Designated Sidekick

Designated Sidekick

The New Maths of Changes

June 27, 2006, Filed under: Uncategorized — @ 11:25 pm

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Take one dose of snarky comment

"What if you just made your own non-sexist comics instead of demanding everyone else change the way they make their comics?"

Meet it head one and match the talk with the walk, and put your money on the table with a little bit of proactive action

"In order to foster women publishing independently, with economy, and as owners of what they create, I will award FOUR grants annually, of a year's free hosting at WebComicsNation.com, to women making a regularly-updating new or existing webcomic of any genre or style"

Get this for a reponse <BrightRaven.

"Standing up for the rights of an oppressed group is an honorable thing, Ms. Hernandez. Unfortunately it can also be seen as self-serving, especially if you qualify as being part of said oppressed group. If you want to make a statement and be a true "Champion" for a cause in striving to improve the industry, then you can't simply pick to fight the fights that interest you. The Never-Ending Battle needs to be fought for us all."

Moral Take Out 1: When they said you should do something about it, they meant "It" not "it". Their Goal Posts Are Mobile.

Moral Take Out 2: Don't. Just… don't listen to the people who complain when you do something proactive. These are the people who would have snarked at Ghandi for his wimpy non violent resistance that only led to the retreat of British Imperial Control of India.

Moral Take Out 3: When challenged to "do something about it yourself then? and you go off and do something, don't be surprised if someone who's not willing to put their money on the line starts trying to tell you how you didn't do enough. (It's okay to be surprised if they actually then follow up by covering the gap you've left open).

The Cure said it well, when they said

"Whatever I do, it's never enough"

 

Comic Book Masculinity as Eternal Suffering.

Filed under: Uncategorized — @ 3:45 pm

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A couple of transistory thoughts on the way to a larger idea on the portrayal of men and masculinity in comic books led me to ponder some questions.

1. Name the male superhero(s) who dies and stays dead (Death within the last continuity crisis is too soon to call)
1.a. Bonus question: Name the male superhero who retains a permanent injury or disfiguration.

2. Name the male superhero(s) in a happy and stable relationship

3. Name the male superhero(s) who had a happy relationship torn from their lives through the violent death of their loved one.

4. Name the male superhero(s) who has made the ultimate sacrifice, and attempted entrance to the halls of Vahalla through noble death, and being flung back to the unending grind of suffering.

Now, category two

1. Name the female character(s) to have come back from the dead.
2. Name the female character(s) in a happy stable relationship.
3. Name the female character(s) to have lost their male partners through violence
4. Now name the ones who made the ultimate sacrifice for Vahalla, and have been returned
5. Now name the character(s) other than Donna Troy who's been through that list.

Brief thoughts to be confirmed/denied by debate and discussion.
1. Does the portrait of the male hero in the DCU have to be inexplicably tied to perpetual death, suffering and the knowledge that death may not be sweet release or solice?

2. What drives these guys to go into something that they know will kill their loved ones, families, friends, and ultimately, leave them alive to suffer the ongoing trauma?

3. Which male superhero(s) took up the spandex and cape after experiencing sexual abuse/rape?

Questions, questions.

At this rate, I'm going to need a blank face or a tacky green suit to keep this gig.

 

So this makes it out to the feeds

June 20, 2006, Filed under: Uncategorized — @ 6:37 pm

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I was wrong about what I felt the GW crew had done. I reacted to the circumstances, fired off a post, and left it 36 hours to look back at it.

So, for the record, I can and do screw up, and I can and will admit that I screwed up.

If I'm gonna kick the stuffing out of other people with free reign and no fear/no favour, I'm going to get it wrong sometimes. The thing is, I'm prepared to say that I stuffed up when I stuff up.

Sorry team.

 

Why this is important

Filed under: Uncategorized — @ 5:53 pm

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There's been a little bit of "But there are bigger issues to tackle" which is true. Just like with an social change campaign, there are bigger issues and smaller issues. The art of social change is to find an issue that can be resolved.

I've seen a lot of reaction to GirlWonder that says that this project (RobinIV in a case) and the broader issue (portrayal of women in comics) is a waste of effort that could be focused onto "Real" issues.

Three issues caught my attention.

First, that there is a finite volume of effort and effort expended on RobinIV is effort that is taken from another cause.

1.Time is finite, yes, and opportunity cost means that the time spend here is time not spend elsewhere. But is the time spend here going to automatically be spent on your preferred crusade? No. The time I'm spending on Girl-Wonder is time I'm taking away from video gaming. In fact, getting involved here is an addition to the broader pool of effort, since rather than using my time for recreation, I'm using it here.

This also assumes that the people involved here can only have one cause. It's this idea that you can only have one cause, or one position, or one skill or one anything. You can believe in two causes and support two causes.

Second, that the portrayal of women in comics isn't important since it's a medium read by young men.

