{"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.
<\/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
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
\n<\/strong><\/p>\n