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[ecrea] CfP French Journal Genre en séries: Can heroines escape their gender?
Fri Nov 02 06:42:52 GMT 2018
*Can superheroines escape their gender ? <http://genreenseries.weebly.com/>*
by Sophie Bonadé, doctoral student (UEVE/Saclay, SLAM) and Réjane
Hamus-Vallée,professor (UEVE/Saclay, Centre Pierre Naville)
"Jewel is a great superhero name! »
" Jewel is a stripper's name. »
dialogue in Jessica Jones
In 1938, the first issue of Action Comics featured the character of
Superman on its cover. Success came fast. Although Superman was not the
first superhero (Gabilliet 2004), he would become the prototype of the
American superhero story. As products of mass culture, which today have
a worldwide influence, superheroes did not confine themselves to comic
books for long. In 1941,
Superman also reached TV screens through the animation series produced
by Fleischer Studios (Fleischer 1941). The same year, Adventures of
Captain Marvel (English and Witney 1941) was published, a serial divided
into 12 parts. In 1952, the television series Adventures of Superman
(Syndication, 1952-1958) was the first live-action adaptation of
Superman's adventures. Many other
superhero story adaptations have since been produced, which soared in
the early 2000s with many television, film and video game adaptations of
the stories by the two main publishers of the superhero genre: Marvel
and DC Comics.
While superheroines were born shortly after Superman (Fantomah in Jungle
Comic No. 2 in late 1939/early 1940s or The Lady in Red in the early
1940s, No. 2 in Thrilling Comics), they had more difficulty than their
male counterparts in being adapted to small (and large) screens, with a
fairly marked time lag. This issue of Genre en Séries will therefore be
devoted to the place of superheroines
since their creation and proposes to study them both in comic books and
through their adaptations in types of media.
Apart from Trina Robbins' books, which provide a fairly broad overview
of the evolution of superheroines (Robbins 1996) and the place of women
in the comic-book industry (Robbins and Roniwode 1985; Robbins 1999 ;
Robbins 2001; Robbins 2013), superheroines are poorly studied, with the
exception of the most famous of them,WonderWoman (Robinson 2004; Bilat
2011; Hanley
2014; Bajac-Carter, Jones and Batchelor (eds.) 2014; Zechowski and
Neumann 2014; Cocca 2016).
Most of the time, superheroines are just mentioned in a book
(Hassler-Forest 2012) or are sometimes the subject of a specific chapter
(Gray II 2011; Ducreux 2013). We believe it is necessary to compensate
for this delay.
If our questioning focuses on superheroines from comic books, this issue
also aims to question the limits of these characters. Proposing a list
of definitional, but not essential, characteristics, as
Jean-Marc Lainé has done (in Lainé 2011, we find the following:
superpowers, costume, secret identity, companions, Achilles' heel,
founding trauma, adversary and relationship to the city) is not a
satisfactory definition, as it allows to group under the superhero name
characters as old as Gilgamesh or Hercules (Reynolds 1994 ; Knowles
2007). A definition by characteristics must be combined with a
definition that makes it possible to locate and contextualize the
characters that are superheroes and superheroines. Is Buffy, the vampire
slayer (The WB, 1997-2001, UPN, 2001-2003), who has superpowers and
protects the world by looking after the small town of Sunnydale, a
superhero? She
is not wearing a suit, but her identity as a killer is a fact she hides
from her family during the first few seasons. Are the action women of
1980s cinema - such as Ellen Ripley from the Alien film series (Scott
1979; Cameron 1986; Fincher 1992; Jeunet 1997) and Sarah Connor from the
Terminator
franchise (Cameron 1984; Cameron 1991) superheroines, since they are
fighting to protect humanity?
And what about Max Guevara, the heroine of Dark Angel (Fox, 2000-2002),
whose genetic heritage was modified during childhood to turn into a
weapon and who fights as an adult for her right, and that of her fellow
human beings, to exist: does she not recall the X-Men team of mutants?
