Alan Bostick ([info]abostick59) wrote in [info]glaurung_quena,
I'm just driving by; I found this post because someone bookmarked it on del.icio.us. (Although I note from your flist that we know a bunch of people in common -- do you go to Wiscon?)

I've looked over many of the links you include. You make a good argument, but I don't think you get very close to the mistake that it seems to me that Johanna Draper Carlson is making.

I read Carlson as saying, "Of course superhero comics are sexist, silly! That's a fact of life; you can't change it; and you're a fool for even trying." What she is arguing is that the hegemony of sexism is inflexible and irresistable.

I wonder how old she is -- I think it is a near-certainty that she was born after 1970, and there's a reasonable shot she was born after 1980. I put the line at 1977; which would you take, the over or the under?

I say this because I was born in 1959, and the changes I've seen in my lifetime convince me that while sexism retains its hegemony, despite the feminist movement, it is most assuredly not inflexible, and that fighting it can change it. Which is why noticing and calling out the sexism -- the increasing degree of sexism in superhero comics in recent years -- is important.

And while crotch shots of Green Lantern are a fun and funny way of making the point, sooner or later what needs to happen is that feminist artists and writers need to produce superhero comics of their own, chock-full of the stuff that jazzes them about superheroes and at the same time consistent with their own values, to be put on their Web sites, self-published, and so on, so that the stuff is out there waiting for the lightning bolt of popularity to strike it.


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