<\/a>Jaime Hernandez,
2000<\/p><\/div>\n
We meet best friends and occasional lovers
Maggie and Hopey in their late teens, in the
fictional town of Hoppers in California. The
fact that the two main protagonists in this
world-famous, best-selling comic book series
are queer latinas is almost enough on its own
to recommend reading it as I’m sure
you’ve noticed that the comics world
isn’t exactly overflowing with such
characters. Incidentally, Geek Feminism<\/a> has a
short list of comics featuring women of
colour.<\/p>\n
At the start Maggie takes a job as a
‘pro-solar’ engineer, and her
early stories feature spaceships, dinosaurs
and female wrestlers who moonlight as
superheroes (there are a lot of these) but
when she returns to Hoppers the story sheds a
lot of the B-movie trappings and focuses on
more earthbound challenges, including love
requited and unrequited, friends, enemies, and
age.<\/p>\n
We follow them, together and apart, over the
next 30 years, during which time they change
considerably, including their appearance. Most
famously, Maggie puts on a lot of
weight.<\/p>\n
Bodies and sex<\/h3>\n
At the Comica event
<\/a>Hernandez spoke at recently, he was
asked how he responded to some fans’
complaints about Maggie’s weight and
their persistent hope that she would lose it
and get ‘pretty’ again. He
replied: \u201cOh, I just have to say
‘you don’t know what
you’re talking about’. Maggie is
heavy. She is the only heavy person in
comics,
still<\/em>. Why is she the only heavy
person in comics?\u201d<\/p>\n
While Maggie does worry a little about
her weight, it never bothers her lovers,
and she is not ostracised or ridiculed
or any of the other things we are taught
to fear may befall us if we get
fat.<\/p>\n
That’s something else I love about
the Locas stories: they can be a good
antidote to body image argh, not just
because there’s a huge range of
body types on show (there is a lot of
nudity \u2013 again, it doesn’t
tend to be glamorous) but because they
are drawn with such skill and honesty
that it is impossible to be
ashamed.<\/p>\n
And, well, the comics are sexy. Not in a
brittle, cookie-cutter, performative way
(although that is examined too when some
of the characters begin working in a
strip club