2. Okay, this one upsets me more than most. There's multiple layers here, so I'll be quick
2.1. Mediums for boys aren't important.
2.2. How boys are taught to perceive women through their mediums of choice isn't important
2.3. Those boys were asking for it anyway
2.4. Non consensual displays of eroticised women are fine to inflicit on young male readers because they were asking for it, and they probably enjoyed it anyway
2.5 The treatment of the male reader isn't that important.

Look, there's a lot of forthcoming posts about this, but let's go for the brief summary. How we portray women to men is important, and it's important to the men as well. If men are constantly told that they're not worthy of a complex story, but hey, here's some erotica instead, what's that saying to the men? It's telling me that I'm dumb, and instead of letting me have something with story, the publisher just wants to make me aroused.

It's contempt. Some males may simply be in this for the pictures and the erotica. Saying all males are, on the basis of a few, is to turn "male" into interchangable faceless shapes that consist of erections and wallets.

Third, the rampant assumption that it's sex that sells comics, when comics are declining in sales, and increased sexualised content is decreasing sales.

3. Frank Miller's All Star Batman is being cited as proof sex sells. Well, no. No. Frank Miller's reputation as Frank Miller "Dude, Frank Miller, the guy who gave us that killer Dark Knight Returns! And Dark Knight Returns II.,.apart from the lastissuewhichkindasucks…and Sin City, and…Dude, Frank Miller".

If sex sells, a lot of men want to sleep with Frank Miller.

Critical acclaim met the All Stars series, and now, most of the critical acclaim is at critical disbelief and critical "If the fourth issue doesn't improve, I'm off this train wreck".

There's something else about the Frank Miller comic that bothers me. Assume for a moment, I'm a teenage boy, massive Batman fan, queued for the opening night of Batman Beyond, bought the comics, love the series. I hear there's this brand new Batman series out, and it's all ages, and it's Frank Miller and it's new Batman.

So cool. More Batman. So I get my copy, Cover page is Batman and Robin, page 1 is Dick Grayson, page 2 is Dick Grayson, Page 3…*carcrash noises* WHAT THE HELL? There's a women in lingerie for five pages. Did anyone consent to this? Did the male reader who picked up a comic with Batman and Robin on the cover honestly expect to have the sketchpad lingerie catalogue?

There's a level of nonconsensual forcing of sexualised content onto the reader that's problematic here. Sure, if you get the next sets of covers, there's the playboy bunny of the month cover, and we're warned in advanced. This time? Nothing.

No chance to say no. No chance to walk back to the comic book store and say "Excuse me, but I think you sold me this by mistake. I was looking for Batman and Robin, and I get erotica. Uh, I'm not like that".

As guys, we get very little say in the amount of eroticised content that's now shoved at us because "Guys Dig Chicks" is the mantra at the expense of "Guys are not universal singular interchangable units".

Fourth, the recognition of RobinIV is important for male readers.

4. RobinIV was a Robin, is a Robin, and to be discarded so easily is to say "This was a mistake we made to let you see a female Robin". You were wrong for believing that a girl could be Robin, so all of you boys who actually thought it was cool to see a female Robin be Robin and kick ass and do all the robin things…here's some breasts instead.

A chance to actually showcase how being a female Robin would be different, difficult, but ultimately, contributing to the legacy left by Tim Drake, Jason Todd and Dick Grayson. RobinIV could have been a way to give guys a chance to see that a female character could be something cool, be someone cool, be someone who you respected and went "Damn, that was cool" when she did something cool, just like you did when Tim Drake did something cool.

Even in death, we get told that she was really a Robin, by none other than Batman. Now, two years later, it's like Batman went "Sure, dying chick, lie to her, that's done, where's a small boy to recruit?". No recognition, no case, no closure, no sense that we're allowed to recognise her as a legitimate character who did contribute to the legacy.

That gap in the Batcave says that any positive feeling any guy may have had towards Stephanie Brown as Robin were misguided, and wrong. That bothers me, that the male reader isn't given the opportunity to respect the character, to recognise and remember the lost RobinIV, the way were were given that opportunity with RobinII.

But that's okay, we're assumed not to care, because Vicki Vale's in her underwear over in AllStar Batman, and Powergirl's over here, and heyhey boys, you didn't honestly read this for the story and the continuity did you?

 

In the overnight mail, it appears quite simply…

June 19, 2006, Filed under: Uncategorized — @ 6:26 am

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I'm wrong. I said we trolled. We didn't.

Overall, I was wrong, I was pissed off, and I made a judgement based on a few factors, not just the LJ of the person. Then what I concluded was wrong, since I'd come late onto the scene, didn't know the backstory, and it all looked pretty bloody ugly.

I was wrong, and I have no qualms about admitting that. It's gonna be long haul, and some of the time I'm gonna screw things up.

$

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