydra's lost honor.<ref>{{cite comic|writer= Spencer, Nick|penciller= Pina, Javier; Sepulveda, Miguel Angel|inker= Pina, Javier; Sepulveda, Miguel Angel|title= Captain America: Steve Rogers|issue= 4|date= October 2016}}</ref> As part of his long-term plans, Steve further compromised Sam Wilson's current image as 'the' Captain America by using his greater familiarity with the shield to deliberately put Wilson in a position where he would be unable to use the shield to save a senator from [[Flag-Smasher]], with the final goal of demoralizing Sam to the point where he will return the shield to Rogers of his own free will, not wanting to kill Wilson and risk creating a martyr.<ref>{{cite comic|writer= Spencer, Nick|penciller= Renaud, Paul|inker= Renaud, Paul|story= Take Back the Shield Part 1|title= Captain America: Sam Wilson|issue= 14|date= December 2016}}</ref>
{{Main|Captain America's shield}}
{{multiple image
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Captain America's primary piece of equipment is a [[round shield]] with a design featuring a white star on a blue circle surrounded by red and white rings. First appearing in ''Captain America Comics'' #1 as a triangular [[heater shield]], beginning in ''Captain America Comics'' #2 it was changed to its current circular design due to a complaint from [[Archie Comics|MLJ Comics]] that the original design too closely resembled the chest symbol of their superhero [[The Shield (Archie)|The Shield]].{{sfn|Cronin|2009|p=134}} The shield is constructed from an alloy of [[vibranium]] and [[adamantium]], two highly resilient [[List of fictional elements, materials, isotopes and subatomic particles|fictional metals]] appearing in Marvel comic books. It is both a virtually indestructible defensive object and a highly aerodynamic offensive weapon: when thrown, it is capable of ricocheting off multiple surfaces and returning to the original thrower.<ref name="Handbook"/>
During the 2016 "[[Civil War II]]" storyline, with the discovery of new Inhuman [[Ulysses (comics)#Ulysses Cain|Ulysses]] – who has the ability to "predict" the future by calculating complex patterns – Rogers has set out to prevent Ulysses from learning of his true plans and allegiance. Rogers does this by "forcing" certain predictions on him, such as anonymously providing Bruce Banner with new gamma research to provoke a vision that would drive the Avengers to kill Banner, although this plan has apparently backfired with a recent vision showing the new [[Spider-Man (Miles Morales)|Spider-Man]] standing over the dead Steve Rogers.<ref>{{cite comic|writer= Spencer, Nick|penciller= Pina, Javier|inker= Pina, Javier|title= Captain America: Steve Rogers|issue= 5|date= November 2016}}</ref><ref>{{cite comic|writer= Bendis, Brian Michael|penciller= Marquez, David|inker= Marquez, David|title= [[Civil War II]]|issue= 5|date= November 2016}}</ref> Despite this revelation, Rogers presents himself as the voice of reason by allowing Spider-Man to flee with Thor. This inspires doubt in Tony Stark for his current stance by suggesting that he is just acting against Danvers because he does not like being top dog.<ref>{{cite comic|writer= Spencer, Nick|penciller= Pina, Javier|inker= Pina, Javier|title= Captain America: Steve Rogers|issue= 6|date= December 2016}}</ref> He then goes to [[Washington, D.C.]], the location seen in Ulysses' vision, to talk to Spider-Man, who was trying to understand the vision like he was. When Captain Marvel attempts to arrest Spider-Man, Tony, wearing the War Machine armor, confronts her and the two begin to fight.<ref>''Civil War II'' #7. Marvel Comics.</ref>


==Supporting cast==
Later, Rogers goes to Sokovia and joins forces with Black Widow to liberate freedom fighters from a prison so they can reclaim their country. After that, he goes to his base where Doctor Selvig expresses concern of his plan to kill the Red Skull. He then reveals that he has Baron Zemo in a cell, planning to recruit him.<ref>''Captain America: Steve Rogers'' #7. Marvel Comics.</ref> He eventually kills the Skull after the villain is captured by the Unity Squad and the Xavier brain fragment extracted by the Beast, Rogers throwing the Skull out of a window over a cliff after Sin and Crossbones affirm their new allegiance to Rogers, Hydra Supreme.<ref>''Captain America: Steve Rogers'' vol.1 #15</ref>
===Sidekicks===
Captain America's first [[sidekick]] is [[Bucky Barnes]], introduced in ''Captain America Comics'' #1 as the teenaged "mascot" of Steve Rogers' regiment. He is made Captain America's partner in that same issue after accidentally discovering the character's secret identity.{{sfn|Rizzo|Licari|2021|p=15}} Joe Simon described Bucky's creation as being largely motivated by a need to give Captain America "someone to talk to" and avoid the overuse of dialogue delivered through [[internal monologue]], noting that "mostly, Bucky was brought in as a way of eliminating too many [[thought balloons]]."{{sfn|Dutter|1990|p=11}} Bucky was retroactively established as having been killed in the same accident that left Captain America frozen in suspended animation; the character remained deceased for many decades, contrasting the typically ephemeral nature of [[Comic book death|comic book deaths]],<ref name="StaysDead"/> until he was revived in 2005 as the Winter Soldier. Initially introduced as a brainwashed assassin and antagonist to Captain America, Bucky's memories and personality were later restored, and he was re-established as an ally to Steve Rogers.{{sfn|Rizzo|Licari|2021|pp=148–150}} [[Rick Jones (character)|Rick Jones]] briefly assumed the role of Captain America's sidekick and the public identity of Bucky following Captain America's return to comics in the 1960s.<ref name="CASidekicks"/>{{sfn|Dowsett|2008|p=137}}


In 1969, [[Falcon (comics)|Sam Wilson]] was introduced as the superhero The Falcon and later became Captain America's sidekick, making the characters the first interracial superhero duo in American comic books.{{sfn|Kaplan|2006|p=56}} Possessing the power to communicate with birds, Wilson is initially depicted as a former [[social worker]] living in [[Harlem]], though this identity is revealed to be the result of memories implanted by the Red Skull. He later receives a winged suit from the superhero [[Black Panther (character)|Black Panther]] that enables him to fly.{{sfn|Rizzo|Licari|2021|p=56}} Other characters who have served as Rogers' sidekick include [[Betsy Ross (character)|Golden Girl]] (Betsy Ross), [[Demolition Man (character)|Demolition Man]] (Dennis Dunphy), [[Jack Flag]] (Jack Harrison), and [[Free Spirit (comics)|Free Spirit]] (Cathy Webster).<ref name="CASidekicks"/><ref name="CBRSidekicks"/>
In the 2017 "[[Secret Empire (comics)|Secret Empire]]" storyline, Rogers, as the head of S.H.I.E.L.D, uses a subsequent alien invasion and a mass supervillain assault in order to seize control of the United States. He neutralizes the superheroes that might oppose him,<ref>''Secret Empire'' #0. Marvel Comics.</ref> and seeks the Cosmic Cube to bring about a reality in which Hydra won World War II.<ref>''Secret Empire'' #1. Marvel Comics.</ref> When Rick smuggles information about the Cube's rewriting of Rogers' reality to the remaining free Avengers, a disheveled, bearded man in a torn World War II army uniform appears who introduces himself as Steve Rogers.<ref>''Secret Empire'' #2. Marvel Comics.</ref> As the Avengers and Hydra search for fragments of the shattered Cube, it is revealed that this amnesic Steve Rogers is actually a manifestation of Rogers existing within the Cube itself, created by Kobik's memories of Rogers before he was converted to Hydra, as she comes to recognize that her decision to 'rewrite' Rogers as an agent of Hydra was wrong.<ref>''Secret Empire'' #9</ref> Although Hydra Supreme Rogers is able to mostly reassemble the Cosmic Cube, Sam Wilson and Bucky are able to use a fragment of the cube to restore the 'memory' of pre-Hydra Rogers in the Cube to corporeal existence, allowing him to defeat his Hydra self, subsequently using the Cube to undo most of the damage caused by Hydra manipulating reality even if the physical damage remains.<ref>''Secret Empire'' #10</ref> 'Hydra Cap' continues to exist as a separate entity and is kept trapped in a prison where he is the only inmate, mocking the restored Rogers about the challenge he will face rebuilding his reputation. For himself, Rogers muses that this troubling affair has a silver lining, that this experience will teach everyone not to place such blind trust in another.<ref>''Secret Empire: Omega'' #1</ref> Not long after, he received a pardon due to a disinformation campaign to paint the non-Hydra Steve Rogers as the Supreme Leader, but as he was leaving his prison he was ambushed and killed by [[Selene (comics)|Selene]].<ref>''Captain America Vol 9 #8''</ref>


===Enemies===
==Powers and abilities==
[[File:CAtransformation.png|thumb|Steve Rogers' physical transformation, from a reprint of ''Captain America Comics'' #1 (March 1941). Art and story by [[Joe Simon]] and [[Jack Kirby]].]]

===Tactician and field commander===
Rogers' battle experience and military training make him an expert [[Military tactics|tactician]] and field commander, with his teammates frequently deferring to his orders in battle. The Avengers, X-Men, Fantastic Four, and other heroes choose Rogers as their leader during the [[Secret Wars]]; Thor says that Rogers is one of the very few mortals he will take orders from, and follow "through the gates of Hades".<ref name=secretwars1>{{cite comic| writer= [[Jim Shooter|Shooter, Jim]]|penciller= Zeck, Mike|inker= Beatty, John|story= The War Begins|title= [[Secret Wars|Marvel Super-Heroes Secret Wars]]|issue= 1|date= May 1984}}</ref>

Rogers has blended [[aikido]], [[boxing]],<ref>''The Official Handbook of the Marvel Universe'' vol 1 #2 (February 1983)</ref> [[judo]],<ref>''Fantastic Four'' vol. 1 #26 (May 1964)</ref><ref name="CaptainAmericaMartialArts">''The Avengers'' vol 1 #5 (May 1964)</ref> [[karate]],<ref name=CaptainAmericaMartialArts /><ref>''Tales of Suspense'' vol. 1 #92 (August 1967)</ref> [[jujutsu]], [[kickboxing]], and gymnastics into his own unique fighting style and is a master of multiple martial arts. Years of practice with his near-indestructible shield make him able to aim and throw it with almost unerring accuracy. His skill with his shield is such that he can attack multiple targets in succession with a single throw or even cause a [[boomerang]]-like return from a throw to attack an enemy from behind. In canon, he is regarded by other skilled fighters as one of the best [[hand-to-hand combat]]ants in the Marvel Universe, limited only by his human physique.<ref>{{cite comic| writer= [[Mike Carlin|Carlin, Mike]]|penciller= Neary, Paul|inker= Janke, Dennis|story= And Other Strangers|title= Captain America|issue= 302|date= February 1985}}</ref><ref>{{cite comic| writer= Gruenwald, Mark|penciller= Lim, Ron|inker= Bulanadi, Danny|story= The Devil You Know|title= Captain America|issue= 375|date= Late August 1990}}</ref> Although the Super Soldier Serum is an important part of his strength, Rogers has shown himself still sufficiently capable against stronger opponents, even when the serum has been deactivated reverting him to his pre-Captain America physique.<ref>{{cite comic| writer= Brubaker, Ed|penciller= [[Dale Eaglesham|Eaglesham, Dale]]|inker= Eaglesham, Dale|story= For a lot of my childhood&nbsp; ... |title= Steve Rogers: Super-Soldier|issue= 3|date= November 2010}}</ref>

Stan Lee claimed that he'd "always been fascinated by the fact that, although Captain America has the least spectacular super-power of all, the mantle of leadership falls naturally upon him, as though he was born to command... Cap is one of the hardest hero characters to write, because the writer cannot use some exotic super-power to make his episodes seem colorful... All he has to serve him are his extraordinary combat skills, his shield, and his unquenchable love for freedom and justice."<ref>{{cite book|title=Marvel Masterworks presents The Avengers, Volume 3|author1=Lee, Stan: 1922-2018.|date=2011|publisher=Marvel Worldwide, Inc|others=Heck, Don.|isbn=9780785150565|location=New York|pages=6|oclc=666234797}}</ref>

Rogers has vast [[U.S. military]] knowledge and is often shown to be familiar with ongoing, classified Defense Department operations. He is an expert in combat strategy, survival, acrobatics, [[parkour]], military strategy, piloting, and demolitions. Despite his high profile as one of the world's most popular and recognizable superheroes, Rogers has a broad understanding of the espionage community, largely through his ongoing relationship with [[S.H.I.E.L.D.]]

===Super Soldier Serum===
Steve Rogers is often considered to be the pinnacle of human potential and constantly operates at peak (and often beyond peak) physical performance due to his enhancement via the Super Soldier Serum. The Super Soldier Serum enhances all of his metabolic functions and prevents the build-up of [[lactic acid|fatigue poisons]] in his muscles, giving him endurance far in excess of an ordinary human being. This accounts for many of his extraordinary feats, including bench pressing {{convert|1100|lbs|kg}} as a warm-up,<ref>{{cite comic| writer= Gruenwald, Mark|penciller= [[Rik Levins|Levins, Rik]]|inker= Bulanadi, Danny|story= The Prowling|title= Captain America|issue=402|date= July 1992}}</ref> vision and reflexes fast enough to dodge bullets,<ref name="cav5no17">''Captain America'' Vol. 5 #17 (June 2006)</ref> and running a mile (1.6&nbsp;km) in less than a minute (60&nbsp;mph/97&nbsp;km/h, easily exceeding the maximum speed achieved by the best human sprinters).<ref>{{cite comic| writer= Brubaker, Ed|penciller= [[Javier Pulido|Pulido, Javier]]; [[Marcos Martín (cartoonist)|Martín, Marcos]]; [[Mike Perkins|Perkins, Mike]]|inker= Pulido, Javier; Martín, Marcos; Perkins, Mike|story= Secrets of Iron & Fire|title= Captain America 65th Anniversary Special|issue= 1|date= May 2006}}</ref> Furthermore, his enhancements are the reason why he was able to survive being frozen in suspended animation for decades. He is highly resistant to hypnosis or gases that could limit his focus.<ref>{{cite comic| writer= [[Kurt Busiek|Busiek, Kurt]]|penciller= [[George Pérez|Pérez, George]]|inker= Pérez, George|story= Book Four: The Brave and the Bold|title= [[JLA/Avengers|Avengers/JLA]]|issue= 4|date= March 2005}}</ref> The secrets of creating a super-soldier were lost with the death of its creator, [[Dr. Abraham Erskine]].<ref name="tos origin" /> All attempts to recreate Erskine's treatment have failed, often creating psychopathic supervillains of which Captain America's [[Grand Director|1950s imitator]] and [[Nuke (Marvel Comics)|Nuke]] are examples. For his part, Rogers, after being revived from suspended animation, similarly regretted that Project Rebirth was never fully implemented as a treatment, pondering that perhaps that the [[Manhattan Project]] could then have been avoided and the [[Atomic bombings of Hiroshima and Nagasaki|victims of the first]] [[nuclear weapon]]s could been spared.<ref>{{cite book |last1=Miller |first1=Frank |last2=Mazzucchelli |first2=David |title=Daredevil: Born Again |date=1987 |publisher=Marvel Comics <!--|access-date=6 April 2023-->}}</ref>

===Artist===
Rogers is a skilled freelance commercial artist.<ref name="cav1no303">''Captain America'' Vol. 1 #303</ref> He has drawn the ''Captain America'' comic book published by Marvel Comics within the Marvel Universe, sometimes grumbling that the writer does not understand the hero's motivation.<ref name="cav1no315">{{cite comic |writer=Gruenwald, Mark |penciller=Neary, Paul |inker=Janke, Dennis |colorist=Feduniewicz, Ken |letterer=Albers, Diana |editor=Carlin, Michael |story=The Hard Sell |title=Captain America |volume=1 |issue=315 |date=March 1986 |publisher=Marvel Comics}}</ref>

===Weapons and equipment===
====Shield====
{{main|Captain America's shield}}[[File:Captain America's shield.svg|thumb|Captain America's shield]]
Captain America has used multiple shields throughout his history, the most prevalent of which is a nigh-indestructible disc-shaped shield made from a unique combination of [[Vibranium]], Steel alloy, and an unknown third component that has never been duplicated called Proto-Adamantium.<ref name="CA303">{{cite comic| writer= [[Mike Carlin|Carlin, Mike]]|penciller= Neary, Paul|inker= Janke, Dennis|story= Double Dare|title= Captain America|issue= 303|date= March 1985}}</ref><ref>{{cite comic| writer= Carlin, Mike|penciller= Neary, Paul|inker= Janke, Dennis|story= Undercover of the Night|title= Captain America|issue= 304|date= April 1985}}</ref> The shield was cast by American metallurgist [[Dr. Myron MacLain]], who was contracted by the U.S. government, from orders of [[President of the United States|President]] [[Franklin D. Roosevelt]], to create an impenetrable substance to use for tanks during World War II.<ref name="CA303" /> This alloy was created by accident and never duplicated, although efforts to reverse-engineer it resulted in the discovery of [[adamantium]].<ref>{{cite comic| writer= Thomas, Roy|penciller= [[Barry Windsor-Smith|Smith, Barry]]|inker= Shores, Syd|story= Betrayal|title= The [[Avengers (comics)|Avengers]]|issue= 66|date= July 1969}}</ref>

Captain America often uses his shield as an offensive throwing weapon. The first instance of Captain America's trademark ricocheting shield-toss occurs in [[Stan Lee]]'s first comics writing, the two-page text story "Captain America Foils the Traitor's Revenge" in ''Captain America Comics'' #3 (May 1941).<ref name="AmazingMarvelUniverse" /> The legacy of the shield among other comics characters includes the time-traveling mutant superhero [[Cable (comics)|Cable]] telling Captain America that his shield still exists in one of the possible futures; Cable carries it into battle and brandishes it as a symbol.<ref>{{cite comic| writer= Nicieza, Fabian|penciller= Medina, Lan|inker= Tadeo, Ed|story= Living Legends|title= [[Cable & Deadpool]]|issue= 25|date= April 2006}}</ref>

When without his trademark shield, Captain America sometimes uses other shields made from less durable metals such as steel,<ref>{{cite comic| writer= [[Mark Waid|Waid, Mark]]|penciller= [[Ron Garney|Garney, Ron]]|inker= [[Bob Wiacek|Wiacek, Bob]]|story= Museum Piece|title= Captain America|volume= 3|issue= 3|date= March 1998}}</ref> or even a photonic energy shield designed to mimic a vibranium matrix.<ref>{{cite comic| writer= Waid, Mark|penciller= [[Andy Kubert|Kubert, Andy]]|inker= Delperdang, Jesse|story= American Nightmare, Chapter One: The Bite of Madness!|title= Captain America|volume= 3|issue= 9|date= September 1998}}</ref> Rogers, having relinquished his regular shield to Barnes, carried a variant of the energy shield which can be used with either arm, and used to either block attacks or as an improvised offensive weapon able to cut through metal with relative ease.<ref>{{cite comic| writer= Brubaker, Ed|penciller= Eaglesham, Dale|inker= Eaglesham, Dale|story= In 1940, the first Professor Erskine created what became&nbsp; ... |title= Steve Rogers: Super-Soldier|issue= 4|date= December 2010}}</ref> Much like his Vibranium shield, the energy shield can be thrown, including ricocheting off multiple surfaces and returning to his hand.<ref>{{cite comic| writer= McCann, Jim|penciller= Diaz, Paco; Dragotta, Nick|inker= Diaz, Paco; Dragotta, Nick|story= Off-Target!|title= Hawkeye: Blindspot|issue= 2|date= May 2011}}</ref>

====Uniform====
Captain America's uniform is made of a fire-retardant material, and he wears a lightweight, bulletproof [[duralumin]] [[Mail (armour)|scale armor]] beneath his uniform for added protection.<ref name="stern origin"/> Originally, Rogers' mask was a separate piece of material, but an early engagement had it dislodged, thus almost exposing his identity. To prevent a recurrence of the situation, Rogers modified the mask with connecting material to his uniform, an added benefit of which was extending his armor to cover his previously exposed neck. As a member of the Avengers, Rogers has an Avengers priority card, which serves as a communications device.

