Friday 14 October 2011

On Red Sonja, Power Girl and good sexy female characters

I don't tend to talk that much about sexuality on the blog, though I have spoken on gender issues in the past. In the recent craziness regarding Starfire's new look, history and personality in the rebooted DC universe, I was thinking about how many Conan fans might have felt marginalized when Red Sonja went from this:



To this:


Man, imagine if this happened nowadays.  Contemplate the outrage roaring across the internet!

Of course, things have changed substantially since the 1970s, and neither Red Sonja nor her mail byrnie were nearly as long-lived or established as Starfire and her character, but I wonder if there are some who saw Barry Smith's Sonja, thought "Wow, a female warrior that wears armour and is treated as Conan's equal, I can't wait to see more of her!" only to be treated to "Day of the Sword," where it's revealed that Sonja only got her powers through divine pity after she was raped by bandits, and she traded in her byrnie for a metal bikini.  Maroto's bikini was considered one of the elements which kick-started Sonja's rise to stardom, with a lot of enthusiasm from the young males crowd, but I can't help but wonder how different history would've been if Thomas decided to just stick to the byrnie.  Would Sonja have become as obscure as other Marvel Conan creations, or would her unique personality and status as a female comics character who wears upper body armour be enough?  Does it really matter what she wears if she still has the same origin story?  Who knows.

Anyway, the furore has resulted in many comics writers commentating on the whole "sex and women in comics" situation...



As you'll no doubt be aware from posts here and at the Conan forums, I have issues with Busiek's take on Conan, and I've been critical of his original creations on many an occassions - Janissa in particular being a character that bothers the hell out of me.  But his take on the issue of female characters and sexuality is so similar to mine, and written in exactly the way I probably would've written it, it's frankly a bit scary:

My argument, over and over, is that "sexy" isn't the problem. Sameness is the problem. Don't make all women look the same. Don't make them act the same. Give us a range of portrayals, like the men. I think Power Girl's a terrific character -- she's brash, she's loud, she's aggressive, she flaunts her sexuality and she doesn't take any shit about it. As a result, she's visually distinctive, she's got a strong personality that goes with the visuals -- she stands out. She's a vivid and memorable character, which is pretty good for someone who's core concept is that she's a variant version of a derivative character.
I don't have a problem with Voodoo being a stripper. Could be an interesting world, an interesting background to build on. I don't have a problem with Starfire wearing a skimpy purple metal outfit. It fits the character as Marv and George designed and presented her. I have a problem, though, when the debate is posed in a way that says that either Power Girl should be toned down, or else it's okay for any female character to be like that. Really? If Batman is all grim and dark and obsessive, is it okay for Superman to be the same way? For Spider-Man? Booster Gold? I don't think so.

One of the things that made the original Starfire work so well was that she was on a team with Wonder Girl and Raven. Starfire was the sexy bombshell without any body issues, and that helped her stand out and be distinctive, standing next to the more conventional Donna Troy and the reserved and repressed Raven. There was variety, there was a range, and it made the characters memorable. What was important to Marv and George was making these characters distinctive and memorable, the women as well as the men.

And that was a nice step forward from the '60s, when most female characters seemed to be cut from the same cloth, with rare exceptions. But in recent times, it seems female characters are being cut from the same cloth again, just a different pattern than we used to get. Now, they're all Victoria's Secret models, cocking their hips, arching their backs, pursing their lips and teasing their hair. I saw a team shot recently that looked like a varied bunch of male heroes and three clones of the same woman, just in different costumes. Women should be varied. They should look different, think different, act different, talk different... Just as surely as the men, because they're all individuals and we want the characters we read about to be distinctive and memorable.

