I fell down and got confused. Willow fixed me. She's gay.

BuffyBot ,'Dirty Girls'


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Discussion of Buffy and Angel comics, books, and more. Please don't get into spoilery details in the first week of release.


P.M. Marc - Jul 19, 2004 11:06:12 pm PDT #4899 of 10000
So come, my friends, be not afraid/We are so lightly here/It is in love that we are made; In love we disappear

Yargh. I'm going to kick the thing that ate my post on IC.

Which is basically, I feel like I'm on the opposite of my usual side of the fence in this case, and I'm not sure why that is. Every reason given as to why it's problematic? I can see. They're legit reasons, and yet I remain not bothered. I am bothered by the fact that I'm *not* bothered at this point. It's possible that I've managed to convince myself that the story will address a lot of those issues (many of which I see as impossible to completely divorce from the Silver Age hero mindset) to my satisfaction. Which doesn't address the issue of the story itself (not the execution) as the problem.


DavidS - Jul 19, 2004 11:30:32 pm PDT #4900 of 10000
"Look, son, if it's good enough for Shirley Bassey, it's good enough for you."

There are a few indications here and there in the text, which indicate that Meltzer is conscious of the deep rooted sexism in the superhero mythos. (The Ollie/Dinah dynamic makes it particularly overt, though that may be the way hears Ollie's voice.) Enough anyway to make me curious to see where he's going with this.


DavidS - Jul 19, 2004 11:42:31 pm PDT #4901 of 10000
"Look, son, if it's good enough for Shirley Bassey, it's good enough for you."

Btw, Ple, on the Teen Titans cartoon I TiVoed tonight, they introduced Speedy. Speedy and Robin practically had little hearts burbling around their heads as they bonded. Felt very Roy and Dick.


Polter-Cow - Jul 20, 2004 4:33:30 am PDT #4902 of 10000
What else besides ramen can you scoop? YOU CAN SCOOP THIS WORLD FROM DARKNESS!

Michele, you invoke Powers in your defense, and I'm a fan too, but I was wondering whether you let it off the hook. The first storyline is called "Who Killed Retro Girl ?" And various female characters have died over the course of the run.

On the other hand, Bendis' Daredevil run has been populated with very strong female characters who take matters into their own hands, and he has yet to put Milla in a fridge.

And on the third hand, The Pulse is currently revolving around the mystery of the murder of a female reporter.

And on the final hand, the current timeline of Secret Wars has a male superhero in peril.

This is probably a major tangent and maybe not relevant to the discussion, but I don't know any of Meltzer's work, so.

Issues like this make my head hurt, because, like Plei, I'm not bothered by it until people say I'm supposed to be bothered by it.


Frankenbuddha - Jul 20, 2004 5:41:10 am PDT #4903 of 10000
"We are the Goon Squad and we're coming to town...Beep! Beep!" - David Bowie, "Fashion"

Plei, that will be interesting if IC goes that way especially since having read Elongated Man stories from the Silver Age (when he was frequently the backup story in Detective Comics), and given that Ralph was/is such a second (hell, third) string superhero (basically a Plas wannabe twice removed by way of Mr. Fantastic), the choice of Sue Dibney is interesting as a trigger for this since she was the most (if not only) interesting element in most of those stories.

Stop me, before I parenthesize again.


amych - Jul 20, 2004 5:59:47 am PDT #4904 of 10000
Now let us crush something soft and watch it fountain blood. That is a girlish thing to want to do, yes?

P-C, I can't speak for Misha, but here's my take:

I'd never say that women characters can't be victims in a good story. Hell, you can't have a story at all without some kind of shit happening, and with any kind of fairness, roughly half the shit should go to women.

(Of course, it's not a fair world, and a lot more than half the shit seems to happen to women characters. But that's another rant that others have ranted better than I.)

For me, the key thing is: how are these characters victims? And how do the people around them deal with it? Are they characters I care about (even in retrospect, seen through the reactions of others after their death), or are they just anonymous damsel-in-distress number 413?