====Motorcycle====
Captain America has used a custom specialized motorcycle, modified by the [[S.H.I.E.L.D.]] weapons laboratory, as well as a custom-built battle van, constructed by the [[Wakanda]] Design Group with the ability to change its color for disguise purposes (red, white and blue), and fitted to store and conceal the custom motorcycle in its rear section with a frame that allows Rogers to launch from the vehicle riding it.

==Antagonists==
{{Main|List of Captain America enemies}}
{{Main|List of Captain America enemies}}
Captain America has faced numerous foes in over 70 years of published adventures. Many of his recurring foes embody ideologies contrary to the American values that Captain America is shown to strive for and believes in. Some examples of these opposing values are Nazism ([[Red Skull]], [[Baron Zemo]]), [[neo-Nazism]] ([[Crossbones (comics)|Crossbones]], [[Doctor Faustus (comics)|Doctor Faustus]]), technocratic fascism ([[Advanced Idea Mechanics|AIM]], [[Arnim Zola]]), Communism ([[Aleksander Lukin]]), amoral capitalism ([[Roxxon Energy Corporation]]), anti-patriotism ([[Flag Smasher]]) and international and domestic terrorism ([[Hydra (Marvel Comics)|Hydra]]).


Over the course of several decades, writers and artists have established a [[rogues' gallery]] of [[supervillain]]s to face Captain America. Notable Captain America villains are listed below, ordered chronologically by their first appearance.
==Reception==


{{color box|#d6eaf8}} Indicates a group.
=== Accolades ===
{| class=wikitable
|-
!Name / team name
!Notable [[alter ego]]s / team members
![[First appearance]] (by cover date)
![[List of comics creators|Creator]]
|-
| [[Adolf Hitler in popular culture|Adolf Hitler]]
| {{ndash}}
| ''Captain America Comics'' #1 (March 1941){{sfn|Dowsett|2008|p=18}}
| {{ndash}}
|-
| [[Red Skull]]
| George Maxon<br/ >Johann Shmidt
| ''Captain America Comics'' #1 (March 1941){{sfn|Dowsett|2008|p=18}}
| [[France Herron]]<br />[[Jack Kirby]]<br />[[Joe Simon]]
|-
| [[Baron Zemo]]
| [[Heinrich Zemo]]<br/ >[[Helmut Zemo]]
| ''[[The Avengers (comic book)|The Avengers]]'' #6 (July 1964){{sfn|Dowsett|2008|p=101}}
| [[Stan Lee]]<br />Jack Kirby
|-
|-bgcolor="#d6eaf8"
| [[Hydra (comics)|Hydra]]
| Red Skull<br />Baron Zemo<br /> [[Baron Strucker]]<br />[[Madame Hydra]]
| ''[[Strange Tales]]'' #135 (August 1965){{sfn|Dowsett|2008|p=108}}
| Stan Lee<br />Jack Kirby
|-
| [[Batroc the Leaper]]
| Georges Batroc
| ''[[Tales of Suspense]]'' #75 (March 1966){{sfn|Dowsett|2008|p=115}}
| Stan Lee<br />Jack Kirby
|-
|-bgcolor="#d6eaf8"
| [[Secret Empire (organization)|Secret Empire]]
| {{ndash}}
| ''[[Tales to Astonish]]'' #81 (July 1966){{sfn|Dowsett|2008|p=116}}
| Stan Lee<br />Jack Kirby
|-
| [[Doctor Faustus (comics)|Doctor Faustus]]
| Johann Fennhoff
| ''[[Captain America (comic book)|Captain America]]'' #107 (November 1968){{sfn|Dowsett|2008|p=132}}
| Stan Lee<br />Jack Kirby
|-
|-bgcolor="#d6eaf8"
| [[Roxxon Energy Corporation]]
| {{ndash}}
| ''Captain America'' #180 (December 1974){{sfn|Dowsett|2008|p=167}}
| [[Steve Englehart]]<br />[[Sal Buscema]]
|-
| [[Arnim Zola]]
| {{ndash}}
| ''Captain America and the Falcon'' #208 (May 1977){{sfn|Dowsett|2008|p=179}}
| Jack Kirby
|-
|-bgcolor="#d6eaf8"
| [[Serpent Society]]
| [[Sidewinder (character)|Sidewinder]]<br />[[Diamondback (Rachel Leighton)|Diamondback ]]
| ''Captain America'' #310 (October 1985){{sfn|Dowsett|2008|p=223}}
| [[Mark Gruenwald]]<br />[[Paul Neary]]
|-
| [[Flag-Smasher]]
| Karl Morgenthau<br />Guy Thierrault
| ''Captain America'' #312 (December 1985){{sfn|Dowsett|2008|p=223}}
| Mark Gruenwald<br />Paul Neary
|-
| [[Crossbones (character)|Crossbones]]
| Brock Rumlow
| ''Captain America'' #359 (October 1989){{sfn|Dowsett|2008|p=242}}
| Mark Gruenwald<br />[[Kieron Dwyer]]
|}


===Romantic interests===
* In 2011, ''[[IGN]]'' ranked Captain America 6th in their "Top 100 Comic Book Heroes" list.<ref>{{cite web |date=2011 |title=IGN's Top 100 Comic Book Heroes |url=http://www.ign.com/top/comic-book-heroes/6 |url-status=live |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20150630173526/http://www.ign.com/top/comic-book-heroes/6 |archive-date=June 30, 2015 |access-date=July 9, 2015 |website=IGN}}</ref>
Steve Rogers' first love interest was Betsy Ross, introduced in his World War II-era comics as a member of the [[Women's Army Corps]] who later became the costumed superhero Golden Girl.{{sfn|Dittmer|2012|p=30}} [[Peggy Carter]], an American member of the [[French Resistance]], was retroactively established in comics published in the 1960s as another of Rogers' wartime lovers.{{sfn|Walton|2009|pp=161–162}} When Rogers is revived in the post-war era, he begins a partnership and on-again off-again relationship with [[S.H.I.E.L.D.]] agent [[Sharon Carter]]; introduced as Peggy's younger sister, she was later retconned as Peggy's grandniece to reflect Marvel's [[floating timeline]].{{sfn|Rizzo|Licari|2021|p=186}} In comics published in the 1980s, Rogers dated and became engaged to civilian [[Bernie Rosenthal]], though they ended their relationship amicably after Bernie decided to leave New York to attend law school.{{sfn|Dowsett|2008|pp=198, 208}} In the 1990s, Rogers had a romantic entanglement with the alternately villainous and antiheroic [[Diamondback (Rachel Leighton)|Diamondback]], a member of the [[Serpent Society]].<ref name="Diamondback"/>
* In 2012, ''[[IGN]]'' ranked Captain America 2nd in their "Top 50 Avengers" list.<ref>{{cite web |date=April 30, 2012 |title=The Top 50 Avengers |url=http://www.ign.com/top/avengers/2 |url-status=live |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20151129171205/http://www.ign.com/top/avengers/2 |archive-date=November 29, 2015 |access-date=July 28, 2015 |website=IGN}}</ref>
* In 2015, ''[[Gizmodo]]'' ranked Captain America 1st in their "Every Member Of The Avengers" list.<ref>{{Cite web |date=2015-02-26 |title=Every Member Of The Avengers, Ranked |url=https://gizmodo.com/every-member-of-the-avengers-ranked-1688282767 |access-date=2022-11-19 |website=Gizmodo |language=en}}</ref>
* In 2015, ''[[Entertainment Weekly]]'' ranked Captain America 2nd in their "Let's rank every Avenger ever" list.<ref>{{Cite web |last1=April 29 |first1=Darren Franich Updated |last2=EDT |first2=2015 at 12:00 PM |title=Let's rank every Avenger ever |url=https://ew.com/article/2015/04/29/lets-rank-every-avenger-ever/ |access-date=2022-11-19 |website=EW.com |language=en}}</ref>
* In 2016, ''[[Screen Rant]]'' ranked Captain America 20th in their "20 Most Powerful Members Of The Avengers" list.<ref>{{Cite web |last=Blunden |first=Fred |date=2016-08-14 |title=The 20 Most Powerful Members Of The Avengers, Ranked |url=https://screenrant.com/most-powerful-avengers-ranked/ |access-date=2022-11-19 |website=ScreenRant |language=en-US}}</ref>
* In 2017, ''[[CBR.com]]'' ranked Captain America 1st in their "15 Avengers Leaders" list.<ref>{{Cite web |last=Ashford |first=Sage |date=2017-09-12 |title=15 Avengers Leaders, Ranked From Worst To Best |url=https://www.cbr.com/avengers-leaders-ranked/ |access-date=2022-11-19 |website=CBR |language=en-US}}</ref>
* In 2018, ''[[GameSpot]]'' ranked Captain America 5th in their "50 Most Important Superheroes" list.<ref>{{Cite web |title=The 50 Most Important Superheroes, Ranked |url=https://www.gamespot.com/gallery/the-50-most-important-superheroes-ranked/2900-473/#46 |access-date=2022-11-21 |website=GameSpot |language=en-US}}</ref>
* In 2018, ''[[CBR.com]]'' ranked Steve Rogers' Captain America persona 1st in their "20 Versions Of Captain America Ranked Worst To Best" list.<ref>{{Cite web |last=Weyer |first=Michael |date=2018-11-07 |title=20 Versions Of Captain America Ranked Worst To Best |url=https://www.cbr.com/versions-of-captain-america-ranked/ |access-date=2022-11-19 |website=CBR |language=en-US}}</ref>
* In 2019, ''[[Comicbook.com]]'' ranked Captain America 6th in their "50 Most Important Superheroes Ever" list.<ref>{{Cite web |title=Ranking The 50 Most Important Superheroes Ever |url=https://comicbook.com/movies/news/the-50-most-important-superheroes-ranked/ |access-date=2022-11-19 |website=Movies |language=en}}</ref>
* In 2022, ''[[IGN]]'' ranked Captain America 1st their "25 Best Marvel Heroes in the MCU" list.<ref>{{Cite web |last=Fowler |first=Matt |date=2022-05-12 |title=The 25 Best Marvel Heroes in the MCU |url=https://www.ign.com/articles/best-top-marvel-mcu-heroes |access-date=2022-11-19 |website=IGN |language=en}}</ref>
* In 2022, ''[[The A.V. Club]]'' ranked Captain America 7th in their "100 best Marvel characters" list.<ref>{{Cite web |date=2022-07-08 |title=The 100 best Marvel characters ranked: 20-1 |url=https://www.avclub.com/top-marvel-movie-characters-ranked-1849148779 |access-date=2022-11-19 |website=The A.V. Club |language=en}}</ref>
* In 2022, ''[[CBR.com]]'' ranked Captain America 30th in their "30 Strongest Marvel Superheroes" list.<ref>{{Cite web |last=Aitchison |first=Sean |date=2018-04-29 |title=The 30 Strongest Marvel Superheroes, Officially Ranked |url=https://www.cbr.com/strongest-marvel-superheroes/ |access-date=2022-11-19 |website=CBR |language=en-US}}</ref>
* In 2022, ''[[Newsarama]]'' ranked Captain America 1st in their "Best Avengers members of all time" list.<ref>{{Cite web |author1=George Marston |date=2022-08-11 |title=Best Avengers members of all time |url=https://www.gamesradar.com/best-avengers-members-of-all-time/ |access-date=2022-11-19 |website=gamesradar |language=en}}</ref>
* In 2022, ''[[Screen Rant]]'' included Captain America in their "10 Most Powerful Avengers In Marvel Comics" list.<ref>{{Cite web |last=Harn |first=Darby |date=2022-06-25 |title=10 Most Powerful Avengers In Marvel Comics |url=https://screenrant.com/avengers-most-powerful-marvel-comics-scarlet-witch/ |access-date=2022-11-19 |website=ScreenRant |language=en-US}}</ref>
* In 2023, ''[[CBR.com]]'' ranked Captain America 7th in their"10 Most Popular Marvel Characters" list.<ref>{{Cite web |last=Harth |first=David |date=2023-01-22 |title=10 Most Popular Marvel Characters, Ranked |url=https://www.cbr.com/popular-marvel-characters/ |access-date=2023-02-04 |website=CBR |language=en}}</ref>


==Other versions==
===Alternate versions of Captain America===
{{anchor|List of incarnations of Captain America}}
{{main|Alternative versions of Captain America}}
"Captain America" is the name of several fictional characters appearing in [[American comic book]]s published by [[Marvel Comics]]. The first and primary character is Steve Rogers, who was created by [[Joe Simon]] and [[Jack Kirby]]. Other characters have adopted the alias over the years, most notably [[Bucky Barnes]] and [[Falcon (comics)|Sam Wilson]].


The title of "Captain America" has been used by other characters in the [[Marvel Universe]] in addition to Steve Rogers. [[Spirit of '76 (Marvel Comics)|William Naslund]], [[Jeffrey Mace]], and [[William Burnside (character)|William Burnside]] were introduced or retroactively established as former Captain Americas to resolve plot inconsistencies arising from appearances made by Captain America that contradicted Rogers' revised backstory established in ''The Avengers'' #4 (1964) as having been frozen in suspended animation since the end of World War II.{{sfn|Stevens|2015|p=16}} [[U.S. Agent|John Walker]], also known as U.S. Agent, was introduced as a villainous Captain America in 1988,{{sfn|Weiner|2013|p=107}} and [[Isaiah Bradley]] was established in the 2003 [[Limited series (comics)|limited series]] ''[[Truth: Red, White & Black]]'' as an African American man who acquired superpowers after being used as a test subject for the for the Super-Solider Serum.{{sfn|Weiner|2013|p=109}} Rogers' sidekicks Bucky Barnes and Sam Wilson have also alternately held the title of Captain America: Barnes in 2008 following [[The Death of Captain America|Rogers' death in 2007]],{{sfn|Weiner|2013|p=107}} and Wilson following Marvel's 2012 rebranding campaign [[Marvel Now!]].<ref name="FalconCap"/> Within the [[Multiverse (Marvel Comics)|multiverse]] of [[Parallel universes in fiction|parallel universes]] that compose the Marvel Universe, there are multiple variations of Steve Rogers and Captain America; this includes Marvel's [[Ultimate Comics]] universe, which possesses [[Captain America (Ultimate Marvel character)|its own version of Steve Rogers]].{{sfn|Stevens|2015|p=224}}
===Steven Rogers (Revolutionary War Era)===
'''Captain Steven Rogers''', the 18th century Earth-616 ancestor of the World War 2 [[supersoldier|Super-Soldier]] serum recipient, wore a colorful costume and carried a round cast iron shield.<ref>''Captain America: Sentinel of Liberty'' #6 (March 1999)</ref>


==Cultural impact and legacy==
===Bob Russo, "Scar" Turpin, and Roscoe Simmons===
{{Quote box
In a time when Rogers had abandoned the Captain America identity, Bob Russo and "Scar" Turpin appear using the alias for an issue each, but both of them quickly abandon the identity after being injured.<ref>''Captain America'' #178-#179 (October 1974)</ref> Roscoe Simmons wears the star-spangled costume during Rogers' time as the [[Nomad (comics)|Nomad]] I, and is given the [[Captain America's shield|shield]] by Rogers. He briefly serves as the Falcon's junior partner, but is killed by the [[Red Skull]] a mere two issues after adopting the identity.<ref>''Captain America'' #181-#183 (January 1975 - March 1975)</ref>
|quote = "Over the years, Captain America's story has accurately reflected U.S. attitudes, as our country moved from the self-confidence of the early Cold War to the guilt-ridden angst of the 1970s to the revival of national pride that characterized the Reagan 1980s."
|author = – Jacob Heilbrun, ''[[The Los Angeles Times]]''<ref name="LATEulogy"/>
|width = 30%
|align = left
|border = none
}}


Captain America is one of the most popular and recognized Marvel Comics characters, and has been described as an icon of [[American popular culture]].{{sfn|Hayton|Albright|2009|p=20}}{{sfn|Weiner|2013|p=101}} He is the most well-known and enduring of the [[List of United States-themed superheroes|United States-themed superhero]] to emerge from the Second World War{{sfn|Weiner|2013|p=108}}{{sfn|Steranko|1970|p=52}} and provoked a significant proliferation of patriotic-themed superheroes in American comic books during the 1940s,{{sfn|Weiner|2013|p=108}} including the [[American Crusader]], the [[American Eagle (Standard Comics)|American Eagle]], the [[Liberator (Nedor Comics)|Liberator]], and the [[Fighting Yank]] at [[Standard Comics|Nedor Comics]]; the [[Spirit of '76 (Harvey Comics)|Spirit of '76]] and [[Captain Freedom]] at [[Harvey Comics]]; [[Yank & Doodle]] at [[Crestwood Publications|Prize Publications]]; [[Captain Flag]] at [[MLJ Comics]]; [[Captain Courageous (comics)|Captain Courageous]] at [[Ace Comics]]; Commando Yank at [[Fawcett Comics]]; U.S. Jones at [[Fox Feature Syndicate]]; and Major Victory at [[Harry "A" Chesler|Harry "A" Chesler Comics]].{{sfn|Steranko|1970|p=52}} Though none would achieve Captain America's commercial success, the volume of Captain America imitators was such that a mere three months after the character's debut, Timely published a statement indicating that "there is only one Captain America" ​​and warning that they would take legal action against publishers that infringed on the character.{{sfn|Steranko|1970|p=52}} After being dismissed from Timely, Joe Simon and Jack Kirby would themselves create a new patriotic superhero, the [[Fighting American]], for [[Crestwood Publications|Prize Comics]] in 1954;{{sfn|Harvey|1996|pp=37–38}} the character became the subject of a lawsuit from Marvel in the 1990s after Rob Liefeld attempted to revive the character following his own departure from Marvel.<ref name="LiefeldInterview"/>
===Dave Rickford===
Dave Rickford is a former special forces soldier who attained an augmentation, giving him superpowers, from [[Dr. Malus]] and the [[Power Broker (character)|Power Broker]]. He becomes the new Captain America when Bucky is entangled in legal difficulties and Steve Rogers is the head of [[S.H.I.E.L.D.]] He is kidnapped by [[Advanced Idea Mechanics|A.I.M.]] and rescued by Rogers, who convinces him to drop the identity.<ref>''Captain America'' #615.1 (May 2011)</ref>


