GWOG

June 21, 2010

Heroines, Assemble!

Filed under: Comics, Criticism and Commentary, Gender, Women in comics — SeanTheSean @ 10:33 am

Welcome to the new GWOG! It will be updated each Monday by a member of the Gworg Board of Directors, on a rotating schedule whose particulars are a closely-guarded secret. I have the honour of the first post of the new regime.

Like lots of fans, I’ve been enjoying the new BATMAN: THE BRAVE AND THE BOLD animated series. It’s campy and fun without being overly knowing or self-referential, accessible to everyone while still being clever. One problem keeps hitting me, though: the lack of female superheroes*.

If you’ve never seen it, there are two notable features of the show’s set-up. First, the few minutes before the title sequence are usually used for a mini-adventure unrelated to the main episode (although they are sometimes used to set up the episode’s backstory, or to further the overarching plot of the season). Second, and most fundamentally, the theme of the show is team-ups. Batman is never alone, always coming together with at least one fellow hero to beat up baddies.

Which makes it quite striking that no female hero has had the full BatB team-up treatment, a one-on-one team-up with Bats in the main episode. Only once has a woman – Black Canary – been in such a team-up, and that was in a pre-title sequence. Every other super-heroine appearance has been alongside other male supers. So far** only five female superheroes have put in an appearance in their professional capacity, and only three have appeared more than once. Let’s go through them – spoilers abound past this point.

Katana in "Batman: The Brave and the Bold"

Katana has made three appearances as one-third of the Outsiders (with Black Lightning and Metamorpho). Katana is, as you’d expect, Japanese, and carries a lot of stereotypes – she wears a schoolgirl uniform, her powers are skills with katana and shuriken (she has a magic sword in the comics, but it’s not put in an appearance yet in the cartoon), and in her first episode, “Enter the Outsiders!”, she’s silent, speaking only to tell her fellow Outsiders how to perform a sort of super-CPR on an incapacitated Wildcat. Her silence means the other two get more limelight, and she remains quiet during a pre-title sequence with the Outsiders being trained by Batman. This is somewhat made up for by “Inside the Outsiders!”, in which Psycho Pirate has trapped the three in nightmares, and Batman has to save them. Each of the Outsiders gets some meaty psychological stuff, but only Katana gets backstory – the death of her sensei in her native Japan. She speaks a lot during her dream sequence (in a strong Japanese accent which she didn’t have in her first appearance) and we learn that her silence is in honour of her master, so at least it’s a stereotype they’ve taken the trouble to justify. In the end, most of Katana’s character is defined by her ethnicity, and she can be crowded out by the other Outsiders quite easily, but she’s still good to watch and they do seem intent on doing something interesting with her team.

Huntress in "Batman: The Brave and the Bold"

Which is more, really, than can be said for Huntress, probably this show’s greatest disappointment for me as I’m a big fan of hers. Huntress gets two main-episode appearances, one as part of a big ensemble in “Death Race to Oblivion!” where she’s rather overshadowed by Green Arrow, Guy Gardner and Plastic Man, and one alongside Blue Beetle in “Night of the Huntress!”***. Huntress’s whole thing in this episode is “sexpot” – her tooling-up sequence mostly consists of her letting her hair down and applying lipstick, and the main thrust of this episode is Jaime’s crush on sexy Helena. She flirts constantly, with lots of double-entendres. The writers just don’t seem to see much of her character beyond her sexiness (she’s also somewhat more violent, although Batman doesn’t seem to be bothered by this).

Black Canary in "Batman: The Brave and the Bold"

Black Canary is another favourite of mine, and the best woman in the series. She’s the only female hero to get a straight team-up in a pre-title beatdown on Solomon Grundy. There are still wrong notes in her portrayal, though – her unrequited love for Batman feels a bit forced and uninteresting. In one of her episodes, the musical “Mayhem of the Music Meister!”, she’s largely passive, apparently under the Music Meister’s mind-control for most of the episode, and though her Canary Cry saves the day Batman has to goad her into using it. Her best episode is “The Golden Age of Justice!”, in which she and Batman are still being treated like sidekicks by an ageing Justice League (of the Flash, Doctor Mid-Nite, Wildcat, Hawkman and Hourman). It’s another ensemble episode, but most of the spotlight is on Canary and she swings the climactic fight. Best of all, nothing is made of her Bat-crush.