Ms. Marvel/Warbird/Carol Danvers: She's ex-military, a tough, no-nonsense fighter who's endured sexism all her life, starting with her own father. Should she pose like a model? Or should she straighten her spine, square her shoulders and her jaw and act like an officer? One's the generic choice, and the other says more about who she is as an individual, so I go with the one that's distinctive.
There's nothing wrong with sexy. I don't want to change Power Girl. She works really well as a character. What's wrong is when everyone's sexy, and in the same way, too. Playing it that way even hurts the characters who are meant to be sexy. If Storm and Kitty Pryde look and stand and act like Victoria's Secret models, then how do you make the White Queen, who is supposed to be strikingly sexy and vamp-ish, stand out? Make her look like a Hustler model? That doesn't come off as sexy; it comes of as ludicrous. But if everyone gets presented the same way, it's harder and harder for the characters to be distinctive, even the ones who _should_ be presented that way, because it's no longer possible to tell that that's a choice, not a default. No range, no distinctiveness. Would Catwoman need to hump Batman on a rooftop to establish how hot and sexy she is if everyone else wasn't crowding into the "sexy" end of the scale?

Mine is more a craft argument than a political argument, but the political statement hiding underneath it is: Women are individuals. The trick to treating them well is to acknowledge that, and seek to bring that individuality forth, rather than going with the generic. It doesn't matter if the generic is "Sports Illustrated swimsuit model," like today, or "fainting overwrought female" like much of Sixties Marvel -- if it's generic, it's lazy and undistinctive and dumb. Let's go for distinctive. Let's go for variety.

Let's see Power Girl and Voodoo and Catwoman, fine, but let's see nerdy women, too -- and funny women and repressed women and confident women and everything in-between and beyond. Give us the strippers, but give us the librarians (and not just the "sexy librarian," either) and the Congresswoman and the cop and the junkie and the single mom and on and on. And even within those roles, not all Congresswomen are the same. Not all single moms, not all biker chicks, not all grad students.

[And if your female cop looks indistinguishable from a cop in a porn movie who's about to handcuff the lucky burglar and have her way with him, maybe you're doing something wrong.]

One size shouldn't fit all, because that's boring. So my answer to the question of how comics can do better with female characters is, stop looking for ways to fit the mold and start looking for ways to stand out. Look for what makes them individuals, not what makes them generic. If nothing else, it's a whole lot easier for an orange-skinned babe in a purple metal bikini to stand out as sexy with just a line or two if everyone else isn't wearing as little as possible and looking as breathy and bosomy as possible too.

I don't want to tone down Power Girl, because she's fine as she is. We just need female characters as distinctive as she is in other ways. Let's not limit the portrayals, because that gives us less. Let's have more, instead. More variety, more distinctiveness, more individuals.

Get outta my head, Kurt, get outta my head!

Speaking of Power Girl and Red Sonja, I came across this fantastic article by Laura Sneddon which discusses the history of women in comics, giving particular praise to those two as feminist icons from the highly sexualised '70s comics aesthetic. She gives an awesome appraisal of Red Sonja's beginnings and recognizes Howard's proto-feminism, and discusses how Red Sonja could still be considered a hope for good female :

The 70s saw mainstream comics sexing up more and more female characters. Red Sonja first appeared in the Conan the Barbarian comics in '73, and by popular demand soon received her own title. While Conan was based on the original Robert E Howard stories, Red Sonja was an original comics creation, only loosely based on a Howard character. His Red Sonya had not been part of the Cimmerian tales, but a Polish-Ukranian mercenary of the 16th century. She was in fact one of several warrior women from the proto-feminist's pen. "From under a steel cap escaped rebellious tresses that rippled red gold in the sun over her compact shoulders. High boots of Cordovan leather came to her mid-thighs which were cased in baggy breeches. She wore a shirt of fine Turkish mesh-mail tucked into her breeches."

