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Crisis on Infinite Earths changed DC forever, and it wreaked havoc on the origin of the League. See, back in the Silver Age, Wonder Woman was one of the founding members of the team, but Crisis changed all of that. Post-Crisis Diana didn’t appear until the present day, so the origin of the League had to be changed. However, it wouldn’t be until 1998 when readers finally got the complete post-Crisis origin of the team in JLA: Year One, by Mark Waid, Bryan Augustyn, and Barry Kitson. The team gave readers the perfect origin for the group, one that combined the past and the present amazingly.
JLA: Year One Is a Perfect Example of the Timelessness of the Justice League

Mark Waid is Silver Age DC’s greatest soldier and he always has been. Waid was able to become popular because he was the kind of writer who had an encyclopedic knowledge of DC and Marvel from the “good old days”. He was able to use classic ideas in modern ways, and his work on books like The Flash, Legion of Superheroes, and Legionnaires made him a star. Waid’s work with editor Bryan Augustyn was especially good, but Augustyn wasn’t just a great editor, but also the writer who created the idea of “Elseworlds” with Gotham by Gaslight. Finally, Kitson was an artist with a simple, classic style that worked beautifully for old school storytelling.
The three of them were perfect to change the origin of the JLA, and they did that in the easiest way possible: by copying. In The Brave and the Bold #28, Hal Jordan, Barry Allen, Aquaman, Martian Manhunter, and Wonder Woman battled Starro the Conqueror together. However, that was changed to include Black Canary instead of Diana. JLA: Year One starts after this battle and the team’s next adventure against the Appellaxians, alien invaders from the Silver Age, and it does something that no one would have ever expected: focuses on the characters and not the spectacle.