Two other heroines have minor appearances – Fire cameos in a Plastic Man pre-title adventure, and one of the Metal Men, Platinum, is really a Metal Woman – but that’s it for woman as heroes in BatB. And over thirty-four episodes, that’s not great.

Part of the underlying problem is revealed by looking at the treatment of women as wives. In the pre-title sequence to “Last Bat on Earth!”, Batman and Mister Miracle escape a death-trap for charity, following which Big Barda hectors Miracle for not cleaning out the garage – Batman chuckles and tells him, “That’s one trap you can’t get out of”. In “Aquaman’s Outrageous Adventure!”, Aquaman’s wife insists that he take her and their son on a vacation rather than fight evildoers. In “Long Arm of the Law!”, Plastic Man’s wife Ramona insists on him watching the baby rather than going out and fighting crime. It’s a time-honoured position for the wives of male superheroes, from Mystery Men to The Incredibles – a dogmatic insistence that their husband give up that silly crimefighting and concentrate on his family. It’s all part of the general stereotype that men put their time and effort into Big Important Projects, whereas women are concerned above all else with their homes and children.

It’s also a genre problem. BatB is trying to recapture an element of light-hearted, old-fashioned fun. Like a cargo cult, they do it by replicating elements from the original purveyors of that fun. And when you do that without some discretion, you replicate the flaws of what you’re making an homage to. With luck, they’ll learn to take what they need from the past and leave behind the unnecessary baggage.

*Which is not to say that this is BatB’s only problem; it’s just the problem I’m talking about here.

**I’m up to episode 34, “Sidekicks Assemble!” – but from the episode list, I don’t think there’s been an uptick in female representation in the episodes I haven’t seen yet. There is apparently a Birds of Prey episode coming up, which should be fun.

***My least favourite episode so far, I think. Not only is it ill-treatment of Huntress, there’s also the awful Mrs. Man-face as a villain.

April 23, 2008

The Open Source Boob Project

Filed under: Criticism and Commentary, Fandom, Gender, conventions — Caribou23 @ 10:18 am

The original post can be found here, although it’s a bit convoluted with all of the edits. Basically, here is the gist of it:

At Penguicon, we had buttons to give away. There were two small buttons, one for each camp: A green button that said, “YES, you may” and a red button that said “NO, you may not.” And anyone who had those buttons on, whether you knew them or not, was someone you could approach and ask:

“Excuse me, but may I touch your breasts?”

AHEM.
This comment rather sums up my feelings on this particular proposal:

“My body does not exist in the binary of SOME GUY’S ACCESS TO IT.”

Here is a brilliant satire of the initial proposal
And here is a round-up of links that have documented the responses.

April 4, 2008

Comic strip meta commentary

Filed under: Criticism and Commentary, Gender, comic strips — Tags: — Arion Hunter @ 5:43 am

Most Rhymes With Orange strips can be a little too grating or cute for my tastes, but sometimes Hilary Price gets it right on the nose.

Same goes for Get Fuzzy, which is funny but rarely incisive. And then occasionally it will make a comment worth listening to.

February 17, 2008

Anti-Women: 1; Pro-Women: Ten Billion

Filed under: Gender, Politics, activism — Tags: — KPhoebe @ 6:57 pm

Referee Michelle Campbell was told not to officiate a high school basketball game in Kansas by a official of St. Mary’s Academy:

The reason given, according to the referees: Campbell, as a woman, could not be put in a position of authority over boys because of the academy’s beliefs. 

So far, so irritating religious-based sexism, of the kind that infuriates, but does not surprise. But what did surprise (and delight) me was that her male colleagues refused to cover the game:

Campbell then walked off the court along with Darin Putthoff, the referee who was to work the game with her.

Fred Shockey, who was getting ready to leave the gym after officiating two junior high games, said he was told there had been an emergency and was asked to stay and officiate two more games.