Captain America became linked to [[counterculture of the 1960s]] through the film ''[[Easy Rider]]''.{{sfn|Hayton|Albright|2009|p=20}} When the character was killed in 2007, he was eulogized in numerous mainstream media outlets including the ''[[The New York Times]]''<ref name="NYTEulogy"/> and ''[[The Los Angeles Times]]'',<ref name="LATEulogy"/> with the former describing him as a "national hero".<ref name="NYTEulogy"/> In 2011, Captain America placed sixth on [[IGN]]'s "Top 100 Comic Book Heroes of All Time",<ref name="IGN100"/> and second in their 2012 list of "The Top 50 Avengers".<ref name="IGN50"/> ''[[Gizmodo]]'' and ''[[Entertainment Weekly]]'' respectively ranked Captain America first and second in their 2015 rankings of Avengers characters.<ref name="Gizmodo"/><ref name="EWRank"/> ''[[Empire (magazine)|Empire]]'' ranked Captain America as the 21st greatest comic book character of all time.<ref name="EmpireRank"/>
===1602===
The ''[[Marvel 1602]]'' [[Limited series (comics)|limited series]] presents an alternative history, Earth-311, in which a Captain America from the late 21st century is transported to the year 1602 after the [[Purple Man]] takes over the world – his enemy wanting to dispose of Rogers in such a way that there is nothing left of him in the present to inspire others – where he assumes the identity of '''Rojhaz''' a white [[Native Americans in the United States|Native American]] who is presumed by the Europeans to be of [[Madoc#Welsh Indians|Welsh ancestry]]. His arrival causes numerous alterations in reality, causing analogues of various Marvel Universe characters to appear in the 17th century instead, speculated by [[Uatu]] to be the result of the universe attempting to generate a means of repairing the damage caused to reality. Rogers refuses to return to the future because he wants to nurture a new United States free of prejudice from its very beginnings, but the 1602 version of Nick Fury forces him to return, accompanying him on the journey. Rogers noted that in his version of the late 21st century, he was the last true superhero and was left alone fighting his own country – the United States – which had fallen under the rule of a tyrannical life-term President.{{Volume needed|c=y|date=February 2013}}


===1872===
==In other media==
{{Main|Captain America in other media}}
''1872'' is a [[Marvel Comics|Marvel]] miniseries during the [[Secret Wars (2015 comic book)|Secret Wars]] comics featuring characters in a Western-style adventure in the small boom town of Timely. A dam constructed for mining projects is diverting water away from nearby native territories, so [[Red Wolf (comics)|Red Wolf]] attempts to blow it up. '''Sheriff Steve Rogers''' prevents the corrupt Mayor Fisk ([[Kingpin (character)|Kingpin]]) from having him killed, in order to give him a fair trial.<ref>{{Cite book|title=1872 #1|year=2015}}</ref> However, as Rogers goes to help his friend Tony Stark ([[Iron Man]]) from being attacked, Red Wolf is taken and Rogers kills more of Fisk's men, further angering the mayor. Red Wolf is denied a trial, and Fisk's team of assassins, including Elektra ([[Elektra (comics)|Elektra]]), Grizzly ([[Grizzly (comics)|Grizzly]]), Bullseye ([[Bullseye (comics)|Bullseye]]) and Otto Octavius ([[Doctor Octopus]]), are sent to kill them both. Sheriff Rogers, having Bullseye at gunpoint, attempts to rally the people of Timely into taking back their government, but is distracted and then shot by Bullseye, thrown into a pig pen by Fisk to die.<ref>{{Cite book|title=1872 #2|year=2015}}</ref>
{{Further|Captain America in film}}


[[File:Captain America- The First Avenger Comic-Con Panel 2b.jpg|thumb|[[Chris Evans (actor)|Chris Evans]] (pictured 2010) portrays [[Steve Rogers (Marvel Cinematic Universe)|Steve Rogers]] in the [[Marvel Cinematic Universe]].]]
Red Wolf, taking up the role of Sheriff, Widow Barnes ([[Black Widow (Natasha Romanova)|Black Widow]]), Doctor Banner ([[Hulk]]), Carol Danvers ([[Captain Marvel (Marvel Comics)|Captain Marvel]]) and Tony Stark join together to get rid of the dam, as well as avenge Steve Rogers,<ref>{{Cite book|title=1872 #3|year=2015}}</ref> and they succeed in both with Banner sacrificing himself to blow up the dam, and Widow Barnes killing Fisk. The remaining characters become Sheriff Roger's Avengers, protecting the town of Timely.<ref>{{Cite book|title=1872 #4|year=2015}}</ref>


Captain America has appeared in a variety of adapted, spin-off, and licensed media, including films, cartoons, video games, toys, clothing, and books.{{sfn|Weiner|2013|p=108}} The first appearance of Captain America in a medium outside of comic books was in the 1944 [[serial film]] ''[[Captain America (serial)|Captain America]]'', which was also the first piece of non-comics media to feature a Marvel Comics character.<ref name="fromthepages" /> The character later appeared in two [[Television film|made-for-TV films]] in 1979, ''[[Captain America (1979 film)|Captain America]]'' and ''[[Captain America II: Death Too Soon]]'',{{sfn|Scott|Weiner|2009|pp=221–222}} and a [[Captain America (1990 film)|a self-titled feature-length film]] in 1990.{{sfn|Burnham|2016|p=135}} A trilogy of Captain America films starring [[Chris Evans (actor)|Chris Evans]] as the title character were produced as part of the [[Marvel Cinematic Universe]] (MCU) in the 2010s: ''[[Captain America: The First Avenger]]'' (2011), ''[[Captain America: The Winter Soldier]]'' (2014), and ''[[Captain America: Civil War]]'' (2016).<ref name="EvansDeal2"/> The character also appeared in the ensemble films ensemble films ''[[The Avengers (2012 film)|The Avengers]]'' (2012),<ref name="Cap">{{cite news |last1=Graser |first1=Marc |title=Chris Evans to play 'Captain America' |url=https://www.variety.com/article/VR1118016757?refCatId=13 |work=Variety |access-date=December 8, 2019 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110406121550/http://www.variety.com/article/VR1118016757?refCatId=13 |archive-date=April 6, 2011 |url-status=dead |date=April 25, 2011}}</ref> ''[[Avengers: Age of Ultron]]'' (2015),<ref name="Ultron">{{cite web |last1=Flemning Jr |first1=Mike |title=Chris Evans To Helm '1:30 Train' Before Reprising Captain America In 'Avengers 2' |url=https://deadline.com/2013/08/chris-evans-to-helm-130-train-before-reprising-captain-america-in-avengers-2-554782/ |website=Deadline Hollywood |access-date=December 8, 2019 |date=August 1, 2013 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20191208205747/https://deadline.com/2013/08/chris-evans-to-helm-130-train-before-reprising-captain-america-in-avengers-2-554782/ |archive-date=December 8, 2019 |url-status=live }}</ref> ''[[Avengers: Infinity War]]'' (2018),<ref name="Endgame" /> and ''[[Avengers: Endgame]]'' (2019).<ref name="Endgame">{{cite web |last1=Chitwood |first1=Adam |title=Chris Hemsworth Reveals the 3 Marvel Movies Left on His Contract |url=https://collider.com/avengers-3-4-chris-hemsworth-reveals-marvel-movies-left-on-his-contract/ |website=Collider |access-date=December 8, 2019 |date=April 14, 2015 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20190929033530/http://collider.com/avengers-3-4-chris-hemsworth-reveals-marvel-movies-left-on-his-contract/ |archive-date=September 29, 2019 |url-status=live }}</ref>
===Age of Ultron===
In the ''[[Age of Ultron]]'' story wherein [[Ultron]] takes over the world, Captain America is one of the few surviving heroes. He is a shattered hero whose spirit is gone and shield is broken.<ref>''Age of Ultron'' #1</ref> He and the remaining heroes are tasked with coming up with a plan to stop Ultron, which takes them to the [[Savage Land]].<ref>''Age of Ultron'' #4</ref> Captain America travels to the future with [[Iron Man]], [[Nick Fury]], [[Red Hulk]], [[Storm (Marvel Comics)|Storm]] and [[Quicksilver (comics)|Quicksilver]] in an attempt to stop Ultron with the use of [[Doctor Doom]]'s time platform,<ref>''Age of Ultron'' #5</ref> but are ambushed by Ultron drones and Captain America is decapitated.<ref>''Age of Ultron'' #6</ref>


The first appearance of Captain America on television was in the 1966 [[Grantray-Lawrence Animation]] series ''[[The Marvel Super Heroes]]''. The character would make minor appearances in several Marvel animated series in the subsequent decades, including ''[[Spider-Man and His Amazing Friends (1981 TV series)|Spider-Man and His Amazing Friends]]'' (1981–1983), ''[[X-Men: The Animated Series]]'' (1992–1997), and ''[[The Avengers: United They Stand]]'' (1999–2000). Buoyed by increased popularity from the character's appearances in the MCU, Captain America began appearing in television series in more prominent roles beginning in the 2010s, such as ''[[The Avengers: Earth's Mightiest Heroes]]'' (2010–2012).<ref name="IGNTV"/> Captain America was the first Marvel character to be adapted into a novel with ''Captain America: The Great Gold Steal'' by [[Ted White (author)|Ted White]], published in 1968.{{sfn|Weiner|2013|p=109}}
===Age of X===
In the ''[[Age of X]]'' reality, Rogers was the leader of the Avengers, here a strike team intended to hunt down mutants. Although he initially believed in his mission to contain the danger that mutants could pose to the world, an encounter with a mutant 'nursery' protecting young children forced Rogers to recognize that he was on the wrong side, he and his team subsequently sacrificing themselves to stop the psychotic Hulk from launching a bioweapon at the mutant stronghold. Rogers' memories were 'stored' by [[Alternative versions of Rogue#Age of X|Legacy]], a mutant who was able to convey his plan of using various mutants to generate force fields around the facility to cut it off from the outside world.{{Volume needed|c=y|date=February 2013}}


==Notes==
===Amalgam Comics===
{{notelist}}
In the [[Amalgam Comics]] universe, Captain America is combined with DC's [[Superman]] to create [[Super-Soldier]].<ref name="MarvelvsDC3">''Marvel vs. DC'' #3 (April 1996)</ref> In this reality, Clark Kent is given a Super-Soldier serum created from DNA harvested from the body of a dead baby Kal-El. The serum gives him the powers of the main universe Superman. Frozen in ice after a battle with Ultra-Metallo at the end of World War II, Super-Soldier is revived decades later and continues his fight for justice.<ref>''Super-Soldier'' #1 (April 1996)</ref>


==References==
===Avataars: Covenant of the Shield===
{{reflist|refs=
In ''[[Avataars: Covenant of the Shield]]'', Earth's version of Captain America is '''Captain Avalon'''. He is the leader of the Champions of the Realm and the King of [[Avalon (Marvel Comics)|Avalon]].<ref>''Avataars: Covenant of the Shield'' #1. Marvel Comics.</ref>


<ref name="Bankrupt">{{cite news |url=https://www.nytimes.com/1997/07/11/business/marvel-reaches-agreement-to-emerge-from-bankruptcy.html |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110607193918/http://www.nytimes.com/1997/07/11/business/marvel-reaches-agreement-to-emerge-from-bankruptcy.html |archive-date=June 7, 2011 |title=Marvel Reaches Agreement to Emerge from Bankruptcy |work=The New York Times |date=July 11, 1997 |page=D3 |url-status=live}}</ref>
===Bishop's Future===
In [[Bishop (comics)|Bishop]]'s future the Witness, a future version of [[Gambit (Marvel Comics)|Gambit]], possesses Captain America's shattered shield.{{Volume needed|c=y|date=September 2020}}


<ref name="BuckyCostume1">{{cite web |last1=Penagos |first1=Ryan |title=The Star-Spangled Avenger Returns in Captain America #34, with a new costume designed by Alex Ross |url=http://marvel.com/news/comicstories.1640.Captain_America_Lives# |website=[[Marvel Comics|Marvel News]] |access-date=March 22, 2023 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20090303235735/http://marvel.com/news/comicstories.1640.Captain_America_Lives# |archive-date=March 3, 2009 |date=October 11, 2007}}</ref>
===Bullet Points===
The five-issue limited series ''[[Bullet Points (comic)|Bullet Points]]'', written by [[J. Michael Straczynski]] and illustrated by [[Tommy Lee Edwards]], tells of an alternative reality in which Doctor Erskine is killed the day before implementing the Captain America program. Steve Rogers, still frail, volunteers for the 'Iron Man' program, which bonds him to a robotic weapons-suit. He uses this to achieve victories against the Axis.<ref>''Bullet Points'' #1 (Jan 2007)</ref> Years after the end of the war, Rogers is killed in a battle with [[Spider-Man|Peter Parker]], who is the [[Hulk]] of that reality.<ref>''Bullet Points'' #3 (Mar 2007)</ref>


<ref name="BuckyCostume2">{{cite web |last1=Brady |first1=Matt |title=Alex Ross & Ed Brubaker on Cap's New Look |url=http://forum.newsarama.com/showthread.php?t=132706# |website=[[Newsarama]] |access-date=March 22, 2023 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20071028005644/http://forum.newsarama.com/showthread.php?t=132706# |archive-date=October 28, 2007 |date=October 12, 2007}}</ref>
===Captain America: Guardian of Freedom===
A story told from the first-hand account of Rick Jones when sent back in time to the Second World War. Captured by Nazi troops, he is rescued by Captain America and Bucky. While initially believed to be shell-shocked, he convinces them that he is from the future when he reveals he knows their secret identities of Private Roger Stephenson (a brunette) and Bucky Barnes. When Barnes is murdered by the Red Skull, Jones takes his place as the new Bucky for a mission to stop Zemo's missile. At the end, with another time jump, Jones encounters a President Stephenson who needs his help.{{Volume needed|c=y|date=February 2013}}


<ref name="CASidekicks">{{cite web |last1=Parker |first1=John |title=The Many Sidekicks of Captain America |url=https://comicsalliance.com/captain-america-sidekicks/ |website=[[Comics Alliance]] |access-date=June 7, 2023 |date=December 30, 2011}}</ref>
===Captain Colonies===
A member of the [[Captain Britain Corps]], '''Captain Colonies''' (Stephen Rogers)<ref>''Official Handbook of the Marvel Universe A to Z'' #2 (May 2008)</ref> appears in ''Excalibur'' #44. His name, combined with his membership in the Captain Britain Corps imply that in his universe, the [[Thirteen Colonies]] did not [[United States Declaration of Independence|declare independence]] to form the United States as they did in our own universe (and most of the other Marvel universes) but instead remain part of Britain.{{Volume needed|c=y|date=September 2020}}


<ref name="CBRSidekicks">{{cite web |last1=Allan |first1=Scoot |title=Every Partner Captain America Worked With In The Comics (In Chronological Order) |url=https://www.cbr.com/captain-america-partners-sidekicks-chronological-order/#jack-flag-and-free-spirit-became-a-patriotic-team |website=[[Comic Book Resources]] |access-date=June 7, 2023 |date=November 7, 2022}}</ref>
===Cellblock Steve===
In the pages of ''Avengers: Forever'', a story called "Cellblock Steve" takes place in a cellblock containing different types of Steve Rogers. One Steve Rogers is a hippie and a persistent political prisoner who didn't want to take part in an illegal war. One Steve Rogers is a dog. One Steve Rogers was a hypochondriac taken from his room where he was hiding under his bed covers. One Steve Rogers was an artist working on an issue for ''Tales of Suspense'' when a car pulled up outside his window....on the 34th floor. One Steve Rogers is an older man named Weapon America who has Nuke's facepaint and Wolverine's claws. Any individual attempts to break out are met with unidentified resistance that lands them back in their cells. When they all work together get passed the different attacks, they are met by more Captain America variants (consisting of [[#Marvel Apes|Captain Ape-Merica from Earth-8101]], [[#Little Marvel|Captain America from Earth-71912]], [[#Earth-666|Cap-Wolf from Earth-666]], [[#Earth-398|Yeoman America from Earth-398]], and a U.S. Agent variant of Steve Rogers) who states that they are fighting in a war that will need every Steve Rogers they can find for their war against the Multiversal Masters of Evil. This training was overseen by Ghost Rider, his Deathlok companion, and [[Iron Man#Earth-818|Ant-Man of Earth-818]]. While it was noted that they finally got Weapon America to pop his claws again, Ghost Rider and Deathlok states that it isn't enough. Deathlok stated that there is a Steve Rogers on Earth-4479 who never picked up a shield and became a drifter who was accidentally caught in a gamma bomb explosion. Ant-Man states that they should meet this Steve Rogers and tells Ghost Rider to fire up his Hell Charger as they "got an army to build".<ref name="Avengers: Forever #2">''Avengers: Forever'' Vol. 2 #7. Marvel Comics.</ref>


<ref name="CoatesBegin">{{cite web |last1=Opam |first1=Kwame |title=Captain America No. 1, by Ta-Nehisi Coates, Annotated |url=https://www.nytimes.com/2018/07/04/books/captain-america-ta-nehisi-coates-annotated.html |website=[[The New York Times]] |access-date=March 10, 2023 |date=July 4, 2018}}</ref>
This gathering of Steve Rogers variants were later referred to as the Howling Commandos.<ref>''Avengers: Forever'' Vol. 2 #10. Marvel Comics.</ref>


<ref name="CoatesEnd">{{cite web |last1=Grunenwald |first1=Joe |title=Marvel Comics Solicitations for June 2021 |url=https://www.comicsbeat.com/marvel-comics-june-2021-solicitations/ |website=[[Comics Beat]] |access-date=March 10, 2023 |date=March 18, 2021}}</ref>
When the Council of Red attack Avengers Tower in the God Quarry, Captain Carter leads the Howling Commandos in fighting them.<ref>''Avengers: Forever'' Vol. 2 #12. Marvel Comics.</ref> When the surviving members of the Council of Red retreat upon their numbers being decimated by [[Wolverine (character)#Old Man Phoenix]] and the granddaughters of [[King Thor]], the Howling Commandos fight the Doctor Doom variants loyal to [[Doom Supreme]].<ref>''Avengers: Forever'' Vol. 2 #13. Marvel Comics.</ref>


<ref name="CoatesAtlantic">{{cite web |last1=Coates |first1=Ta-Nehisi |author1-link=Ta-Nehisi Coates |title=Why I'm Writing Captain America |url=https://www.theatlantic.com/entertainment/archive/2018/02/we-who-love-america/553991/ |website=[[The Atlantic]] |access-date=March 20, 2023 |date=February 28, 2018}}</ref>
===Civil War===
The [[Battleworld]] domain of the Warzone seen in ''[[Secret Wars (2015 comic book)|Secret Wars]]'' contains a world in which ''[[Civil War (comics)|Civil War]]'' never ended where it did in the original comics and continued for six more years. Captain America now runs the west side of the United States called "the Blue" as General America operating on his own set of politics compared to Iron Man on his side, "The Iron."{{Volume needed|c=y|date=September 2020}}