Red Sonja, as she first appeared in comics, was strikingly similar to this description, albeit without the breeches. She wore a chainmail shirt, exposing less skin than Conan himself. Sonja is first introduced as leader of an army, and saves Conan twice in her first comic outing. She rebuffs the admiring Barbarian's advances, conspires with him in pilfering some riches, and ultimately betrays him and rides off into the sunset laughing her head off.
After these two initial stories though, where Red Sonja had been portrayed as a mysterious warrior woman and an equal to the ultimate man's man Conan, her costume and lack of origins were to change. For her own title, out went the practical long sleeved chainmail shirt, and in came the infamous chainmail bikini which greatly helped with the tits and ass focused covers. And as if that wasn't enough, she got slapped with the classic "rape as a backstory" trope. Sonja, it transpired, had seen her family slaughtered by mercenaries that also brutally raped the young girl. A goddess granted Sonja great warrior skills, asking that in return Sonja must not lie with a man unless he defeats her in fair combat.
One interpretation of this has been that Sonja can only engage in sex with a man who first dominates her with violence, thus reliving her rape. However, in the original comic, the goddess also adds "Something that no man is like to do after this day". This suggests that the oath is less about only having sex with men who defeat her, and more about the fact that men aren't going to be able to defeat her anyway.
Another accusation levelled at Sonja is that her attire is a provocation for her primarily male attackers, that she is, in many ways, "asking for it". Putting aside the fact that a comics character is hardly responsible for clothing herself, Sonja has stated throughout the comics that her costume is very handy in battle – it distracts the enemy! It's unfortunate that this oath has put the focus firmly on fighting off men who would otherwise try to bed her, the bikini ensuring that our eyes never stray for long from her desirable body.
Still, Red Sonja was a strong, independent, intelligent woman who fought her way through a man's world and did a pretty kickass job. Costume and all too predictable back story aside, there is a lot of fun to be had with a sword and sorcery title starring a woman, and indeed Red Sonja has a large feminist following.

I still have my problems with Red Sonja, but it's easy to forget that she actually isn't as horrible as I tend to remember her.  She also reminds me just why I loved Power Girl, back when the emphasis was on Power as much as on Girl:

Unlike the demure Supergirl of the 50s, Power Girl refused to be spoken down to by the men, and demanded that she be treated as an equal. She was angry, but rightly so: Kara could not understand why her being a woman had any bearing on how she should be treated. Her build was slightly stocky, her hair a short cute cut, and her costume stylish. She let no sexist remarks slide (don't call her a girlie!), angrily calling out the men for their ignorance while slamming doors or breaking the furniture. Power Girl was angry as hell, but why shouldn't she be? Determined to step out from her cousin's shadow and be taken seriously, Power Woman was one of the first outspoken feminist characters in comics.
A lot of the above isn't so well known. One aspect of Power Girl tends to overshadow everything else, and even leads people to make judgements on the character without actually reading any of her stories. Y'see, Kara has a really famous set of assets – large breasts that her costume certainly makes the most of. Her outfit has a circular peephole that shows off her cleavage, and certainly distracts the eye. And it would appear that when confronted with breasts, many people suffer from what I can only describe as melting brain. She has large boobs and shows them off so she must be... slutty? Dumb? Attention seeking? Really?
Power Girl is a highly sexualised hero, of that there is no doubt. But her costume, and her breast size, do not determine whether or not her words and actions had a feminist message. Kara demanded respect from her male peers, forced them to take her seriously, and never apologised for being female.
Kara's costume changed often, the peephole came and went. The story that Wally Wood increased her breast size in every comic is a common myth, it was far later on that her boobs started to expand at an alarming rate. The popularity of this myth is perhaps testament to how unsurprised readers would be at creators having so little respect for their female characters.

Reminds me of the Lara Croft fiasco, which I flagrantly over-generalize as "girls with big boobs are dumb insecure sleazemiddens for dumb sexist boys, girls with little boobs are intelligent independent women for intelligent egalitarian men" garbage.

I'd been thinking about how women in comics often have very similar body types, to the point where it becomes somewhat distracting (for entirely different reasons than presumably intended).  I'm not just talking about superheroines, but even non-supers like the mighty Amanda Waller:


DC should know better than to mess with the Wall...

Anyway, I just wonder why so many heroines have the same body shape.  Can't some be a bit more heavyset, or muscular, or skinny, than others?  Can't some be taller, longer-torsoed, shorter-legged, different BWH measurements?  Bigger noses, stronger jawlines, thinner lips, thicker brows?  The fact that, say, Wonder Woman has 35-25-35 measurements and stands 5'10" with full lips, high cheekbones, heavy eyes, a button nose and muscular/voluptuous build is fine... but not every single superheroine should have the exact same measurements.  Good comics have variety in their heroines: Wonder Woman may be taller and more rangy, Power Girl more stockily built, Supergirl more petite, and so forth. But too few comics are unwilling to buck the three body types trend (roughly the Total Recall Slim-Athletic-Voluptuous tryptich), so it seems like heroines are all clones of each other.