 

“When I found out what the emergency was, I said there was no way I was going to work those games,” said Shockey, who spent 12 years in the Army and became a ref about three years ago. “I have been led by some of the finest women this nation has to offer, and there was no way I was going to go along with that.” 

 

The Kansas State High School Activities Association is now considering removing St. Mary’s Academy from its list of approved schools. 

February 11, 2008

Pride High Wins Queer Press Grant

Filed under: Comics, Comics, I love you, Creators, Gender — Tags: , — Rachel Edidin @ 11:59 am

Tommy Roddy and Justin Hall have been chosen as joint winners of this year’s Prism Comics Queer Press Grant. For Roddy, the money will help finance the first Pride High trade paperback – awesome news for much of the Girl-Wonder community!

http://forum.newsarama.com/showthread.php?t=146336

January 22, 2008

Breaking through the silicon ceiling

Filed under: Gender — Mary @ 8:47 pm

From The Sydney Morning Herald:

In the sea of blokey middle-aged males who typically dominate the ranks of Australian technology companies, a small group of enterprising women have built multi-million dollar IT businesses – and they’re hell bent on turning the gender tides.

But the road to riches wasn’t without its speed bumps – a consequence of an industry in which males account for over 82 per cent of all employees. At management level, the silicon ceiling has been even harder for women to break through.

In her 15 years as a business manager, including seven at the helm of software companies, Liesl Capper says she has been criticised by a venture capitalist for having kids while running an IT business, fired by a manager to make way for his golf buddies and repeatedly antagonised by male colleagues after rejecting their unwelcome advances.

Conversely, Danielle Lehrer, who has built two successful technology companies since 1998 and is about to launch her third, said that although she has always worked for herself, being a woman has mostly proved advantageous.

“I find being female in the IT industry gives you an edge – you’re a face that stands out in the crowd, and there’s nothing wrong with that,” Lehrer said.

Capper and Lehrer, both based in Sydney, are among six Australian female recipients of the “IT’s Million $ Babes” award ( http://www.itmillion.com/), which organiser Sonja Bernhardt said was created to recognise the achievements of female IT industry players and help people imagine what they can do with a career in technology.

They’re Just Breasts

Filed under: Gender — Tags: , — KPhoebe @ 4:54 am

In the state of New York, it is legal for women to go topless. Photographer Jordan Matter took pictures of women in NYC doing just that – as if it was an unremarkable, everyday occurrence for women going about their days – and the results are here.

The exhibition is thought-provoking, frequently beautiful and sometimes saddening, and should be compulsory viewing for anyone who’s ever drawn Power Girl without a bra.

January 12, 2008

Freshening Up Sex Ed

Filed under: Gender — Tags: — KPhoebe @ 7:25 pm

Many people find sex a subject of intense interest – so why are Sex Education videos so boring?Check out the Fresh Focus Video Challenge, where you can vote on the finalists as they compete to make the best Sex Ed video. Not your standard teaching aid!

December 7, 2007

16 Days of Activism Against Gender Violence

Filed under: Gender, activism — Rachel Edidin @ 2:02 pm

November 25 – December 10

The 16 Days of Activism Against Gender Violence is an international campaign originating from the first Women’s Global Leadership Institute sponsored by the Center for Women’s Global Leadership in 1991. Participants chose the dates, November 25, International Day Against Violence Against Women and December 10, International Human Rights Day, in order to symbolically link violence against women and human rights and to emphasize that such violence is a violation of human rights. This 16-day period also highlights other significant dates including November 29, International Women Human Rights Defenders Day, December 1, World AIDS Day, and December 6, which marks the Anniversary of the Montreal Massacre.

I found out about this toward the end, but that’s no reason not to check it out!

December 3, 2007

Queer Comics Controversy Bingo!

Filed under: Comics, Gender, activism — Tags: , , — Kate Fitzsimons @ 8:31 pm

Disclaimer This bingo card is not meant to replace or, indeed be used in, actual debate. Instead it is merely designed to amuse and inform, in a lighthearted presentation of the most common arguments against having queer characters in comics.

BINGO!

http://ragnell.blogspot.com/2007/12/never-thought-i-say-this-but.html
 

ETA: Feel free to use, link, or distribute this image in any way you see fit.

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