<ref name="EmpireRank">{{cite web |title=The 50 Greatest Comic Book Characters: Captain America |url=http://www.empireonline.com/50greatestcomiccharacters/default.asp?c=21 |website=[[Empire (magazine)|Empire]] |access-date=June 9, 2023 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20120308181108/http://www.empireonline.com/50greatestcomiccharacters/default.asp?c=21 |archive-date=March 8, 2012}}</ref>
===Civil Warrior===
The 2014 mobile game ''[[Marvel: Contest of Champions]]'' includes an exclusive version of Captain America named ''Civil Warrior''. This version of Steve Rogers, set in Earth-TRN634, killed [[Tony Stark]] during the Civil War. Rogers then incorporated Stark's armor into his uniform, and uses a modified shield containing a version of the ARC reactor.<ref>{{cite web |title=CHAMPION SPOTLIGHT – CIVIL WARRIOR |url=https://playcontestofchampions.com/champion-spotlight-civil-warrior/ |website=playcontestofchampions.com |publisher=[[Marvel: Contest of Champions]] |access-date=2 August 2019 |language=en |date=2019 |quote=There are many rumors about the origin of the mysterious Civil Warrior… legend says he is a Captain America from an alternate Earth ravaged by the Civil War between his own army and Iron Man's forces. On that world, the two heroes mortally wounded each other in the final battle of the war; Steve survived, but Tony didn't. Riddled with guilt for the battle's destruction and the death of his former ally at his own hands, he assumed the mantle of the Civil Warrior. Adding Tony's ARC technology to his Captain America gear, he vowed to use his friend's legacy to stop this senseless conflict from ever happening again.}}</ref>


<ref name="fromthepages">{{cite book |last1=Potter |first1=Benny |last2=Rumbles |first2=Dan |last3=Keen |first3=Jason |title=The Rise of Comic Book Movies: From the Pages to the Big Screen |date=2016 |publisher=Mango Media |isbn=978-1-63353-342-4 |pages=119–120}}</ref>
===Danielle Cage===
{{further|Danielle Cage}}
The daughter of [[Luke Cage]] and [[Jessica Jones]], Dani Cage operates as Captain America in an alternate future where New York City has been flooded. She uses the magnetic components Steve once used on the shield in order to better control it, and has the abilities of both her parents. She first appears in ''Ultron Forever'', and returns to the present as a member of the [[U.S.Avengers]].<ref>U.S.Avengers #1 (January 2017)</ref>


<ref name="DeathSales">{{cite web |last1=Macdonald |first1=Heidi |title=Diamond’s Top 300 Comics of 2007 |url=https://www.comicsbeat.com/diamond-top-300-comics-of-2007/ |website=[[Comics Beat]] |access-date=March 20, 2023 |date=January 29, 2008}}</ref>
===DC vs. Marvel===
Captain America appears in the Marvel/DC crossover ''DC vs. Marvel''. He first appears fighting with HYDRA before being summoned to the DC Earth. He is later shown in a brawl with [[Bane (comics)|Bane]], winning when he throws his shield so that it strikes Bane in the back of the head before Bane can [[Batman: Knightfall|break his back]]. He is then seen fighting with [[Batman]] in the sewers of [[Manhattan]]. After a pitched hand-to-hand standoff, they realize that neither one of them can gain an advantage over the other. Afterward, they team up with each other to stop the entities, the fundamental similarities between the two unique men who trained themselves to the peak of human development&mdash;and their lack of interest in 'proving' their superiority over their counterpart forcing the Brothers to halt their conflict.<ref name="MarvelvsDC3" />


<ref name="Diamondback">{{cite web |last1=Gaber |first1=Nabeel |title=How a Marvel Villain Became Steve Rogers' Forgotten Love |url=https://www.cbr.com/captain-america-diamondback-forgotten-love/ |website=[[Comic Book Resources]] |access-date=March 10, 2023 |date=March 17, 2021}}</ref>
===Deadpool: Merc with a Mouth===
In the 7th issue in the series, [[Deadpool]] visits a world where Captain America is known as '''General America''', and is after a female version of Deadpool called Lady Deadpool. Deadpool intervenes and sends Headpool (the zombie version) after him, and Headpool bites him on the arm. To prevent the zombie plague from affecting that Earth, Deadpool cuts off Cap's arm and leaves with it. In promos for ''Deadpool Corps'', General America is shown to have a robotic arm.{{Volume needed|c=y|date=February 2013}}


<ref name="Englehart">{{cite web |title=Captain America I |url=http://www.steveenglehart.com/Comics/Captain%20America%20153-167.html |website=steveenglehart.com |access-date=March 11, 2023 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20090517000217/http://www.steveenglehart.com/Comics/Captain%20America%20153-167.html |archive-date=May 17, 2009}}</ref>
===Earth-398===
In [[Morgan le Fay (Marvel Comics)|Morgan le Fay]]'s reality of Earth-398, there is a version of Captain America called Yeoman America who operates as a knight.<ref>''Avengers'' Vol. 3 #2. Marvel Comics.</ref>


<ref name="EvansDeal2">{{cite web |last1=Collin |first1=Robbie |title=Chris Evans interview: the Marvel star on politics, break-ups, and saying goodbye to Captain America |url=http://www.telegraph.co.uk/films/0/chris-evans-interview-marvel-star-politics-break-ups-saying/ |website=The Telegraph |access-date=March 31, 2023 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20170611061849/http://www.telegraph.co.uk/films/0/chris-evans-interview-marvel-star-politics-break-ups-saying/ |archive-date=June 11, 2017 |date=June 10, 2017}}</ref>
Yeoman America was among the Captain America variants recruited by Ghost Rider, his Deathlok companion, and Ant-Man of Earth-818 to help train the Steve Rogers variants in preparation for the war against the Multiversal Masters of Evil.<ref name="Avengers: Forever #2"/>


<ref name="FalconCap">{{cite web |url=http://www.comicbookresources.com/?page=article&id=54124 |title=Falcon Picks up the Shield in Remender & Immonen's "All-New Captain America" |last=Ching |first=Albert |date=16 July 2014 |publisher=[[Comic Book Resources]] |access-date=12 September 2014}}</ref>
===Earth-666===
On Earth-666 which is inhabited by monsters like mummies, vampires, and werewolves, a version of Captain America is a werewolf that was similar to what happened to Earth-616's version of Captain America once.{{efn|As seen in ''Captain America'' #405-408.}} He goes by the name of Cap-Wolf and is a member of this world's version of the Avengers.<ref>''Secret Avengers'' #33. Marvel Comics.</ref>


<ref name="FallenSon">{{cite journal |last1=Brucie |first1=Dylan |title=Fallen Son |journal=[[Wizard (magazine)|Wizard]] |date=May 2007 |issue=187 |pages=24–25}}</ref>
Cap-Wolf among the Captain America variants recruited by Ghost Rider, his Deathlok companion, and Ant-Man of Earth-818 to help train the Steve Rogers variants in preparation for the war against the Multiversal Masters of Evil.<ref name="Avengers: Forever #2"/>


<ref name="FredEntertainment">{{cite web |last1=Tipton |first1=Scott |title=Comics 101: Everybody's All American |url=http://www.quickstopentertainment.com/comics101/29.html# |website=[[Fred Entertainment]] |access-date=March 18, 2023 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20080309010142/http://www.quickstopentertainment.com/comics101/29.html# |archive-date=March 9, 2008 |date=September 10, 2003}}</ref>
===Earth X===
In the 1999 ''[[Earth X]]'' series, in a post-apocalyptic alternative present, Captain America is a war-worn hero, with a bald head, a ragged [[Flag of the United States|United States flag]] for a top and an A-shaped scar on his face, but still holding on to his shield and well-built. In the ''Universe X: Cap'' [[One-shot (comics)|one-shot comic]], he sacrificed himself to save the reborn [[Captain Mar-Vell]]. He later transformed into an angel of sorts, with blue skin, a white star on his chest, an "A" shape on his face, a U.S. flag draped around him, and a blade of light from his right arm. It is during this series that Doctor Erskine is revealed to be a Nazi, using his work with the Americans as a cover to help the Nazis create an army of "super soldiers." The bullet that killed Dr. Erskine was meant for Steve Rogers.<ref>Univers X: Cap No 1, 2001</ref>


<ref name="Gizmodo">{{Cite web |date=February 26, 2015 |title=Every Member Of The Avengers, Ranked |url=https://gizmodo.com/every-member-of-the-avengers-ranked-1688282767 |access-date=November 19, 2022 |website=[[Gizmodo]] }}</ref>
===Elseworlds===
Captain America and his sidekick Bucky appear in ''[[Batman]] and Captain America'', a 1996 title that is part of the [[DC Comics]] [[Elseworlds]] series. The story is set in an alternative World War II, with Captain America and Bucky meeting Batman and Robin in the course of a mission and working together as a result. The two heroes' principal archvillains, the [[Red Skull]] and the [[Joker (character)|Joker]], also work together to steal an American [[atomic bomb]]. When the Joker realizes that the Skull is actually a Nazi (saying "I may be a criminal lunatic but I'm an ''American'' criminal lunatic!"), he double-crosses him and causes the atomic bomb to be detonated prematurely, apparently killing the two villains. In an epilogue set approximately 20 years later, Dick Grayson, who is now the new Batman, with retired Bruce Wayne's son Bruce Wayne Jr. as Robin, discovers Captain America frozen in an iceberg. When thawed out by Batman and Robin, Captain America, though aggrieved by the death of Bucky in their final adventure (the same as in the main Marvel storyline), decides to again fight in the name of justice.<ref>''Batman and Captain America'' (December 1996)</ref>


<ref name="GraphicNYC">{{cite web |last1=Irving |first1=Christopher |title='If you're lucky': Joe Simon on life and comic books |url=http://graphicnyc.blogspot.com/2009/05/if-youre-lucky-joe-simon-on-life-and.html |website=Graphic NYC |access-date=March 5, 2023 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110726094703/http://graphicnyc.blogspot.com/2009/05/if-youre-lucky-joe-simon-on-life-and.html |archive-date=July 26, 2011}}</ref>
===Exiles===
In the ''[[Exiles (Marvel Comics)|Exiles]]'' arc "A World Apart", the Earth was conquered by the Skrulls in the nineteenth century. Captain America has become a gladiator known as the Captain, fighting for the Skrulls against other superhumans in contents. He is defeated by [[Mimic (comics)#Exiles|Mimic]], who, disgusted at Captain America having become nothing but a puppet to the Skrulls rather than the symbol he should be to others, uses [[Cyclops (Marvel Comics)|Cyclops]]'s optic blasts.<ref>''Exiles'' #9</ref>


<ref name="GruenwaldInterview">{{cite web |last1=Ringenberg |first1=Steve |title=Interview with Mark Gruenwald |url=http://www.comic-art.com/interviews/gruenwal.htm |website=Comic Art and Graphix Gallery |access-date=March 18, 2023}}</ref>
In "Forever Avengers", the Exiles visit a timeline where Captain America was turned into a [[vampire]] by Baron Blood. He later turns the [[Avengers (comics)|Avengers]] into vampires and becomes the new Vampire King. The now Cursed Avengers (composed of Hawkeye, Wasp, Giant-Man, Falcon and [[Polaris (Marvel Comics)|Polaris]]) plan to turn New York's population into zombies, but their plans are thwarted by the Exiles with the help of that Earth's Union Jack [[Baron Blood (comics)#Baron Blood (Kenneth Crichton)|Kenneth Crichton]]. One of the Exiles, [[Sunfire (Exiles)|Sunfire]], is bitten by a vampire. Before she can completely turn, Baron Crichton destroys Captain America and reveals himself to be the grandnephew of the original [[Baron Blood (comics)#Baron Blood (John Falsworth)|Baron Blood]] and a vampire as well, and becomes the newest King of the Vampire by blood right.<ref>''Exiles'' #31-32</ref>


<ref name="EWRank">{{cite web |last1=Franich |first1=Darren |title=Let's rank every Avenger ever |url=https://ew.com/article/2015/04/29/lets-rank-every-avenger-ever/ |website=[[Entertainment Weekly]] |access-date=June 9, 2023 |date=April 29, 2015}}</ref>
===House of M===
In the altered world of the ''[[House of M]]'', Steve Rogers was not frozen in [[suspended animation]] and lived through World War II and the years afterward. Rogers became an [[astronaut]] and was the first man to walk on the moon in 1956. By the present time, Rogers is said as being nearly 100 years old. His Earth-616 memories are not reactivated, to spare him from a severe mental shock. According to a Marvel editorial, the House of M is not an alternative reality, but a period of time in which everything in the 616 reality was profoundly altered by the Scarlet Witch.{{Volume needed|c=y|date=February 2013}}


<ref name="Handbook">{{cite book |last1=Zeck |first1=Mike |author1-link=Mike Zeck |editor1-last=Gruenwald |editor1-first=Mark |editor1-link=Mark Gruenwald |title=[[Official Handbook of the Marvel Universe|The Official Handbook of the Marvel Universe, B-C]] |date=February 1983 |publisher=Marvel Comics |page=22 |chapter=Captain America}}</ref>
===JLA/Avengers===
Captain America is the leader of the [[Avengers (comics)|Avengers]] in the ''[[JLA/Avengers]]'' limited series, in which the two super teams travel to each other's universe. His mind affected by subtle incompatibilities between the two universes, he sees the [[Justice League]] as overlords who demand praise and worship in return for heroic actions. He especially gets angry at [[Superman]], who (likewise affected) sees the Avengers as heroes who do not do enough and have let their world down. After Cap and [[Batman]] battle to a standstill, the two team up to solve the mystery of the game. Using an inter-dimensional vehicle that allows them to reach the Grandmaster's headquarters, they discover that the Avengers are fighting for [[Krona (comics)|Krona]]. Their intervention in the last battle, where Cap makes sure that Batman can get the cube so the JLA wins the game, causes the villain Krona to go mad and attack the Grandmaster. The Grandmaster causes the two universes to merge, imprisoning Krona between them. Cap, still subconsciously aware of the reality changes, attacks Superman, who is also subconsciously aware of the changes. This shatters the fixed reality, freeing Krona. Cap and Superman again argue, but are stopped by [[Wonder Woman]]. The two teams find the [[Grandmaster (comics)|Grandmaster]], who reveals their true realities. Despite seeing shocking revelations, the two teams decide to face Krona. Cap leads the teams as a battle tactician at Superman's suggestion, communicating orders through the [[Martian Manhunter]]'s telepathy, and gives Superman his shield. After the two teams defeat Krona and restore their universes, Cap and Superman salute each other as they are transported back to their own dimensions, saying that they fight on.<ref>''JLA/Avengers'' #1 and #3 (September and December 2003) and ''Avengers/JLA'' #2 and #4 (October 2003 and March 2004)</ref>


<ref name="Harvey">{{cite web |title=2006 Harvey Award Nominees |url=http://www.harveyawards.org/awards_2006nom.html |website=[[Harvey Awards]] |access-date=March 20, 2023 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20100829082238/http://www.harveyawards.org/awards_2006nom.html |archive-date=August 29, 2010}}</ref>
===Kiyoshi Morales===
A future incarnation of Captain America, known as '''Commander A''', is a major character in the ''Captain America Corps'' limited series, and is stated to be of mixed Japanese, African-American, Latino, and Native American descent. He is also implied to be a descendant of [[Luke Cage]]. He wields two energy force-field shields, similar to the one that Steve Rogers used once when he temporarily lost his vibranium shield.<ref>''Captain America Corps'' #1-5</ref>


<ref name="IGN50">{{cite web |date=April 30, 2012 |title=The Top 50 Avengers |url=http://www.ign.com/top/avengers/2 |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20151129171205/http://www.ign.com/top/avengers/2 |archive-date=November 29, 2015 |access-date=July 28, 2015 |website=IGN}}</ref>
===Last Avengers Story===
The two-issue limited series ''The Last Avengers Story'' (November–December 1995) tells of a possible alternative future for Captain America and the Avengers. Appalled with the American government after the "Villain Massacre", Captain America leaves his life as a superhero and runs for president. His presidency is a large success, but he is shot and seemingly killed in his third term, causing the other heroes to lose faith. However, Cap is not dead, but placed in suspended animation in a secret location until the technology to heal him can be developed. Using a sophisticated series of computer monitors, Captain America watches his friends win their final battle and records it for historical purposes.<ref>''The Last Avengers Story'' #1 & 2 (Nov & Dec 1995)</ref>


<ref name="IGN100">{{cite web |title=IGN's Top 100 Comic Book Heroes |url=http://www.ign.com/top/comic-book-heroes/6 |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20150630173526/http://www.ign.com/top/comic-book-heroes/6 |archive-date=June 30, 2015 |access-date=July 9, 2015 |website=IGN}}</ref>
===Larval Earth===
In the ''[[Spider-Ham]]'' comic books, the [[talking animals in fiction|talking animal]] version of Captain America is '''Captain Americat (Steve Mouser)''' an anthropomorphic cat who works for the ''Daily Beagle''.<ref name="americat">{{Cite web | url=http://www.marvel.com/universe/Larval_Earth | title=Larval Earth | work=Marvel.com}}</ref>


<ref name="IGNTV">{{cite web |last1=Goldman |first1=Eric |title=Captain America's TV History |url=http://www.ign.com/articles/2012/04/23/the-avengers-captain-americas-tv-history?page=1 |website=[[IGN]] |access-date=June 7, 2023 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20160418105954/http://www.ign.com/articles/2012/04/23/the-avengers-captain-americas-tv-history?page=1 |archive-date=April 18, 2016 |date=April 11, 2016}}</ref>
===Little Marvel===
Two younger versions of Captain America were created by writer/artist [[Skottie Young]]. The first appears in the 2015 ''[[Secret Wars (2015 comic book)|Secret Wars]]'' tie-in, ''Giant Size Little Marvel'', written and illustrated by Young. In the Battleworld town of Marville, the mainstream superheroes are all elementary school age children, using their superpowers to engage in very destructive roughhousing. This Captain America is still the leader of the Avengers, though their headquarters are in a tree house instead of Avengers Mansion. As in the mainstream "[[Avengers vs. X-Men]]" storyline, Captain America faces off against Cyclops and the X-Men, only this time in an attempt to get two new kids on the block to join their respective group.<ref>''Giant Size Little Marvel: AVX'' #1-4 (August to November 2015)</ref>


<ref name="KirbyInterview">{{cite journal |last1=Nelson |first1=Brian |title=Birth of a Legend: Jack Kirby Talks About Captain America |journal=[[Marvel Age]] |date=December 1990 |volume=1 |issue=95 |page=9 |issn=8750-4367}}</ref>
An even younger version of Captain America appears in ''A-Babies vs X-Babies'', a 2012 Skottie Young scripted story, illustrated by Gurihiru. In this story, Captain America and his fellow superheroes are all babies, but still superpowered. When baby Captain America's favorite stuffed bear Bucky goes missing, he assembles his baby Avengers and battles the baby X-Men for its return.<ref>''A-Babies vs. X-Babies Vol. 1'' #1 (December 2012)</ref> This issue and the four ''Giant Size Little Marvel'' issues were collected into the ''Giant Size Little Marvel'' 2016 trade edition ({{ISBN|978-0785198703}}). This Captain America was among the Captain America variants recruited by Ghost Rider, his Deathlok companion, and Ant-Man of Earth-818 to help train the Steve Rogers variants in preparation for the war against the Multiversal Masters of Evil.<ref name="Avengers: Forever #2"/>