Do they all have to look like Victoria's Secret models, who are so generic and alike in shape and height it looks like they stepped off a factory line save for different haircuts and skin tones?  Is this preparation for the Stepford Revolution, attuning our menfolk to not act surprise when suddenly all women on earth are replaced with stick-legged automatons, with terrors of the obesity epidemic resulting in healthy weight-loss measures being co-opted to produce a race of clone-women?



That's not sexy, that's terrifying.

Of course, this isn't restricted to women.  Why do Batman, Superman and Captain Marvel all look so similar to each other out of distinguishing costume in so many works?  But then, there are more body types generally available to males than to females.  Look at all the body types available to male superheroes in, say, the DC Animated Universe, then compare it to females.

Ah well.  You just know that this DC relaunch is going to be like New Coke, and everything will be restored somewhere down the line.  At least one can hope so.

6 comments:

  1. I have to place the blame squarely on the shoulders of the artists. They should put away their Playboys and Victoria's Secret catalogs, go outside into the street and start drawing real people for a change.

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  2. I think what upset most people about starfire was that they took a complex character and seemingly replaced it with a male fantasy. Maybe they should have shown catwoman's face before the 4th page.

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  3. Even from the simplistic 'give em what they like' point of view it's disappointing. I'm a guy who, for example, finds the old Amanda Waller much more attractive than the new one.

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  4. The DC reboot is the biggest piece of crap in the history of mankind... well, no, there is that new Conan movie. 2011: what a great year.

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  5. In Spain and in other countries I suppose the tv ads for Special K aren't doing a good thing for young girls, I remember one of them with a skinny, don't know the exactly word in english I mean slim or thin, girl looking at herself on a mirror and feeling fat an going to eat Special k for losing weight

    Francisco

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  6. I have to place the blame squarely on the shoulders of the artists. They should put away their Playboys and Victoria's Secret catalogs, go outside into the street and start drawing real people for a change.

    I still can't understand how some of these people get work. Without naming names, I cannot fathom how some artists consistently ignore the many "don'ts" drummed into people at a high school level manage to get jobs. And it isn't even an issue of rules being made to be broken in the name of style: breaking these rules makes the art look ugly, sloppy and outright bad.

    I think what upset most people about starfire was that they took a complex character and seemingly replaced it with a male fantasy. Maybe they should have shown catwoman's face before the 4th page.

    Definitely, yes. Regarding Catwoman: I love the idea of a slow reveal of a character's face, but this is a case where they went about it all wrong. If they were doing, say, Batman, you can imagine how showing parts of him in the a lead up to the big reveal would work: show him suiting up, a vague shadow darting through the alleys, a black blur speeding against the night sky, then eventually we see his face in a big dramatic moment. I don't think they would start by showing us close-ups of his swimsuit area.

    Even from the simplistic 'give em what they like' point of view it's disappointing. I'm a guy who, for example, finds the old Amanda Waller much more attractive than the new one.

    Even the comics industry should know that people have different tastes. Some men like larger or smaller women more than the current ideal, which history has shown tends to fluctuate dramatically by the decade. Why not facilitate for all, especially in something like a Justice League or X-Men team? I find it laughable that the male mutants can have any number of horrific mutations, but the worst a female can get is blue skin or being a bodybuilder...

    The DC reboot is the biggest piece of crap in the history of mankind... well, no, there is that new Conan movie. 2011: what a great year.


    Ah, 2011.

    In Spain and in other countries I suppose the tv ads for Special K aren't doing a good thing for young girls, I remember one of them with a skinny, don't know the exactly word in english I mean slim or thin, girl looking at herself on a mirror and feeling fat an going to eat Special k for losing weight

    Oh, don't get me started on Special K ads. EVERY SINGLE advert has a perfectly thin girl lamenting her apparent morbid obesity, started eating special K, and revels in her newfound thinness... despite showing NO DIFFERENCE in body weight before and after! Good grief, it's the sort of thing advertising standards should ban. At least get someone who isn't size 12 to portray the "overweight" person.

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