{"id":6538,"date":"2011-08-04T09:00:58","date_gmt":"2011-08-04T08:00:58","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/www.badreputation.org.uk\/?p=6538"},"modified":"2011-08-04T09:00:58","modified_gmt":"2011-08-04T08:00:58","slug":"badrep-challenge-response-feminist-characters-in-comics","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/badreputation.org.uk\/2011\/08\/04\/badrep-challenge-response-feminist-characters-in-comics\/","title":{"rendered":"BadRep Challenge Response: Feminist Characters in Comics?"},"content":{"rendered":"
Team BadRep were put on the spot again this month: in the wake of SDCC
Batgirl<\/a> igniting the gender-and-comics conversation loud
‘n’ proud, the team were asked to take a look at their favourite
comic book titles and characters – some obvious choices, some less
so… and next up, we have Steve.
There wasn’t a specific comic which made me look at the female lead
and think “Girls can be heroes just as well as guys! I should be for equality, and
stuff.<\/em>” That doesn’t mean there weren’t loads of
characters who fit the bill, only that I never looked on them that way.
Which could be the whole point…<\/p>\n
I got into comics pretty late, and mostly with UK releases instead of
Marvel or DC. I think it started when an older friend had spent 2
straight hours laughing himself onto the floor at Alan Moore and Alan
Davis’ “DR & Quinch<\/strong><\/a>“. (They STILL get asked to do
more of that one.) I suppose that technically DR’s girlfriend
Crazy
Chrissie<\/a> is an empowered and independent woman, but since she
spends much of her time firing guns and\/or throttling him,
it’s hard to tell. It’s a great book though, especially
the incredibly sensitive war poetry.<\/p>\n Judge Anderson says freeze, creep.
Copyright 2000AD, image from
http:\/\/judgedredd.wikia.com\/.<\/p><\/div>\n
2000 AD<\/strong> was (and still is) an important publication
in the UK. It hurt like hell when I finally stopped buying it
(around the age of 18 and at university, I think). It also
produced a far more relevant female character for this post:
Judge Anderson<\/strong>. I was mostly oblivious to Judge
Dredd’s satire on future fascism, so all I knew was that
Anderson was a determined, skilled woman who could do
everything Dredd could (shout, kick doors, shoot things) but
also more. She had the psi-powers side of it as well, and her
storylines just seemed fuller to me. The telepathy element
allowed for more of a detective story, and the others in
Psi-Division such as Empaths brought in some very murky
subtlety at times. There was no hint of her being less
physically capable than a male Judge (although Dredd in
particular is something of an unstoppable juggernaut) so my
decision was completely based on which characters I got more
from. (This priority of ‘story over gender’ was
reflected in my affection for another
2000AD<\/strong> series, Pat Mills’ enjoyably bonkers
Finn<\/strong>, which starred a
male<\/em> witch.) Anderson is still incredibly
popular, and will feature in the new Judge Dredd movie currently in
production<\/a>.<\/p>\n
In my all-time Top 10 individual graphic novels, Neil
Gaiman’s Death: The High Cost of Living<\/strong><\/a> will
always feature highly. Technically very few of the
female characters in the Sandman tales are actually
human, and those in the Endless family such as
Death, Delirium and Despair certainly not, but it is
a remarkable book. There’s no question that
Death herself is where all the focus is, as she
steals the show from her brother Dream even in the
main Sandman storylines which are supposedly about
him.<\/p>\n
We recently linked to Greg Rucka and Rick
Burchett’s “Lady Sabre and the Pirates of the Ineffable
Aether<\/strong><\/a>” (starring LADY
SKYSHIP PIRATES), but Rucka was on my radar long
before. His series
Queen and Country<\/strong> stars Tara Chace,
who in my view is about as feminist a
character as can exist (hard-drinking, flawed,
MI6 operative in a man’s world) –
we
have a post about her here<\/a>. It was
another graphic novel which caught my
attention though, when he took over a
superhero who was originally arguably one of
the least feminist-friendly ever: Elektra<\/a>.<\/p>\n Elektra, somehow
managing to show off her chest and rear.
Again. Copyright Marvel comics, image from
http:\/\/marvel.wikia.com\/.<\/p><\/div>\n
Seriously, even quite recently before
Rucka’s volume
Everything Old is New Again<\/strong>,
she was aimed at a fanbase who wanted her
to look like the image here. She’s
the Sexy! Killer! Babe! In Red! So far, so
very sex assassin<\/a>, as we call it around
here.<\/p>\n
In Rucka’s storyline however,
things get shaken up a bit. Elektra has
got too used to the endless killing, and
is almost at a point where she
can’t recover psychologically. She
meets a new sensei who is the other main
character of the book… an older
woman of colour. That’s right, the
most dangerous warrior in this story
– more capable and badass than the
famously lethal assassin herself –
is a non-white woman of advancing years,
and she is also the one with all the
intelligence and wisdom. The art (in the
early episodes at least) is superb, with
a fight between them showing convincing
movement and how muscles actually work.
It also heralded a change from
CombatBarbie visuals. Rucka had just
previously produced
Elektra\/Wolverine: The
Redeemer<\/strong> with esteemed
Japanese artist Yoshitaka Amano, where
the glorious
full-page paintings<\/a> showed a
stylised Elektra with a body which was
often much less objectified than
typical comic fare. (Amano’s
site doesn’t have my favourite
pages from towards the end of the
book, where Elektra is shown
exhibiting the kind of power and
savagery usually given to an avatar of
an avenging death goddess, in some
very powerful images.)<\/p>\n
Everything Old is New Again
<\/strong> frequently surprised
me, since earlier chapters of this
character had basically been
SexyNinja books (I knew Greg Rucka
would be doing more with it
though). I wasn’t thinking
outwardly about feminism, I was
just being pulled along by the
adrenaline and drama of the story.
<\/p>\n
And that’s the secret.
That’s why pop culture is
such a great partner for
feminism: we don’t notice
that it’s happening.
It’s why the first
Matrix<\/strong> film is a
classic, but no matter how
many motifs and clever
philosophies the sequels pack
in, they still fail to
inspire. They will never get
people thinking to the same
extent as the original did
because
the audience is bored<\/em>
(and disappointed, if
you’re me). Grab your
reader’s\/viewer’s
attention and you can push
your message home very
effectively.<\/p>\n
I don’t have one
particular comic or
character which made me
stop and think YEAH
FEMINISM, but I suspect
there are many which
slipped in under my radar
and connected strongly,
which is a great thing
too.<\/p>\n
\n<\/strong><\/p>\n
<\/a>
<\/a>