<ref name="Lawsuit1">{{cite web|url=http://www.philadelphiabar.org/page/TPLSummer03CaptainAmerica|work=The Philadelphia Lawyer| publisher= Philadelphia Bar Association |access-date= August 6, 2013|title=The Struggle for Captain America|last=Lovitz|first=Michael | archive-date= December 2, 2013 | archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20131202222355/http://www.philadelphiabar.org/page/TPLSummer03CaptainAmerica | url-status=live}}</ref>
===Marvel 2099===
In [[Marvel 2099]] a man masquerading as the original Captain America became ruler of the U.S. after a successful coup deposed [[Doom 2099]]. The man was killed when Doom 2099 dropped nano-machines on the Red House. The real Captain America appears in ''[[2099: Manifest Destiny]]'' and takes up the role of Thor before giving Mjolnir to [[Spider-Man 2099]].{{Volume needed|c=y|date=September 2020}}


<ref name="Lawsuit2">{{cite news|title= Joe Simon, a Creator of Captain America, Fighting On|url= https://www.nytimes.com/2008/04/16/books/16gust.html?pagewanted=all&_r=0|work= [[The New York Times]]|first= George Gene|last= Gustines|date= April 16, 2008|archive-url= https://web.archive.org/web/20181102081658/https://www.nytimes.com/2008/04/16/books/16gust.html?pagewanted=all&_r=0|archive-date= November 2, 2018|url-status=dead|access-date= August 6, 2013}}</ref>
In ''[[Secret Wars (2015 comic book)|Secret Wars]]'', a new version of Captain America was created by Alchemax and resides in the Battleworld domain of 2099. '''Roberta Mendez''' was forcefully subjected to take the Super-Soldier Serum by her husband, Harry and became the leader of Alchemax's Avengers. Roberta and Captain America are two different personas of the same woman, with Roberta unknowing of her counterpart. She physically and mentally becomes Captain America if her trigger words, "Avengers Assemble", are said, and she reverts to Roberta if someone says "Dismissed". In the ''Secret Wars'' title, Captain America goes against Miguel Stone's orders to treat the Defenders as criminals and worked with the Defenders and Avengers to stop Baron Mordo and the Dweller-In-Darkness.{{Volume needed|c=y|date=September 2020}}


<ref name="LATEulogy">{{cite web |last1=Heilbrunn |first1=Jacob |title=Captain America was us |url=https://www.latimes.com/archives/la-xpm-2007-mar-09-oe-heilbrunn9-story.html |website=[[The Los Angeles Times]] |access-date=June 9, 2023 |date=March 9, 2007}}</ref>
Following ''Secret Wars'', Roberta is transported to the prime Marvel Universe with hallucinations of her past life. She was a supporting character in the All-New, All-Different Marvel ''Spider-Man 2099'' comic, where she was an employee at Parker Industries with Miguel O'Hara as her boss. After Roberta's powers resurface again, she becomes a recurring ally for Spider-Man 2099. During the ''[[Civil War II]]'' storyline, Roberta goes back to 2099 to find her family, despite Miguel's warnings. The Public Eye attempt to arrest her, until she is rescued by Ravage 2099. In the present, Miguel receives a call from Peter Parker, who tells him of a vision the Inhuman [[Ulysses (comics)|Ulysses]] had of the future: the death of Roberta Mendez. He goes back to 2099.<ref>''Spider-Man 2099'' (vol. 3) #13</ref> Roberta learns from Ravage about the Anti-Powers Act, a law outlawing superpowers. Roberta and Ravage are taken to the downtown area by Hawkeye 2099, where they meet the remaining heroes. Spider-Man convinces Doctor Strange 2099 to help him out in exchange for his help in eliminating the A.P.A. Meanwhile, the CEO of Alchemax calls on [[Power Pack]] to defeat the heroes. Upon finding Roberta, Strange takes Spider-Man downtown, while Roberta leaves to find her husband upon learning his location. Roberta finds her husband Harry, who claims that she died and that they do not have kids, and gets captured by Power Pack. After Strange reveals that the CEO of Alchemax is [[J. Jonah Jameson]], Spider-Man rallies the heroes to launch an assault on S.H.I.E.L.D. HQ and rescue Roberta. In the process, they discover that "Jameson" and "Power Pack" are actually Skrull impostors. Spider-Man and Roberta then go back to 2016 to restore the timeline.<ref>''Spider-Man 2099'' (vol. 3) #14-16</ref> In the book's ending, Roberta and Miguel's son save Miguel from death and return to 2099 on New Year's Eve. Thanks to Miguel's sacrifice, Roberta's family history is restored.<ref>''Spider-Man 2099'' (vol. 3) #25</ref>


<ref name="LiefeldInterview">{{cite web |last1=Thompson |first1=Luke Y. |title=Youngblood at Heart |url=http://www.ocweekly.com/2007-10-11/features/youngblood-at-heart/3# |website=[[OC Weekly]] |access-date=March 18, 2023 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20090721113600/http://www.ocweekly.com/2007-10-11/features/youngblood-at-heart/3# |archive-date=July 21, 2009 |date=October 11, 2007}}</ref>
;In other media
* Captain America 2099 (Roberta Mendez) appears in ''[[Marvel: Future Fight]]'', as alternative costume to Captain America.{{citation needed|date=September 2020}}
* Captain America 2099 (Roberta Mendez) appears as a playable character in ''[[Lego Marvel Super Heroes 2]]''.{{citation needed|date=September 2020}}


<ref name="NomadCostume">{{cite web |last1=Connolly |first1=Spencer |title=Captain America’s Absolute Worst Costume is Called Out By Marvel |url=https://screenrant.com/captain-america-worst-costume-marvel-comics-nomad/ |website=[[ScreenRant]] |access-date=March 22, 2023 |date=March 18, 2022}}</ref>
===Marvel Apes===
In the [[Marvel Apes]] Universe, a version of Captain America called Captain Ape-Merica leads the Ape-vengers (which contain a lot of reformed supervillains). Secretly, he is a [[vampire]] along with his version of the [[Invaders (comics)|Invaders]], and plots to enter the [[Earth-616|616]] universe for sustenance. To accomplish this, he has already killed his world's version of [[Reed Richards|Mister. Fantastic]]. However, it is revealed that the vampire Captain Ape-Merica was really [[Baron Blood]], who took on Cap's form and increased his strength through the Super-Soldier Serum inside him. The real Captain Ape-Merica was still frozen in ice up to the modern era, and helped the [[Gibbon (comics)|Gibbon]], [[Wolverine (character)|Wolverine]], and [[Speedball (comics)|Speedball]] fight off the vampire [[Namor]]. Afterwards, they stop Baron Blood. This version of Captain Ape-Merica turns out to be nearly as brutal as his impersonator; for example he is willing to kill Spider-Monkey for the 'crime' of helping innocent dimensional travelers.<ref>''https://www.amazon.com/Marvel-Apes-Evolution-Starts-Here/dp/0785139915''</ref>


<ref name="NYTEulogy">{{cite web |last1=Gustines |first1=George Gene |title=Captain America Is Dead; National Hero Since 1941 |url=https://www.nytimes.com/2007/03/08/books/08capt.html |website=[[The New York Times]] |access-date=June 9, 2023 |date=March 8, 2007}}</ref>
Captain Ape-Merica is among the Captain America variants recruited by Ghost Rider, his Deathlok companion, and Ant-Man of Earth-818 to help train the Steve Rogers variants in preparation for the war against the Multiversal Masters of Evil.<ref name="Avengers: Forever #2"/>


<ref name="StaysDead">{{cite web |last1=Last |first1=Jonathan V. |author1-link=Jonathan V. Last |title=Captain America, RIP |url=http://www.opinionjournal.com/la/?id=110009780 |website=[[The Wall Street Journal]] |access-date=March 20, 2023 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20070315175407/http://www.opinionjournal.com/la/?id=110009780 |archive-date=March 15, 2007}}</ref>
===Marvel Mangaverse===
In the [[Marvel Mangaverse]] reality, the original Captain America is decapitated and killed by Doctor Doom, but [[Carol Danvers]] assumes the identity. This is done mostly out of a desire of self-defense, but she is encouraged to keep it for the foreseeable future by [[Sharon Carter]]. The original Mangaverse Captain America is both the leader of the Avengers and the President of the United States. His costume gives him the power to generate and manipulate energy shields.{{Volume needed|c=y|date=February 2013}}


<ref name="SternInterview">{{cite web |last1=Khoury |first1=George |title=The Roger Stern Interview: The Triumphs and Trials of the Writer |url=http://www.marvelmasterworks.com/features/int_stern_1006_2.html |website=Marvel Masterworks |access-date=March 18, 2023 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20080801204637/http://www.marvelmasterworks.com/features/int_stern_1006_2.html |archive-date=August 1, 2008}}</ref>
===Marvel Zombies===
In the 2005–2006 miniseries ''[[Marvel Zombies]]'', and the follow-up 2007 ''[[Marvel Zombies vs. The Army of Darkness]]'', Captain America is known as '''Colonel America''' and once served as the [[President of the United States]]. He is among the superheroes infected, along with his other fellow Avengers, by the zombified [[Sentry (comics)|Sentry]]. Colonel America is responsible for infecting [[Spider-Man]] in ''Marvel Zombies vs. The Army Of Darkness'' by biting him on the shoulder. He is apparently killed by a zombie [[Red Skull]], who rips off his left arm and scoops his exposed brains out before he himself is decapitated by a zombified Spider-Man. Zombie Ant-Man then steps on the [[Red Skull]]. As his intellect was partly retained in the remaining portion of his brain, he was transplanted into [[Black Panther (comics)|Black Panther]]'s son T'Channa's dead body, and given a mechanical left arm. The transplant is successful, but the resulting brain damage turns Colonel America into a battle-crazed zombie leader, manageable but unable to focus on anything that is not related to war, confrontation, and battle. Colonel America (Steve Rogers/T'Channa) also has a role in ''[[Marvel Zombies Return]]'', where he was transported to Earth-Z.{{Volume needed|c=y|date=September 2020}}


<ref name="SteveArtist">{{cite web |last1=Moll |first1=Ashtyn |title=If Captain America Hadn't Become An Avenger, He Could Have Been An Artist |url=https://screenrant.com/captain-america-avenger-artist-marvel-comics/ |website=[[ScreenRant]] |access-date=March 21, 2023 |date=January 26, 2021}}</ref>
''[[Marvel Zombies 3]]'' features a zombie version called "Captain Mexica", who comes from an alternate universe in which the [[Aztec]] Empire in [[Mexico]] never fell. He is killed after Machine Man cuts him in half.{{Volume needed|c=y|date=September 2020}}


<ref name="TheCaptainCostume">{{cite web |last1=Tipton |first1=Scott |title=Because It's Right: Ethics and the Work of Mark Gruenwald |url=http://www.quickstopentertainment.com/comics101/83.html# |website=[[Fred Entertainment]] |access-date=March 22, 2023 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20090108111517/http://www.quickstopentertainment.com/comics101/83.html# |archive-date=January 8, 2009 |date=September 22, 2004}}</ref>
===MC2===
In the [[Parallel universe (fiction)|alternative reality]] [[Marvel Comics 2|MC2]] universe, Captain America leads the original Avengers on a mission to an alternative reality, which claims the majority of the team. He stays behind to aid the rebels in that reality, thus adding to the list of the dead / [[missing in action]]. The next iteration of MC2 Avengers aids him in ''[[A-Next]]'' #10-11, at the end of which he gives [[American Dream (comics)|American Dream]] the shield that had belonged to that universe's Captain America. Captain America and [[Thunderstrike (Kevin Masterson)|Thunderstrike]] return to their home universe to aid in the fight against [[Seth (comics)|Seth]]<ref>''[[Spider-Girl (Mayday Parker)|Spider-Girl]]'' #59. Marvel Comics.</ref>


<ref name="WizardHeroesReborn">{{cite journal |last1=McLauchlin |first1=Jim |title=Lee Extends 'Reborn' Run |journal=[[Wizard (magazine)|Wizard]] |date=August 1997 |issue=72 |pages=18–19}}</ref>
In the 2005 limited series ''[[Last Hero Standing]]'', the MC2 Captain America is fatally injured leading a group of young heroes in battle against the Norse god [[Loki (Marvel Comics)|Loki]]. [[Thor (Marvel Comics)|Thor]] uses his power to transform Captain America into a new star. In the sequel, ''[[Last Planet Standing]]'', [[Galactus]] states that this new star is the key to his escaping his world-devouring hunger{{Citation needed|date=August 2011}}.


}}
===Mutant X===
In the ''[[Mutant X (comics)|Mutant X]]'' universe, a mutant succeeds Rogers as Captain America, joining [[Havok (comics)|Havok]]'s team of superheroes, "The Six", in order to protect mutants from a deranged Nick Fury and S.H.I.E.L.D. He has powerful energy manipulating abilities which manifest when America is threatened. Using that power he manages to kill a platoon of Super Soldiers and the Avengers, which consist of Black Widow, Deathlok, Typhoid Mary, Hawkeye and Iron Giant Man ([[Iron Man (comics)|Tony Stark]]). He is defeated by Havok and is then drawn below the earth by [[The Beyonder]] who kills him after he finds out what he needs to know.{{Volume needed|c=y|date=February 2013}}


===Bibliography===
===Nextwave: Agents of H.A.T.E.===
{{refbegin}}
Captain America is mentioned several times in ''Nextwave'', usually by [[Monica Rambeau]] (who constantly talks about her time as an Avenger). At one point, Monica theorizes that Captain America is secretly gay, as he was the only Avenger who never hit on her (Tabitha Smith agrees that it would be cool if that were true and that it would explain why "people always dress like him at gay pride marches"){{Volume needed|c=y|date=February 2013}}
*{{cite journal |last1=Amash |first1=Jim |title='Captain America Was A Dirty Name': John Romita On the First Superheo He Ever Drew – Captain America |journal= [[Alter Ego (magazine)|Alter Ego]]|publisher=[[TwoMorrows Publishing]] |date=April 2004 |volume=3 |issue=35 |pages=19–26 |url=https://twomorrows.com/index.php?main_page=product_info&cPath=123_139_141&products_id=466 |url-access=subscription}}

*{{cite book |last1=Burnham |first1=Jeff |editor1-last=Peaslee |editor1-first=Robert Moses |editor2-last=Weiner |editor2-first=Robert Jr. |title=Marvel Comics Into Film: Essays on Adaptations Since the 1940s |date=2016 |publisher=[[McFarland & Company]] |isbn=978-0-7864-4304-8 |pages=138–149 |chapter=The Primetime Heroics of Small Screen Avengers: Finding Sociopolitical Value in Marvel TV Movies}}
He appears in a flashback Monica has, when the Avengers are attacked by naked enemies. He tells her to "cover your eyes, go back to the mansion, and make my dinner".{{Volume needed|c=y|date=February 2013}}
*{{cite book |last1=Cronin |first1=Brian |title=Was Superman a Spy?: And Other Comic Book Legends Revealed |date=2009 |publisher=[[Plume (publisher)|Plume]] |isbn=978-0-452-29532-2}}

*{{cite book |last1=Dalton |first1=Russell W. |title=Marvelous Myths: Marvel Superheroes and Everyday Faith |date=2011 |publisher=Chalice Press |isbn=9780827223608}}
===Old Man Logan===
*{{cite book |last1=Daniels |first1=Les |author1-link=Les Daniels |title=Marvel: Five Fabulous Decades of the World’s Greatest Comics |date=1991 |publisher=[[Abrams Books]] |isbn=0-8109-3821-9}}
In this [[Old Man Logan|potential future]], all the Marvel Universe superheroes were killed when the supervillains combined forces. The villains then conquer and divide up control of the United States. Captain America is shown in a flashback as having been killed by the Red Skull in the ruins of the [[U.S. Capitol]]. The Red Skull subsequently takes Cap's costume and wears it as [[President of the United States|President of America]].<ref>''Wolverine'' vol. 3 #72 (June 2009). Marvel Comics.</ref>
*{{cite journal |last1=DiFruscio |first1=Mark |title=Whatever Happened to the Sentinel of Liberty? |journal=[[Back Issue!]] |publisher=[[TwoMorrows Publishing]] |date=June 2010 |volume=1 |issue=41 |pages=38–48 |url=https://twomorrows.com/index.php?main_page=product_info&products_id=919 |url-access=limited}}

*{{cite book |last1=Dittmer |first1=Jason |title=Captain America and the Nationalist Superhero: Metaphors, Narratives, and Geopolitics |date=2012 |publisher=[[Temple University Press]] |isbn=978-1439909775}}
===Peggy Carter===
*{{cite book |editor1-last=Dowsett |editor1-first=Elizabeth |title = Marvel Chronicle: A Year by Year History|publisher = [[DK (publisher)|DK]]|year = 2008|isbn =978-0756641238}}
{{main|Peggy Carter#Captain Carter}}
* {{cite journal |last1=Dutter |first1=Barry |title=Simon Says... |journal=[[Marvel Age]] |date=December 1990 |volume=1 |issue=95 |pages=10–13 |publisher=Marvel Comics |issn=8750-4367}}

* {{cite journal|last= Fromm|first= Keif|title= The Privacy Act Of Carl Burgos|journal= [[Alter Ego (magazine)|Alter Ego]]|publisher=[[TwoMorrows Publishing]]|volume= 3|issue= 49|date= June 2005 |url=https://twomorrows.com/index.php?main_page=product_info&products_id=303 |url-access=subscription}}
===Ruins===
* {{cite book |last1=Harvey |first1=Robert C. |author1-link=R. C. Harvey |title=The Art of the Comic Book: An Aesthetic History |date=1996 |publisher=[[University Press of Mississippi]] |isbn=0-8780-5758-7 |url=https://archive.org/details/artofcomicbookae0000harv |url-access=limited }}
[[Warren Ellis]]'s ''[[Ruins (comics)|Ruins]]'' limited series explored a version of the Marvel Universe where "everything went wrong". In this continuity, Captain America himself makes no physical appearance in the series aside from the cover for issue #1 and in a dream sequence in issue #2. He was a member of the Avengers, a revolutionary cell formed by Tony Stark bent on liberating California from the corrupt rule of President Charles Xavier, but along with many other members of the team, he is killed aboard the Avengers Quinjet. His shield is recovered by soldiers who celebrate the deaths of the Avengers. A part of the Captain's war history is touched upon by the now-psychotic Nick Fury, who was ordered to destroy the Quinjet by the President: "...I'll give you an anecdote. Back in the war, it was America introduced me to eating human meat."<ref>''Ruins'' #1-2 (August 1995 - September 1995)</ref>
*{{cite journal |last1=Johnson |first1=Mackenna |title="Captain America Must Die": How a Super Soldier became a Patriot |journal=The Forum: Journal of History |date=2018 |volume=10 |issue=1 |pages=81–97 |url=https://digitalcommons.calpoly.edu/forum/vol10/iss1/11}}