The hallmarks of the literature that most pisses me off are: Only women are ever victims. They're never really characters beyond traditional feminine virtues like being pretty and soft and adored by all around them; in fact, they're adored above all others because they're practically angels. They're dead women walking -- if they're really lucky, they get to die like the bloody dull consumptive one in Little Women, and everyone's just so terribly sad. On the other hand, if it's an action story, they're offed (raped, abducted), often brutally and graphically, and it's the men's job to do something about it; the implication is that the men are protecting property. Neither the victim herself (if she lives), nor other women (although they may be included in crowd scenes) get a chance to kick the bastard's ass, because it's the role of women to be passive -- indeed, to be plot devices, sacrificed to kick off the action. In other words, John Wayne goes off to chase down the damn dirty injuns who stole the white woman, and she's no more an actor in what comes next than she was in the original crime.

By contrast, the events Who Killed Retro Girl (to take your example) kick off a widely varied response from both the costumed and non-costumed communities. John Wayne isn't here -- instead, we get to see friends, enemies, old lovers, heroes, police, the media, and the public. They all react differently. They tell us things about who Retro Girl herself was that make her much more than just the pretty one. Bendis has a world where there are heroes and non-heroes coexisting (not always smoothly) but I can believe the reactions. The victim is female, she is beloved (without being the angel/victim/damsel-in-distress type for a single panel), but I never once got the sense that she was there only to be a plot device for the boys.

What makes it worse in IC is that Sue can be and has been far more than that, but I have yet to see any sign that Meltzer knows it or cares, in spite of the fact that he's willing to take on other silver age bline spots, most notably the cold-war era black or white morality they have in dealing with villains. And there's a lot I like about the series, and that I've talked about here -- but this won't stop clawing at me.

And there's no "supposed to be bothered" about it. I'd never say that you must be bothered, but I am. Deeply and viscerally, to the point where my sense that the nasty gender politics of comics has changed is really being pretty badly shaken. Again, you don't have to feel like I do about it, but it's rather facile to dismiss the reaction with "well, a man/woman is threatened in XYZ".


P.M. Marc - Jul 20, 2004 6:16:18 am PDT #4905 of 10000
So come, my friends, be not afraid/We are so lightly here/It is in love that we are made; In love we disappear

Issues like this make my head hurt, because, like Plei, I'm not bothered by it until people say I'm supposed to be bothered by it.

If you'd been around here when I was foaming at the mouth during BtVS S7 (and to a lesser extent, at the damselization of Fred in A Hole in the Word (err... World), you'd know that part of my thing is that I am normally bothered by it. Thus my take that I'm not on my usual side of the fence.

Deeply and viscerally, to the point where my sense that the nasty gender politics of comics has changed is really being pretty badly shaken.

I think another part of why I think it will be addressed is knowing that the Manhunter title is coming out as a result of the events of IC.

Of course, if things go unaddressed, or get worse, I reserve the right to go all S7 on his ass.


amych - Jul 20, 2004 6:21:47 am PDT #4906 of 10000
Now let us crush something soft and watch it fountain blood. That is a girlish thing to want to do, yes?

A Hole in the Word

This is possibly the most charming typo ever.

And I'm still hoping you're right, but I'd like more than metatextual reasons to believe.


P.M. Marc - Jul 20, 2004 6:35:59 am PDT #4907 of 10000
So come, my friends, be not afraid/We are so lightly here/It is in love that we are made; In love we disappear

This is possibly the most charming typo ever.

Yes, I appear to need my coffee. I should go pour a cup. Soon. Now.

My comic book store didn't have a copy of Powers, or at least, if it did, it was somewhere where I couldn't find it. Of course, I was going in at 10-to-close.

Now I want it. Grr.

Amych, I see things in the text that lead me to think the way I think (what Hec pointed out is one of them), but they're all tied into the other titles I'm reading, so I'm not sure how much is there, and how much I'm reading into things because of who the key players in the current generation are.


amych - Jul 20, 2004 6:41:30 am PDT #4908 of 10000
Now let us crush something soft and watch it fountain blood. That is a girlish thing to want to do, yes?

I see things in the text... but they're all tied into the other titles I'm reading, so I'm not sure how much is there, and how much I'm reading into things because of who the key players in the current generation are.

Please, do expand. I have neither the drive full of files the *(&*&%(&$$ summer student minion was supposed to bring back by the end of last week, nor write permission on the server I need to house them on. Work has ground to a complete halt. Discussion would be much preferable to f_w or searching for work-friendly badfic.