{"id":6679,"date":"2011-08-03T09:00:04","date_gmt":"2011-08-03T08:00:04","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/www.badreputation.org.uk\/?p=6679"},"modified":"2011-08-03T09:00:04","modified_gmt":"2011-08-03T08:00:04","slug":"tank-girl-vs-my-enemies","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/badreputation.org.uk\/2011\/08\/03\/tank-girl-vs-my-enemies\/","title":{"rendered":"Tank Girl vs My Enemies"},"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. First up, Sarah J with (for how could we
not mention her) Tank Girl.
Just to be clear I’m talking about what I think of as Tank Girl<\/a> – the comics not the film (oh
God not the film) and basically the first<\/a> two<\/a> volumes of the collected comic by Jamie
Hewlett and Alan Martin. After that the stories go to an even weirder
place, and I think the artwork goes downhill too (I\u2019m fussy about
artwork \u2013 reading Alan Moore\u2019s superb Swamp Thing<\/strong><\/a> series despite the garish colour was a
labour of love). But anyway: there’s a little chunk of my soul
which belongs to early Tank Girl.<\/p>\n
Where to start? She
looks<\/em> awesome. Yes, she’s often in a bra, and yes,
she has a slightly implausible figure, but she’s a million
miles away from traditional balloon breasted comic book
heroines. She is rather androgynous, masculine without being
butch, has actual facial expressions and a great philosophy<\/a> about clothes. She is sexy,
and sexual, but in a way which entirely rejects the idea of a
performed sex appeal.<\/p>\n
Then there’s her attitude. Irreverent and subversive to
the very core of her being, she is linked in some of the
stories with a demonic force, a sort of soul of chaos.
There’s a great story where an aboriginal community
summons a kind of mystical proto-Tank Girl (called Tanicha) to
wreak bloody vengeance on the white men who are trying to
steal their land and assault the women.1<\/a><\/sup> Tanicha slaughters them gleefully,
and in interestingly gendery ways. Tank Girl laughs at
danger, power, pomp and duty in a thrilling and vicariously
liberating way.<\/p>\n Tank Girl, Sub Girl and Jet
Girl<\/p><\/div>\n
But then there are a few moments in which she is
breathtakingly, shockingly human, even vulnerable. In one
story, she dreams that her friends and her lover have had
their minds destroyed in a psychiatric institution,
One Flew Over The Cuckoo’s Nest
<\/strong>-stylee. She wakes up shaken and goes to sit
outside her beloved tank to think. As the sun comes up,
her lover brings her a mug of tea. He’s a mutant
kangaroo called Booga, for anyone who doesn’t
know, but that doesn’t make the moment any less
touching.<\/p>\n
Although many of the characters that accompany her on
her adventures are men, her female relationships are
surprisingly significant. Her two childhood friends
Jet Girl and Sub Girl are introduced in a story about
her birthday party (spoiled through a lack of decent
beer) and one issue consists of a letter from Tank
Girl to her mum. She also goes to England at one point
to visit her sick grandmother.<\/p>\n
And some of the best stories are where she gets one
over on a series of macho tough guys, from a kangaroo
gang leader to a bounty hunter who underestimates her
special gift for total destruction. In one of my
Sergeant: “Look at me when I’m going to
kill you!”<\/p>\n
Tank: “The male ego rides again… Should I
faint or scream? Ha ha ha ha!”<\/p>\n
Then her breasts transform into missiles. Which makes
the point quite nicely, I feel.<\/p>\n
Tank Girl is not a positive role model. She\u2019s not
a \u2018strong female character\u2019. Unlike, say,
the similarly badass Starbuck<\/a> in the
Battlestar Galactica<\/strong> reboot, she’s
not particularly troubled, and she doesn’t
experience remorse.<\/p>\n
But when I was a geeky 12-year-old at school,
powerless and furious, she was a lifeline.
I\u2019m sure my TG-inspired dreams of destruction
saved me from turning my rage on someone in real
life, when I finally gave up the fight to be quiet
and pretty and clever and kind. When my peers were
throwing sandwiches at me on the bus I\u2019d just
think, \u201cWhat would Tank Girl do?\u201d And
I\u2019d lean my head against the window and enjoy
the carnage.<\/p>\n
\n<\/strong><\/p>\n
<\/a>Reams have been written about whether
Tank Girl<\/strong> is a legitimate feminist icon or not. My position
is something along the lines of OMIGODILOVEHER which comes partly from a
feminist place and partly from a place of profound 12 year old
outsiderdom and rage.<\/p>\n
<\/a>
<\/a>favourites her former
sergeant becomes obsessed with her lack of respect and
her lack of discipline, and sets out to annihilate
her. In his dream he prepares to blow her apart with a
rocket but she just laughs at him.<\/p>\n