* {{cite book | author-link = Gerard Jones | last = Jones | first = Gerard | title = Men of Tomorrow: Geeks, Gangsters, and the Birth of the Comic Book | publisher = [[Basic Books]] | year = 2004 | isbn = 978-0-465-03657-8}}
===Spider-Gwen===
* {{cite book |last1=Kaplan |first1=Arie |author1-link=Arie Kaplan |title=Masters of the Comic Book Universe Revealed |date=2006 |publisher=[[Chicago Review Press]] |isbn=9781556526336}}
Captain America is a S.H.I.E.L.D. agent on [[Spider-Gwen|Earth-65]], who apprehends [[Spider-Woman (Gwen Stacy)|Spider-Gwen]] during her battle with the Lizard (this reality's Peter Parker). This Captain America is an African American woman named '''Samantha Wilson''' a genderbent version of [[Falcon (comics)|Sam Wilson/Falcon]].<ref>''Radioactive Spider-Gwen'' #1</ref> During the 1940s, Samantha volunteered for Project: Rebirth after other test subjects were shot and killed or badly injured by Nazis. She became trapped in an alternate dimension after seemingly sacrificing herself to stop [[Arnim Zola]], but later managed to return home to find that 75 years had passed.<ref>''Radioactive Spider-Gwen'' #2</ref> Steve Rogers would go on to become a famous comic creator, who writes stories of Samantha's dimensional journeys that he saw in his dreams, which Sam confirmed as being accurate.<ref>''Spider-Gwen Annual'' #1</ref>
* {{cite journal |last1=Morse |first1=Ben |title=The Wizard Retrospective: Captain America |journal=[[Wizard (magazine)|Wizard]] |pages=30–48 |date=May 2007 |issue=187}}

* {{cite book |last1=Rhoades |first1=Shirrel |author1-link=Shirrel Rhoades |title=A Complete History of American Comic Books |url=https://archive.org/details/completehistoryo0000rhoa |date=2008 |publisher=[[Peter Lang (publisher)|Peter Lang]] |isbn=978-1433101076 |url-access=limited}}
===Spider-Island===
*{{cite book |last1=Rizzo |first1=Marco |last2=Licari |first2=Fabio |title=Marvel's Captain America: The First 80 Years |date=2021 |publisher=[[Titan Publishing Group]] |isbn=978-1787737174}}
In this retelling of ''Spider-Island'' as part of the "[[Secret Wars (2015 comic book)|Secret Wars]]" storyline, Captain America and the other heroes are mutated into monster spiders and he is still the Spider Queen's "Spider King" in the Battleworld domain of Spider-Island. However, Agent Venom gives Captain America the Godstone and turns him into a Man-Wolf (as an homage to the time when Captain America was a werewolf called Capwolf), releasing Steve from the Spider Queen's control. He uses his new form to fight for the resistance.{{Volume needed|c=y|date=September 2020}}
* {{cite book |last=Ro |first=Ronin |title=Tales to Astonish: Jack Kirby, Stan Lee and the American Comic Book Revolution |publisher=[[Bloomsbury Publishing|Bloomsbury USA]] |year=2004 |isbn=978-1-58234-345-7}}

* {{cite book |last1=Stevens |first1=J Richard |title=Captain America, Masculinity, and Violence: The Evolution of a National Icon |date=2015 |publisher=[[Syracuse University Press]] |isbn=978-0815633952 }}
===Spider-Man: Life Story===
*{{cite journal|last= Thomas|first= Roy|date= August 2011|title= Stan Lee's Amazing Marvel Interview! |url=https://twomorrows.com/index.php?main_page=product_info&cPath=123_139_141&products_id=971 |journal= [[Alter Ego (magazine)|Alter Ego]]|volume=3 |issue= 104| pages= 3–45|publisher= [[TwoMorrows Publishing]] |url-access=subscription}}
''Spider-Man: Life Story'' takes place in an alternate continuity where characters naturally age after Peter Parker debuts as Spider-Man in 1962. In 1966, Captain America is pressured by the public to join the efforts in Vietnam and decides to go to see the conflict for himself. A year later, American soldiers label Steve as a traitor when he decides to protect a Vietnamese village. By 1974, he is on the run, having gone rogue from the US to save lives on both sides of the conflict, and is seen in 1984 fighting in the Secret Wars. Captain America also gets himself involved in the [[Civil War (comics)|Superhuman Civil War]] in the 2000s. In the 2010s, it is unknown if he is dead or in hiding after Doctor Doom took over the planet.<ref>''Spider-Man: Life Story'' #1-6 (March 2019)</ref>
*{{cite journal |last1=Senreich |first1=Matthew |title=The Wizard Q&A: Mark Waid & Ron Garney |journal=[[Wizard (magazine)|Wizard]] |date=August 1997 |issue=72 |pages=68–72}}

*{{cite book |last1=Simon |first1=Joe |last2=Simon |first2=Jim |author1-link=Joe Simon |title=The Comic Book Makers |date=2003 |publisher=Vanguard |isbn=978-1887591355}}
===Truth: Red, White & Black===
* {{cite book |last1=Steranko |first1=Jim |author1-link= |title=[[The Steranko History of Comics]], Vol 1 |date=1970 |publisher=Supergraphics}}
{{Main|Truth: Red, White & Black}}
*{{cite book |editor1-last=Weiner |editor1-first=Robert |title=Captain America and the Struggle of the Superhero: Critical Essays |url=https://archive.org/details/captainamericast00wein |url-access=limited |date=2009 |publisher=[[McFarland & Company]] |isbn=978-0786437030|ref=none}}
In the 2003 [[Limited series (comics)|limited series]] ''[[Truth: Red, White & Black]]'', black soldiers act as test subjects for the WWII Super-Soldier program of 1942. Most of the subjects die, or become deformed with the exception of one, [[Isaiah Bradley]]. Isaiah substitutes for Captain America on an assignment, discovering Jewish concentration camp detainees subjected to experiments.<ref>''Truth: Red, White & Black'' #1-7 (January 2003 - July 2003)</ref>
**{{cite book |last1=Lawrence |first1=John Shelton |author1-link=John Shelton Lawrence |pages=1–7 |chapter=Foreword by John Shelton Lawrence |editor1-last=Weiner |editor1-first=Robert |title=Captain America and the Struggle of the Superhero: Critical Essays |date=2009}}

**{{cite book |last1=Hayton |first1=Christopher J.|last2=Albright |first2=David L. |pages=15–23 |chapter=O Captain! My Captain! |editor1-last=Weiner |editor1-first=Robert |title=Captain America and the Struggle of the Superhero: Critical Essays |date=2009 }}
In ''Captain America'' (vol. 4) #28 (August 2004), an [[Isaiah Bradley]] from an alternative Earth became Captain America and never married. Later, he is elected president and serves two terms. He travels back in time, accidentally crossing to [[Earth-616]], and brings the mainstream Captain America and Rebecca Quan forward into his own time to prevent his daughter, Rebecca "Becky" Barnes, from traveling to Earth-616.{{Volume needed|c=y|date=September 2020}}
**{{cite book |last1=Moser |first1=John E. |pages=24–35 |chapter=Madmen, Morons, and Monocles: The Portrayal of the Nazis in ''Captain America'' |editor1-last=Weiner |editor1-first=Robert |title=Captain America and the Struggle of the Superhero: Critical Essays |date=2009 }}

**{{cite book |last1=Hack |first1=Brian E. |pages=79–89|chapter=Weakness Is a Crime: Captain America and the Eugenic Ideal in Early Twentieth-Century America |editor1-last=Weiner |editor1-first=Robert |title=Captain America and the Struggle of the Superhero: Critical Essays |date=2009 }}
===Ultimate Marvel===
**{{cite book |last1=Weiner |first1=Robert G. |pages=90–100 |chapter=Sixty-Five Years of Guilt Over the Death of Bucky |editor1-last=Weiner |editor1-first=Robert |title=Captain America and the Struggle of the Superhero: Critical Essays |date=2009 }}
{{Main|Captain America (Ultimate Marvel character)}}
**{{cite book |last1=Walton |first1=David |pages=160–175 |chapter='Captain America Must Die': The Many Afterlives of Steve Rogers|editor1-last=Weiner |editor1-first=Robert |title=Captain America and the Struggle of the Superhero: Critical Essays |date=2009}}

**{{cite book |last1=Cunningham |first1=Phillip L. |pages=176–189|chapter=Stevie's Got a Gun: Captain America and His Problematic Use of Lethal Force |editor1-last=Weiner |editor1-first=Robert |title=Captain America and the Struggle of the Superhero: Critical Essays |date=2009 }}
In addition to the WWII era hero, a 1960s version of Captain America (a.k.a. "Captain America of the Vietnam War") exists as an [[Ultimate Marvel]] Universe parallel to the [[Grand Director|William Burnside/Captain America of the 1950s]], who succeeded Rogers in the role after he is accidentally frozen. The 1960s Captain America is in fact Frank Simpson, better known in the Earth-616 Marvel Universe as [[Nuke (Marvel Comics)|Nuke]]. As scientists were unable to recreate the Super-Soldier Serum, they used cybernetics and steroids to enhance Simpson, which eventually eroded his sanity.<ref>''Ultimate Comics Captain America'' (vol. 1) #1 (Mar 2011)</ref>
**{{cite book |last1=Scott |first1=Cord |last2=Weiner |first2=Robert |editor1-last=Weiner |editor1-first=Robert |chapter=A Selected Filmographic Essay |title=Captain America and the Struggle of the Superhero: Critical Essays |date=2009 |pages=218–226}}

*{{cite book |last1=Weiner |first1=Robert G. |editor1-last=Duncan |editor1-first=Randy |editor2-last=Smith |editor2-first=Matthew J. |title=Icons of the American Comic Book: From Captain America to Wonder Woman |date=2013 |publisher=[[ABC-CLIO]] |isbn=9780313399244 |pages=101–111 |chapter=Captain America}}
====Scott Summers====
* {{cite book |last1=Wright |first1=Bradford W. |title=Comic Book Nation: The Transformation of Youth Culture in America |date=2001 |publisher=[[Johns Hopkins University Press]] |isbn=978-0-8018-7450-5}}
In an [[Cyclops (Marvel Comics)#Ultimate Fantastic Four/Ultimate X-Men Annual #1|alternate future of the Ultimate Universe]], [[Cyclops (Marvel Comics)|Scott Summers]] assumes the mantle of Captain America after Steve Rogers dies and leads a small team of [[X-Men]] to fight for mutant justice.<ref>''Ultimate Fantastic Four/Ultimate X-Men Annual'' #1</ref>
{{refend}}

===Weapon X: Days of Future Now===
Steve Rogers is selected for the Weapon X program. He is given a procedure similar to Wolverine's that bonds vibranium to his skeleton. He is given the code name Vibram.{{Volume needed|c=y|date=September 2020}}

===What If?===
Alternative versions of Steve Rogers are seen within several issues of the ''[[What If (comics)|What If?]]'' series.

* In "What If Captain America and Bucky Had Both Survived World War Two?", Steve is able to hold onto the drone plane and deactivate the bomb, allowing both men to survive. Baron Zemo is shot by the Red Skull for failing to kill Captain America and Bucky, but it is later revealed that the Skull shot him with a weapon which put him to sleep for 20 years. Bucky and Cap continue to fight in the 1950s and 1960s against Communists, though tragically Nick Fury is killed in the Korean War. In the mid-1960s, Bucky goes his own way. Contacted by President [[Lyndon Johnson]], the aged Steve is offered the job as the head of the newly created [[S.H.I.E.L.D.]], but Steve declines and suggests Barnes instead. S.H.I.E.L.D. and Barnes battle HYDRA, but fail to capture the Supreme Hydra. Joining Steve on one of his missions, the pair run into the Hulk and Rick Jones. Steve is knocked out, forcing Bucky to use Cap's shield and rescue Rick from the Hulk's rampage. Bucky decides to take on the role of Captain America, to which Steve agrees. Overhearing the conversation, Rick light-heartedly blackmails the two for the chance to be the new Bucky. Steve becomes the new leader of S.H.I.E.L.D.. Tracking the final group of HYDRA to an uncharted island, Steve and S.H.I.E.L.D. agent Sharon Carter team up with the new Cap and Bucky. The group infiltrate the island's volcano, which turns out to be fake and created as a hideaway for HYDRA forces. The four are captured, and the Supreme Hydra is revealed to be Baron Zemo, who has not aged for 20 years due to the Red Skull's weapon. Believing that Captain America is still Rogers, he prepares to kill Bucky, but Steve escapes his cuffs and frees the others. A fierce battle ensues, resulting in Zemo's death, but not before a shot from Zemo's gun hits and kills Bucky. The story ends with a distraught Steve mourning the loss of his friend, and the possibility of Rick Jones becoming the new Captain America.<ref>''What If?'' (vol. 1) #5 (Oct 1977)</ref>
* "What If...Captain America Fought in the Civil War?" features a continuum where Captain America lived during the [[American Civil War]]. In this universe, Steve Rogers is a corporal attached to a Northern regiment called the [[Redlegs]], led by Colonel Buck "Bucky" Barnes. Rogers's first mission turns out to be an attack on a group of civilians, and he refuses to follow Barnes' orders. Barnes shoots Rogers, but only wounds him after Barnes is attacked by an eagle. Rogers passes out while trying to escape, and has visions of We-pi-ahk the Eagle-Chief. Waking, he is greeted by a black man, [[Falcon (comics)|Private Wilson]], who brought him back to an Indian reserve. Wilson believes Steve's vision of We-pi-ahk means he is destined to be the one that will bring union to all people. Wilson begins a mystical ceremony that he says will make Rogers "as you are on the inside, so shall you become on the outside." Barnes breaks into the hut as the ceremony is underway. Rogers is mystically given superhuman strength and a magical shield that can transform into an eagle, while Barnes' head is turned into a fleshless skull. Barnes orders his men to open fire and kill everyone in the camp, and Wilson is fatally shot. Before the troops can escape, Rogers appears as Captain America, and captures Barnes and his men. Thanks to Captain America's involvement, the Civil War ends earlier than in our history, and [[Abraham Lincoln]] is never assassinated. Rogers helps the South rebuild after the war, and suppresses the rise of the [[Ku Klux Klan|K.K.K.]] As a representative of the Indian people, he is able to prevent the [[Indian wars]] of 1870. Unfortunately Barnes, now known as the White Skull, forms a group even more dangerous than the K.K.K. The descendants of both men continue fighting each other up to the present in this alternative universe.<ref>''What If: Captain America'' (vol. 1) #1 (Feb 2006)</ref>
* In the 2006 ''What If [[Age of Apocalypse]]'' one shot, Captain America is the leader of the [[Defenders (comics)|Defenders]] (this reality's version of the [[Avengers (comics)|Avengers]]), alongside [[Wolverine (character)|Logan]] (not bonded with any [[adamantium]]), [[Captain Britain]] (who uses Iron Man's armor), [[Brother Voodoo]] (this reality's [[Sorcerer Supreme]], after [[Doctor Strange|Dr. Strange]]'s death), [[Colossus (comics)|Colossus]], the [[Thing (comics)|Thing]] (who has a prosthetic arm), the [[Molecule Man]], [[Sauron (comics)|Sauron]], and [[Nate Grey|Nate Summers]]. Captain America no longer wears a mask, and wields [[Thor (Marvel Comics)|Thor]]'s hammer, [[Mjolnir (comics)|Mjolnir]], along with his [[Captain America's shield|shield]].<ref>''What If? X-Men Age of Apocalypse'' #1 (February, 2007)</ref>

==In other media==
{{main|Captain America in film|Captain America in other media}}

==Notes==
{{Notelist}}

==References==
{{Reflist}}


==External links==
==External links==
{{sisterlinks|d=Q190679|c=Category:Captain America and his cast|n=no|b=no|v=no|voy=no|m=no|mw=no|s=no|wikt=no|species=no|display=Captain America}}
{{commons category}}
* [https://www.marvel.com/characters/captain-america-steve-rogers Captain America] at Marvel.com
{{wikiquote}}
* [https://marvel.fandom.com/wiki/Steven_Rogers_(Earth-616) Captain America] at the Marvel Database, a Marvel Comics [[wiki]]
*{{cite web | last=Gladstone | first=Brooke | url=http://www.wnyc.org/story/129271-death-to-america/#transcript | title= Death to America | publisher=Transcript and streaming audio; [[Ed Brubaker]] and [[Joe Simon]] interviewed|work=[[On the Media]]|date=March 9, 2007 | access-date=July 27, 2007}}
* {{Comicbookdb|type=character|id=208|title=Captain America (Steve Rogers)}}
*{{cite web | last=Powell | first=Matt | url=http://www.wizarduniverse.com/magazine/wizard/003800596.cfm | work=[[Wizard (magazine)|Wizard]] | date=March 7, 2007 | title=Captain America Remembered | access-date=July 27, 2007|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20070309130111/http://www.wizarduniverse.com/magazine/wizard/003800596.cfm|archive-date=March 9, 2007}}
*[https://web.archive.org/web/20140502000500/http://captainamericalibrary.com/ Captain America Library] (fan site). [https://web.archive.org/web/20110708115149/http://www.captainamericalibrary.com/superhero-library/captain-america/captain-america-home-page.aspx Archived] from the original on July 8, 2011.
* ''[https://web.archive.org/web/20110708115149/http://www.captainamericalibrary.com/superhero-library/captain-america/captain-america-home-page.aspx Captain America Library]'', comprehensive fan website (defunct; link via [[Wayback Machine]])
*{{Comicbookdb|type=character|id=208|title=Captain America (Steve Rogers)}}
*[http://comicbookimagesgallery.com/tags/captain%20america Captain America cover gallery] {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20141102095356/http://comicbookimagesgallery.com/tags/captain%20america |date=November 2, 2014 }}
*[https://web.archive.org/web/20190201171952/https://marvel.fandom.com/wiki/Captain_America Captain America] at Marvel Wiki
*{{cite web |url= http://www.toonopedia.com/capamer.htm|title= Captain America|first= Don|last= Markstein|year= 2010|publisher= [[Don Markstein's Toonopedia]]|access-date= April 9, 2012}}
* [http://www.marvel.com/universe/Captain_America_(disambiguation) Captain America (disambiguation)] at the Marvel Universe
* [[MarvelDatabase:Captain America|Captain America]] at the Marvel Database Project
*{{marvelwiki}}


{{Captain America}}
{{Captain America}}

Revision as of 03:08, 10 June 2023

Captain America
Variant cover of Captain America #1 (2018),
with art by Adam Hughes
Publication information
PublisherMarvel Comics
First appearanceCaptain America Comics #1 (December 20, 1940)[a]
Created byJoe Simon & Jack Kirby
In-story information
Alter egoSteven "Steve" Rogers
Place of originNew York City
Team affiliations
Partnerships
Notable aliasesNomad, The Captain
Abilities

Captain America is a superhero created by Joe Simon and Jack Kirby who appears in American comic books published by Marvel Comics. The character first appeared in Captain America Comics #1, published on December 20, 1940 by Timely Comics, a corporate predecessor to Marvel. Captain America's civilian identity is Steve Rogers, a frail man enhanced to the peak of human physical perfection by an experimental "super-soldier serum" after joining the United States Army to aid the country's efforts in World War II. Equipped with an American flag-inspired costume and a virtually indestructible shield, Captain America and his sidekick Bucky Barnes clashed frequently with the villainous Red Skull and other members of the Axis powers. In the final days of the war, an accident left Captain America frozen in a state of suspended animation until he was revived in modern times. He resumes his exploits as a costumed hero and becomes leader of the superhero team the Avengers, but frequently struggles as a "man out of time" to adjust to the new era.

The character quickly emerged as Timely's most popular and commercially successful wartime creation, though as the popularity of superheroes in general began to wane towards the end of the war and into the post-war period, Captain America Comics was discontinued in 1950. The character saw a short-lived revival in 1953 before returning to comics in 1964, and has since remained in continuous publication. Captain America's creation as an explicitly anti-Nazi figure was consciously political: Simon was was stridently opposed to the actions of Nazi Germany and a supporter of U.S. intervention in World War II, and conceived of the character in response to the American non-interventionism movement. Political messages have subsequently remained a defining feature of Captain America stories, with writers regularly using the character to comment on the state of American society and government.

Captain America is one of the most popular and recognized Marvel Comics characters and has been described as an icon of American popular culture, having appeared in more than ten thousand stories in more than five thousand media formats. Though Captain America was not the first United States-themed superhero, he would become the most popular and enduring of the many patriotic American superheroes created during World War II. Captain America was the first Marvel character to appear in a medium outside of comic books, in the 1944 serial film Captain America; the character has subsequently appeared in a variety of films and other media, including the Marvel Cinematic Universe, where he is portrayed by actor Chris Evans.

Publication history

Creation and development

"It was a time of deep passion. Hitler was grabbing all of Europe, we had Nazis in America, Nazis holding mass meetings in Madison Square Garden. [...] Captain America was created in that atmosphere, he was a natural outgrowth of the passionate mood of the country."

In 1940, Timely Comics publisher Martin Goodman responded to the growing popularity of superhero comics – particularly Superman at rival publisher National Comics Publications, the corporate predecessor to DC Comics – by hiring freelancer Joe Simon to create a new superhero for the company.[2] Simon began to develop the character by determining who their nemesis could be, noting that the most successful superheroes were defined by their relationship with a compelling villain, and eventually settled on Adolf Hitler.[3][4] He rationalized that Hitler was the "best villain of them all" as he was "hated by everyone in the free world",[4] and that it would be a unique approach for a superhero to face a real-life adversary rather than a fictional one.[3]

This approach was also consciously political: Simon was stridently opposed to the actions of Nazi Germany and supported U.S. intervention in World War II, and intended the hero to be a response to the American non-interventionism movement.[5] Simon initially considered "Super American" for the hero's name, but felt there were already multiple comic book characters with "super" in their names.[6] He worked out the details of the character, who was eventually named "Captain America", after he completed sketches in consultation with Goodman.[2] The hero's civilian name "Steve Rogers" was derived from the telegraphy term "roger", meaning "message received".[2]

Goodman elected to launch Captain America with his own self-titled comic book, making him the first Timely character to debut with his own ongoing series without having first appeared in an anthology.[4] Simon sought to have Jack Kirby be the primary artist on the series: the two developed a working relationship and friendship in the late 1930s after working together at Fox Feature Syndicate, and had previously developed characters for Timely together.[7][8] Kirby also shared Simon's pro-intervention views, and was particularly drawn to the character in this regard.[4] Goodman, conversely, wanted a team of artists on the series; it was ultimately determined that Kirby would serve as penciller, with Al Avison and Al Gabriele assisting as inkers.[4] Simon negotiated so that he and Kirby would receive 25 percent of the profits from the comic[9] and notes that he regards Kirby as a co-creator of Captain America, stating that "if Kirby hadn't drawn it, it might not have been much of anything."[4]

1940 – 1944: Debut and early success

The front page of the first Captain America comic depicts Captain America punching Adolf Hitler in the jaw. A Nazi soldier's bullet deflects from Captain America's shield, while Adolf Hitler falls onto a map of the United States of America and a document reading 'SABOTAGE PLANS FOR U.S.A.'
Cover of Captain America Comics #1 (December 1940, cover dated March 1941). Art by Joe Simon and Jack Kirby.

Captain America Comics #1 was published on December 20, 1940,[10] with a cover date of March 1941.[11] While the front cover of the issue featured Captain America punching Hitler, the comic itself established the Red Skull as Captain America's primary adversary, and also introduced Bucky Barnes as Captain America's teenaged sidekick.[12] Simon stated that he personally regarded Captain America's origin story, in which the frail Steve Rogers becomes a supersoldier after receiving an experimental serum, as "the weakest part of the character", and that he and Kirby "didn't put too much thought into the origin. We just wanted to get to the action."[4] Kirby designed the series' action scenes with an emphasis on a sense of continuity across panels, saying that he "choreographed" the sequences as one would a ballet, with a focus on exaggerated character movement. Kirby's layouts in Captain America Comics are characterized by their distorted perspectives, irregularly shaped panels, and the heavy use of speed lines.[13]

The first issue of Captain America Comics sold out in a matter of days, and the second issue's print run was set at over one million copies.[14][15] Captain America quickly became Timely's most popular character, with the publisher creating an official Captain America fan club called the "Sentinels of Liberty".[5][b] Circulation figures remained close to a million copies per month after the debut issue, which outstripped even the circulation of news magazines such as Time during the same period.[17] Captain America Comics was additionally one of 189 periodicals that the US Department of War deemed appropriate to distribute to its soldiers without prior screening.[18] The character would also make appearances in several of Timely's other comic titles, including All Winners Comics, Marvel Mystery Comics, U.S.A. Comics, and All Select Comics.[19]

Though Captain America was not the first United States-themed superhero – a distinction that belongs to The Shield at MLJ Comics[20] – he would become the most popular patriotic American superhero of those created during World War II.[21] Captain America's popularity drew a complaint from MLJ that the character's triangular heater shield too closely resembled the chest symbol of The Shield, prompting Goodman to direct Simon and Kirby to change the design beginning with Captain America Comics #2. The revised round shield went on to become an iconic element of the character;[20] its use as a discus-like throwing weapon originated in a short prose story in Captain America Comics #3, written by Stan Lee in his professional debut as a writer.[22][23] Timely's publication of Captain America Comics led the company to be targeted with threatening letters and phone calls from the German American Bund, an American Nazi organization. When members began loitering on the streets outside the company's office, police protection was posted and New York mayor Fiorello La Guardia personally contacted Simon and Kirby to guarantee the safety of the publisher's employees.[24]

Simon wrote the first two issues of Captain America Comics before becoming the editor for the series; they would be the only Captain America stories he would ever directly write.[4] While Captain America generated acclaim and industry fame for Simon and Kirby, the pair believed that Goodman was withholding the promised percentage of profits for the series, prompting Simon to seek employment for himself and Kirby at National Comics Publications.[9] When Goodman learned of Simon and Kirby's intentions, he effectively fired them from Timely Comics, telling them they were to leave the company after they completed work on Captain America Comics #10.[25] The authorship of Captain America Comics was subsequently assumed by a variety of individuals, including Otto Binder, Bill Finger, and Manly Wade Wellman as writers, and Al Avison, Vince Alascia, and Syd Shores as pencilers.[16]

1944 – 1950s: Decline in popularity

Superhero comics began to decline in popularity in the final years of the war and into the post-war period.[26] This prompted a variety of attempts to reposition Captain America, including having the character fight gangsters rather than wartime enemies in Captain America Comics #42 (October 1944), appearing as a high school teacher in Captain America Comics #59 (August 1946), and joining Timely's first superhero team, the All-Winners Squad, in All Winners Comics #19 (Fall 1946).[16] The series nevertheless continued to face dwindling sales, and Captain America Comics ended with its 75th issue in February 1950.[16] Horror comics were ascendant as a popular comic genre during this period; in keeping with the trend, the final two issues of Captain America Comics were published under the title Captain America's Weird Tales.[16]

Timely's corporate successor Atlas Comics relaunched the character in 1953 in Young Men #24, where Captain America appears alongside the wartime heroes Human Torch and Toro, which was followed by a revival of Captain America Comics in 1954 written by Stan Lee and drawn by John Romita.[27] In the spirit of the Cold War and McCarthyism, the character was billed as "Captain America, Commie Smasher" and faced enemies associated with the Soviet Union.[28] The series was a commercial failure, and was cancelled after just three issues.[28] Romita attributed the series' failure to the changing political climate, particularly the public opposition to the Korean War; the character subsequently fell out of active publication for nearly a decade, with Romita noting that "for a while, 'Captain America' was a dirty word".[29]

1960s: Return to comics

The front page of The Avengers #4, depicting Captain America leading Avengers members Thor, Iron Man, Ant-Man and The Wasp under the subtitle "CAPTAIN AMERICA LIVES AGAIN!". An inset image indicates that Namor the Sub-Mariner also appears in the issue.
Cover of The Avengers #4 (March 1964). Art by Jack Kirby and George Roussos.

Captain America made his ostensible return in the anthology Strange Tales #114 (November 1963), published by Atlas' corporate successor Marvel Comics. In an 18-page story written by Lee and illustrated by Kirby,[c] Captain America reemerges following years of apparent retirement, though he is revealed as an impostor who is defeated by Johnny Storm of the Fantastic Four. A caption in the final panel indicates that the story was a "test" to gauge interest in a potential return for Captain America;[31] the reader response to the story was enthusiastic,[32] and the character was formally reintroduced in The Avengers #4 (March 1964). The issue retroactively established that Captain America had fallen into the Atlantic Ocean in the final days of World War II, where he spent decades frozen in ice in a state of suspended animation.[33][d] Captain America solo stories written by Lee with Kirby as the primary penciller were published in the anthology Tales of Suspense alongside solo stories focused on fellow Avengers member Iron Man beginning in November 1964; the character also appeared in Lee and Kirby's World War II-set Sgt. Fury and his Howling Commandos beginning in December same year. These runs introduced and retroactively established several new companions of Captain America, including Nick Fury, Peggy Carter, and Sharon Carter.[35]

In 1966, Joe Simon sued Marvel Comics, asserting that he was legally entitled to renew the copyright on the character upon the expiration of the original 28-year term. The two parties settled out of court, with Simon agreeing to a statement that the character had been created under terms of employment by the publisher, and was therefore work for hire owned by the company.[36] Captain America's self-titled ongoing series was relaunched in April 1968, with Lee as writer and Kirby as penciller; Kirby later departed the series, and was replaced by Gene Colan.[37] In 1969, writer and artist Jim Steranko authored a three-issue run of Captain America. Despite the brevity of Steranko's time on the series, his contributions significantly influenced how Captain America would be represented in post-war comics, reestablishing the character's secret identity and positioning the character as deeply conflicted by the tension between America as it idealizes itself to be and America in reality – a theme that would recur frequently in Captain America comics in the subsequent decades.[38][39]

1970s: Political shifts

"This was the '70s – prime anti-war years – and here was a guy with a flag on his chest who was supposed to represent what most people distrusted. No one knew what to do with him."

In contrast to the character's enthusiastic participation in World War II, comics featuring Captain America rarely broached the topic of the Vietnam War,[41] though the subject of Captain America's potential participation was frequently debated by readers in the letters to the editor section in Captain America.[42] Marvel maintained a position of neutrality on Vietnam; in 1971, Stan Lee wrote in an editorial that a poll indicated that a majority of readers did not want Captain America to be involved in Vietnam, adding that he believed the character "simply doesn't lend himself to the John Wayne-type character he once was" and that he could not "see any of our characters taking on a role of super-patriotism in the world as it is today".[42]

Captain America stories in the 1970s began to increasingly focus on domestic American political issues, such as poverty, racism, pollution, and political corruption.[43][e] Captain America #117 (September 1969) introduced The Falcon as the first African-American superhero in mainstream comic books[45] and who would become Captain America's partner; the series was cover titled as Captain America and the Falcon beginning February 1971, which it would maintain for the next seven and a half years.[46] These political shifts were significantly shaped by comics created by writer Steve Englehart and artist Sal Buscema, who joined the series in 1972.[47][40] In a 1973 storyline written by Englehart directly inspired by the Watergate scandal, Captain America is framed for murder by the fascistic Secret Empire, whose leader is ultimately revealed to be the president of the United States.[48] The incident causes a disillusioned Steve Rogers to briefly drop the moniker of Captain America to become "Nomad, the many without a country", though he later vowed to "reclaim the ideals of America, which its leaders have trampled upon" and again assumed the role of Captain America.[43] Englehart and Buscema's run was highly acclaimed, bringing Captain America from one of Marvel's lowest-selling titles to its top-selling comic.[47][40]

In 1975, Roy Thomas created the comic book series The Invaders. Set during World War II, the comic focuses on a superhero team composed of Timely's wartime-era superheroes, with Captain America as its leader; Thomas, a fan of stories from the Golden Age of Comic Books, drew inspiration for the series from Timely's All-Winners Squad.[49] Jack Kirby wrote and illustrated run on Captain America and the Falcon from 1975 to 1977.[50] This was followed by issues authored by a number of writers and artists, including Roy Thomas, Donald F. Glut, Roger McKenzie, and Sal Buscema; the series was also re-titled Captain America beginning with issue 223 in 1978.[51]

1980s and 1990s: Post-Vietnam and "Heroes Reborn"

Owing to the series' lack of a regular writer, Captain America editor Roger Stern and artist John Byrne authored the series from 1980 to 1981, in a run that saw a storyline in which Captain America declines an offer to run for president of the United States.[52][53] Following Stern and Byrne, Captain America was authored by writer J.M. Dematteis and artist Mike Zeck from 1981 to 1984.[54] Their run featured a year-long storyline in which Captain America faced a crisis of confidence in the face of what Dematteis described as "Reagan Cold War rhetoric"[54] that was originally planned culminate in Captain America #300 with Captain America renunciating violence to become a pacifist; that ending was rejected by Marvel editor-in-chief Jim Shooter, causing Dematteis to resign from the series in protest.[55]

Writer Mark Gruenwald, editor of Captain America from 1982 to 1985, served as writer on the series from 1985 to 1995. Various artists illustrated the series over the course of Gruenwald's decade-long run, notably Paul Neary from 1985 to 1987, and Kieron Dwyer from 1988 to 1990.[54] In contrast to DeMatteis, Gruenwald placed less emphasis on Steve Rogers' life as a civilian, wishing to show "that Steve Rogers is Captain America first [...] he has no greater needs than being Captain America."[56] Among the most significant storylines appearing in Gruenwald's run was "The Choice" in 1987, in which Steve Rogers renounces the identity of Captain America to briefly become simply "The Captain" after the United States government orders him to continue his superheroic activities directly under their control.[57]

After Gruenwald departed the series, writer Mark Waid and artist Ron Garney began to author Captain America in 1995. Despite early acclaim, including the reintroduction of Captain America's love interest Sharon Carter, their run was terminated after ten issues as a result of Marvel's "Heroes Reborn" rebranding in 1996.[58] The rebrand saw artists Jim Lee and Rob Liefeld, who had left the company in the early 1990s to establish Image Comics, return to Marvel to re-imagine several of the company's characters.[59] Marvel faced various financial difficulties in the 1990s, culminating in the company filing for Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection in 1996,[60] and "Heroes Reborn" was introduced as part of an effort to increase sales.[61] As part of the rebrand, Liefeld illustrated and co-wrote with Jeph Loeb a run on Captain America that was ultimately cancelled after six issues.[61] Marvel stated that the series was cancelled due to low sales,[61] though Liefeld has contended that he was fired after he refused to take a lower pay rate amid Marvel's bankruptcy proceedings.[62] Waid would return to Captain America in 1998, initially with Garney as arist and later with Andy Kubert.[58]

In 1999, Joe Simon filed to claim the copyright to Captain America under a provision of the Copyright Act of 1976 that allows the original creators of works that have been sold to corporations to reclaim them after the original 56-year copyright term has expired. Marvel challenged the claim, arguing that Simon's 1966 settlement made the character ineligible for copyright transfer. Simon and Marvel settled out of court in 2003, in a deal that paid Simon royalties for merchandising and licensing of the character.[36][63]

2000s–present: Modern era

Writer and artist Dan Jurgens took over Captain America from Waid in 2000, positioning the character in a world he described as "more cynical [...] in terms of how we view our government, our politicians and people's motives in general".[64] In the wake of the September 11 attacks, a new Captain America series written by John Ney Rieber with artwork by John Cassady was published under the Marvel Knights imprint from 2002 to 2003.[65] The series depicted Captain America fighting terrorists modelled after Al-Qaeda; Cassady noted that while the series was criticized for its political content, he stated that the aim of the series was to depict "the emotions this hero was going through" in the wake of 9/11, and the "guilt and anger a man in his position would feel".[66]

In 2005, Marvel relaunched Captain America in a new volume written by Ed Brubaker and illustrated by Steve Epting. The run reintroduced Captain America's previously deceased partner Bucky Barnes as the Winter Soldier, a brainwashed cybernetic assassin.[67] Contemporaneously, Captain America was a central character in the 2006 crossover event Civil War written by Mark Millar and penciled by Steve McNiven, which saw the character come into conflict with fellow Avengers member Iron Man over government efforts to regulate superheroes.[68] The character was ultimately killed in the 2007 storyline "The Death of Captain America" written by Brubaker,[67] which was accompanied by the miniseries Fallen Son: The Death of Captain America written by Jeph Loeb;[69] the character was later revived in the 2009 limited series Captain America: Reborn.[70] Brubaker's run on Captain America, which ran across various titles until 2012, was critically and commercially acclaimed; Captain America #25 (which contains the character's death) was the best-selling comic of 2007,[71] and Brubaker won the Harvey Award for Best Writer for the series in 2006.[72]

After Brubaker's run on Captain America ended in 2012, a new volume of the series written by Rick Remender was published as part of the Marvel Now rebranding initiative, which saw Sam Wilson assume the mantle of Captain America in 2014.[73] This was followed by a run written by Nick Spencer beginning in 2016, in which Captain America was replaced by a version of himself loyal to the villainous organization Hydra, culminating in the 2017 crossover event Secret Empire.[74] As part of Marvel's Fresh Start rebrand in 2018, a new Captain America series written by Ta-Nehisi Coates with art by Leinil Francis Yu was published from 2018 to 2021.[75][76]

Characterization

Fictional character biography

As of 2015, Captain America has appeared in more than ten thousand stories in more than five thousand media formats, including comic books, books, and trade publications.[77] The character's origin story has been retold and revised multiple times throughout his editorial history, though its broad details have remained generally consistent.[78] Steven "Steve" Rogers was born in the 1920s to an impoverished family on the Lower East Side of New York City. The frail and infirm Rogers attempts to join the U.S. Army in order to fight in the Second World War, but is rejected after being deemed unfit for military service.[79] His resolve is nevertheless noticed by the military, and he is recruited as the first test subject for "Project Rebirth", a secret government program that seeks to create super soldiers through the development of the "Super-Soldier Serum". Though the serum successfully enhances Rogers to the peak to human physical perfection, a Nazi spy posing as a military observer destroys the remaining supply of the serum and assassinates its inventor, foiling plans to produce additional super soldiers. Rogers is given a patriotic uniform and shield by the American government and becomes the costumed superhero Captain America, and goes on to fight the villainous Red Skull and other members of the Axis powers both domestically and abroad alongside his sidekick Bucky Barnes and as a member of the Invaders. In the final days of the war, Rogers and Barnes seemingly perish after falling from an experimental drone plane into the northern Atlantic Ocean.[57]

Rogers is found decades later by the superhero team the Avengers, the Super-Soldier Serum having allowed him to survive frozen in a block of ice in a state of suspended animation.[57] Reawakened in modern times, Rogers resumes activities as a costumed hero, joining and later becoming leader of the Avengers.[80] Many of his exploits involve missions undertaken for the Avengers or for S.H.I.E.L.D., an espionage and international law enforcement agency operated by his former war comrade Nick Fury. Through Fury, Rogers befriends Sharon Carter, a S.H.I.E.L.D. agent with whom he eventually begins a partnership and an on-again off-again romance. He meets and trains Sam Wilson, who becomes the superhero the Falcon, and they establish an enduring friendship and partnership.[81] After a conspiracy hatched by the Secret Empire to discredit Rogers is revealed to have been personally orchestrated by the President of the United States, a disillusioned Rogers abandons the mantle of Captain America and assumes the title of "Nomad", the "man without a country".[82] He eventually re-assumes the title, and later declines an offer from the "New Populist Party" to run for president himself.[82] He again abandons the mantle of Captain America to briefly assume the aloas of "The Captain" when a government commission orders him to work directly for the U.S. government.[83]

In the aftermath of the September 11 attacks, Rogers reveals his secret identity to the world.[82] Following the disbandment of the Avengers, Rogers discovers that Bucky is still alive, having been brainwashed by the Soviets to become the Winter Soldier.[84] Later, in reaction to government efforts to regulate superheroes, Rogers becomes the leader of an underground anti-registration movement that clashes with a pro-registration faction led by fellow Avengers member Iron Man.[85] After significant rancor, he voluntarily surrenders and submits to arrest. At his trial, he is shot and killed by Sharon Carter, whose actions are manipulated by the villainous Dr. Faustus; in his absence, a recovered Bucky assumes the title of Captain America.[86] Ultimately, it is revealed that Rogers did not die, but became displaced in in space and time; he is ultimately able to return to the present.[87] He resumes his exploits as a superhero, though his public identity is briefly supplanted by a sleeper agent from the terrorist organization Hydra.[88]

Personality and motivations

"Rogers' transformation into Captain America is underwritten by the military. But, perhaps haunted by his own roots in powerlessness, he is a dissident just as likely to be feuding with his superiors in civilian and military governance as he is to be fighting with the supervillain Red Skull. [...] He is 'a man out of time,' a walking emblem of greatest-generation propaganda brought to life in this splintered postmodern time."

Media scholar J. Richard Stevens notes that Steve Rogers' personality has shifted across his editorial history, a fact he sees as a natural consequence of the character being written and re-interpreted by many writers over the span of multiple decades. However, he identifies two aspects of the character's personality that have remained consistent across expressions: his "uncompromising purity" and "his ability to judge the character in others".[90] Early Captain America stories typically paid little attention to Rogers' civilian identity; in his 1970 book The Steranko History of Comics, Jim Steranko notes that the character was consequently often criticized as two-dimensional. He argues that this was an intentional device, writing that these critics "failed to grasp the true implication of his being. Steve Rogers never existed, except perhaps as an abstract device for the convenience of storytelling. Captain America was not an embodiment of human characteristics but a pure idea."[91]

Following the character's return to comics in the 1960s, many stories began to focus on Rogers' civilian identity, particularly his struggles as a "man out of time" attempting to adjust to a new era.[92] Often these stories focus on a brooding or melancholic Rogers as he faces both a physical struggle as Captain America, and an ideological struggle as Steve Rogers to reconcile his social values with modern times.[93] The character is depicted as deeply conflicted by the anachronism of his World War II-era "good war" morality being challenged by the compromising demands of the post-war era.[93][94] Prior to Bucky Barnes' return to comics in the 2000s, many Captain America stories centered on Rogers' sense of guilt over Barnes' death. Culture scholar Robert G. Weiner notes that these stories mirror the post-traumatic stress disorder and survivor guilt held by many war veterans, and that this trauma distinguishes the character from other well-known superheroes such as Batman and Spider-Man; while those characters became heroes in response to traumatic incidents, Rogers carries on as a hero in spite of a traumatic incident, which Weiner argues serves to reinforce the "nobility" of the character.[95]

Political themes

From the character's origins as an anti-fascist superhero, Captain America stories have frequently contained political messages.[96] Though Marvel has historically trended away from making overt partisan political statements in the post-war period, writers have nevertheless regularly used Captain America to comment on the state of American society and government at particular moments in history.[81] For example, the conspiracy storyline of "Secret Empire" reflected what writer Steve Englehart saw as broad disillusionment with American institutions in the wake of the Vietnam War and the Watergate scandal,[82] the "Streets of Poison" storyline by Mark Gruenwald in the 1990s reflected debates around the war on drugs,[82] and "Civil War" by Mark Millar was widely interpreted as an allegory for the Patriot Act and post-9/11 debates on the balance between national security and civil liberties.[97] While the ideological orientation of Captain America stories has shifted in response to changing social and political attitudes, Stevens notes how a central component of Captain America's mythology is that the character himself does not change: when the character's attitudes have shifted, it is consistently framed as an evolution or a new understanding of his previously-held ideals. Stevens argues that the character's seeming paradoxical steadfastness is reflective of "the language of comics, where continuity is continually updated to fit the needs of the serialized present."[98]

Despite his status as patriotic superhero, Captain America is rarely depicted as an overly jingoistic figure. Stevens notes how the charcter's "patriotism is more focused on the universal rights of man as expressed through the American Dream" rather than "a position championing the specific cultural or political goals of the United States."[99] Weiner similarly concurs that the character "embodies what America strives to be, not what it sometimes is".[100] Dittmer agrees that while the character sees himself "as the living embodiment of the American Dream (rather than a tool of the state)",[101] his status as a patriotic superhero nevertheless tethers him to American foreign policy and hegemony.[102] He notes how the character tends to skew away from foreign intervention during moments where the United States is criticized as being imperialist, specifically citing his non-participation in the Vietnam and Iraq wars,[103] and that the character's inconsistent position on the use of deadly force across his editorial history "is perhaps a tacit acknowledgment of the violence, or the threat of violence, at the heart of American hegemony."[104]

Powers, abilities, and equipment

"Cap is one of the hardest hero characters to write, because the writer cannot use some exotic super-power to make his episodes seem colorful. [...] All he has to serve him are his extraordinary combat skills, his shield, and his unquenchable love for freedom and justice."

Captain America possesses no superpowers, though the Super-Soldier Serum has enhanced his body's strength, speed, agility, endurance, reflexes, reaction time, and natural self-healing ability to the peak of human physical perfection. He is additionally an expert tactician and field commander, and has achieved mastery in a variety of hand-to-hand combat styles, including boxing and judo.[106] The precise parameters of Captain America's physical prowess varies across stories due to editorial dictates and artistic license taken by authors; Steve Englehart noted that he was given an editorial order to give the character superhuman strength in the 1970s, but the change did not remain permanent and was soon forgotten.[40] Steve Rogers is also a skilled visual artist, having worked as a commercial illustrator prior to joining the military, and several storylines have depicted the character working as a freelance artist.[107]

Costume

The basic design of Captain America's costume has remained largely consistent from its original incarnation in the 1940s. Designed by Joe Simon, the costume is based on the United States flag, with Simon likening the character's appearance to that of "a modern-day crusader": chain mail armor, and a helmet adorned with wings in reference to the Roman god Mercury.[108] Steve Rogers has worn other costumes when he has adopted alternate superhero alter egos: as Nomad he wears a domino mask and a black and gold suit that is cut to expose his bare chest and stomach,[109] and as The Captain he wears a modified version of the Captain America suit with a red, white, and black design.[110]

Following Rogers' apparent death in 2008, the mantle of Captain America was taken over by Bucky Barnes, who wore a new costume designed by Alex Ross with input from Ed Brubaker, Steve Epting and Tom Brevoort. Ross aimed to maintain the elements he saw as symbols of Captain America, such as the winged helmet and the "A" emblem, while updating the costume to make it feel modern.[111] The artist drew inspiration from Rogers' appearance in the 1940s, integrating the shape of the original triangular shield in the form of the breastplate of Barnes' costume,[112] and replacing the chain mail with chrome armor, which Barnes wears over a plain black outfit.[111]

Shield

Captain America's primary piece of equipment is a round shield with a design featuring a white star on a blue circle surrounded by red and white rings. First appearing in Captain America Comics #1 as a triangular heater shield, beginning in Captain America Comics #2 it was changed to its current circular design due to a complaint from MLJ Comics that the original design too closely resembled the chest symbol of their superhero The Shield.[20] The shield is constructed from an alloy of vibranium and adamantium, two highly resilient fictional metals appearing in Marvel comic books. It is both a virtually indestructible defensive object and a highly aerodynamic offensive weapon: when thrown, it is capable of ricocheting off multiple surfaces and returning to the original thrower.[106]

Supporting cast

Sidekicks

Captain America's first sidekick is Bucky Barnes, introduced in Captain America Comics #1 as the teenaged "mascot" of Steve Rogers' regiment. He is made Captain America's partner in that same issue after accidentally discovering the character's secret identity.[113] Joe Simon described Bucky's creation as being largely motivated by a need to give Captain America "someone to talk to" and avoid the overuse of dialogue delivered through internal monologue, noting that "mostly, Bucky was brought in as a way of eliminating too many thought balloons."[4] Bucky was retroactively established as having been killed in the same accident that left Captain America frozen in suspended animation; the character remained deceased for many decades, contrasting the typically ephemeral nature of comic book deaths,[114] until he was revived in 2005 as the Winter Soldier. Initially introduced as a brainwashed assassin and antagonist to Captain America, Bucky's memories and personality were later restored, and he was re-established as an ally to Steve Rogers.[115] Rick Jones briefly assumed the role of Captain America's sidekick and the public identity of Bucky following Captain America's return to comics in the 1960s.[116][45]

In 1969, Sam Wilson was introduced as the superhero The Falcon and later became Captain America's sidekick, making the characters the first interracial superhero duo in American comic books.[37] Possessing the power to communicate with birds, Wilson is initially depicted as a former social worker living in Harlem, though this identity is revealed to be the result of memories implanted by the Red Skull. He later receives a winged suit from the superhero Black Panther that enables him to fly.[117] Other characters who have served as Rogers' sidekick include Golden Girl (Betsy Ross), Demolition Man (Dennis Dunphy), Jack Flag (Jack Harrison), and Free Spirit (Cathy Webster).[116][118]

Enemies

Over the course of several decades, writers and artists have established a rogues' gallery of supervillains to face Captain America. Notable Captain America villains are listed below, ordered chronologically by their first appearance.

  Indicates a group.

Name / team name Notable alter egos / team members First appearance (by cover date) Creator
Adolf Hitler Captain America Comics #1 (March 1941)[21]
Red Skull George Maxon
Johann Shmidt
Captain America Comics #1 (March 1941)[21] France Herron
Jack Kirby
Joe Simon
Baron Zemo Heinrich Zemo
Helmut Zemo
The Avengers #6 (July 1964)[119] Stan Lee
Jack Kirby
Hydra Red Skull
Baron Zemo
Baron Strucker
Madame Hydra
Strange Tales #135 (August 1965)[120] Stan Lee
Jack Kirby
Batroc the Leaper Georges Batroc Tales of Suspense #75 (March 1966)[121] Stan Lee
Jack Kirby
Secret Empire Tales to Astonish #81 (July 1966)[122] Stan Lee
Jack Kirby
Doctor Faustus Johann Fennhoff Captain America #107 (November 1968)[123] Stan Lee
Jack Kirby
Roxxon Energy Corporation Captain America #180 (December 1974)[124] Steve Englehart
Sal Buscema
Arnim Zola Captain America and the Falcon #208 (May 1977)[125] Jack Kirby
Serpent Society Sidewinder
Diamondback
Captain America #310 (October 1985)[126] Mark Gruenwald
Paul Neary
Flag-Smasher Karl Morgenthau
Guy Thierrault
Captain America #312 (December 1985)[126] Mark Gruenwald
Paul Neary
Crossbones Brock Rumlow Captain America #359 (October 1989)[127] Mark Gruenwald
Kieron Dwyer

Romantic interests

Steve Rogers' first love interest was Betsy Ross, introduced in his World War II-era comics as a member of the Women's Army Corps who later became the costumed superhero Golden Girl.[128] Peggy Carter, an American member of the French Resistance, was retroactively established in comics published in the 1960s as another of Rogers' wartime lovers.[129] When Rogers is revived in the post-war era, he begins a partnership and on-again off-again relationship with S.H.I.E.L.D. agent Sharon Carter; introduced as Peggy's younger sister, she was later retconned as Peggy's grandniece to reflect Marvel's floating timeline.[130] In comics published in the 1980s, Rogers dated and became engaged to civilian Bernie Rosenthal, though they ended their relationship amicably after Bernie decided to leave New York to attend law school.[131] In the 1990s, Rogers had a romantic entanglement with the alternately villainous and antiheroic Diamondback, a member of the Serpent Society.[132]

Alternate versions of Captain America

The title of "Captain America" has been used by other characters in the Marvel Universe in addition to Steve Rogers. William Naslund, Jeffrey Mace, and William Burnside were introduced or retroactively established as former Captain Americas to resolve plot inconsistencies arising from appearances made by Captain America that contradicted Rogers' revised backstory established in The Avengers #4 (1964) as having been frozen in suspended animation since the end of World War II.[133] John Walker, also known as U.S. Agent, was introduced as a villainous Captain America in 1988,[134] and Isaiah Bradley was established in the 2003 limited series Truth: Red, White & Black as an African American man who acquired superpowers after being used as a test subject for the for the Super-Solider Serum.[135] Rogers' sidekicks Bucky Barnes and Sam Wilson have also alternately held the title of Captain America: Barnes in 2008 following Rogers' death in 2007,[134] and Wilson following Marvel's 2012 rebranding campaign Marvel Now!.[136] Within the multiverse of parallel universes that compose the Marvel Universe, there are multiple variations of Steve Rogers and Captain America; this includes Marvel's Ultimate Comics universe, which possesses its own version of Steve Rogers.[137]

Cultural impact and legacy

"Over the years, Captain America's story has accurately reflected U.S. attitudes, as our country moved from the self-confidence of the early Cold War to the guilt-ridden angst of the 1970s to the revival of national pride that characterized the Reagan 1980s."

– Jacob Heilbrun, The Los Angeles Times[138]

Captain America is one of the most popular and recognized Marvel Comics characters, and has been described as an icon of American popular culture.[139][78] He is the most well-known and enduring of the United States-themed superhero to emerge from the Second World War[140][141] and provoked a significant proliferation of patriotic-themed superheroes in American comic books during the 1940s,[140] including the American Crusader, the American Eagle, the Liberator, and the Fighting Yank at Nedor Comics; the Spirit of '76 and Captain Freedom at Harvey Comics; Yank & Doodle at Prize Publications; Captain Flag at MLJ Comics; Captain Courageous at Ace Comics; Commando Yank at Fawcett Comics; U.S. Jones at Fox Feature Syndicate; and Major Victory at Harry "A" Chesler Comics.[141] Though none would achieve Captain America's commercial success, the volume of Captain America imitators was such that a mere three months after the character's debut, Timely published a statement indicating that "there is only one Captain America" ​​and warning that they would take legal action against publishers that infringed on the character.[141] After being dismissed from Timely, Joe Simon and Jack Kirby would themselves create a new patriotic superhero, the Fighting American, for Prize Comics in 1954;[142] the character became the subject of a lawsuit from Marvel in the 1990s after Rob Liefeld attempted to revive the character following his own departure from Marvel.[62]

Captain America became linked to counterculture of the 1960s through the film Easy Rider.[139] When the character was killed in 2007, he was eulogized in numerous mainstream media outlets including the The New York Times[143] and The Los Angeles Times,[138] with the former describing him as a "national hero".[143] In 2011, Captain America placed sixth on IGN's "Top 100 Comic Book Heroes of All Time",[144] and second in their 2012 list of "The Top 50 Avengers".[145] Gizmodo and Entertainment Weekly respectively ranked Captain America first and second in their 2015 rankings of Avengers characters.[146][147] Empire ranked Captain America as the 21st greatest comic book character of all time.[148]

In other media

Chris Evans (pictured 2010) portrays Steve Rogers in the Marvel Cinematic Universe.

Captain America has appeared in a variety of adapted, spin-off, and licensed media, including films, cartoons, video games, toys, clothing, and books.[140] The first appearance of Captain America in a medium outside of comic books was in the 1944 serial film Captain America, which was also the first piece of non-comics media to feature a Marvel Comics character.[149] The character later appeared in two made-for-TV films in 1979, Captain America and Captain America II: Death Too Soon,[150] and a a self-titled feature-length film in 1990.[151] A trilogy of Captain America films starring Chris Evans as the title character were produced as part of the Marvel Cinematic Universe (MCU) in the 2010s: Captain America: The First Avenger (2011), Captain America: The Winter Soldier (2014), and Captain America: Civil War (2016).[152] The character also appeared in the ensemble films ensemble films The Avengers (2012),[153] Avengers: Age of Ultron (2015),[154] Avengers: Infinity War (2018),[155] and Avengers: Endgame (2019).[155]

The first appearance of Captain America on television was in the 1966 Grantray-Lawrence Animation series The Marvel Super Heroes. The character would make minor appearances in several Marvel animated series in the subsequent decades, including Spider-Man and His Amazing Friends (1981–1983), X-Men: The Animated Series (1992–1997), and The Avengers: United They Stand (1999–2000). Buoyed by increased popularity from the character's appearances in the MCU, Captain America began appearing in television series in more prominent roles beginning in the 2010s, such as The Avengers: Earth's Mightiest Heroes (2010–2012).[156] Captain America was the first Marvel character to be adapted into a novel with Captain America: The Great Gold Steal by Ted White, published in 1968.[135]

Notes

  1. ^ Cover dated as March 1941.
  2. ^ Members of the Sentinels of Liberty received a membership card and a metal Captain America badge in exchange for a ten cent membership fee, though badge distribution was later discontinued due to wartime salvage efforts; Timely instead began to match all ten cent donations made to US Department of War.[16]
  3. ^ Kirby returned to the company as a freelancer in 1956.[30]
  4. ^ This revised backstory did not acknowledge the 1950s "Commie Smasher" incarnation of the character, who in the 1970s would be retconned as an imposter.[34]
  5. ^ This shift was enabled by a change to the Comics Code Authority in 1971; the code had previously prohibited "respected institutions" from being "presented in such a way as to create disrespect for established authority", but was revised to permit depictions of illegal acts by these institutions so long as the individual responsible was made to "pay the legal price" and the act itself was "declared as an exceptional case".[44]

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Bibliography