This issue therefore proposes to study superheroines as such but also in
their relationships with their male teammates. From comic books to
animated image adaptations, the reasons for their relative lesser
success compared to superheroes is at the heart of our questioning.
Who are the superheroines and where are they today? What place(s) do
they have in the different media? Who are their audiences? How does the
transition from comic book to another medium transform, or not, the
heroine in question? What are their links with superheroes?
Approaches from the different social sciences are welcome in this issue,
which will focus in particular on the following non-exhaustive areas:
1) Evolution of superheroines
A first approach can focus on the socio-historical context of the
appearance of these characters in the tradition of Loïse Bilat's work on
Wonder Woman. When Wonder Woman appeared in 1941, she had physical
strength similar to Superman's. However, its creatorWilliam Moulton
Martson, also
endowed her with qualities that he considered intrinsically feminine
such as softness and charm. This construction of Wonder Woman is
attributable to William Moulton Martson's essentialist vision, but also
to the gender relations at the beginning of the Second World War, when
women were called upon to support the war effort, taking on male roles
while remaining male supporters.
Superheroine stories have since gone through 70 years of American social
transformation. The social changes that have taken place since 1941 -
changes in the status of women, civil rights, feminist movements,
LGBTIQ+ struggles - have influenced the stories of superheroines. The
creation and simultaneous broadcasting, between 1975 and 1977, of the
superhero series The Secret of Isis (CBS, 1975-1977) and Wonder Woman
(ABC, 1975, CBS, 1977-1979) were made possible by the women's rights
movements that shook the United States during the Second Wave of
feminism, but also by the massive entry of women into the paid labour
market, which turned them into consumers to whom a product can be sold
(Passerini 2002). In the early 2000s, Jessica Jones, an alcoholic and
borderline ex-superheroine, was created. Alias (2001-2004, Max Comics),
the series in which she is the protagonist, is a meta-report that offers
a reflection on the evolution of superheroines, but also on their
future. The character's success in comic books but also on the Netflix
video platform (Netflix, 2015-ajd), where the series has been renewed
for a third season, supports an unconventional superhero model.
Nevertheless, Jessica Jones must also question the possibility even for
a woman to embody a superheroic figure, because the character has
precisely renounced being a superhero.
How are superheroines representatives of their time? How do superheroine
stories portray and interact with American social changes in different
media? And does adaptation make it possible to solve certain "problems"
posed by superheroines in comics (objectification, use for scriptwriting
purposes in stories centred on men) or are they reproduced in the target
medium?
2) Creation, production, mediation and public
In this axis, priority will be given to studies that focus on the
contexts of these comic books and their adaptations. On the one hand,
the reception context: which audiences, for which works? Are the
audiences of superhero and superheroine stories really more masculine?
How does this audience
influence the content of these superheroic fictions? In 2013, Paul Dini,
one of the creators of Batman:
The Animated Series (Fox Kids, 1992-1995), attributed the cancellation
of Young Justice (Cartoon Network, 2010-ajd) and Green Lantern (Cartoon
Network, 2011-2013) to the overly female audience, which was not good
for broadcasting channels, as girls are known to buy fewer toys. While the
reasons for this cancellation were never confirmed by the Cartoon
Network, Paul Dini pointed at the gendered dimension of superhero
productions that are intended for the youth market in relation to the
importance of the sale of ancillary products in their profitability.
This also raises the question of the production context: who are the
people who create these superheroic adventures? Can the gender relations
that are played out within a television channel, film studio, video game
production company or comic book publishing house influence its brand
identity?
The CW channel, for example, which produces many of the current
superhero television series, was, when it was created in 2006, the
network with the highest number of female employees and its identity was
marked by the production of series for young women such as Gossip Girl
(Le Fèvre-Berthelot 2015). Can CW's recent production - Arrow, The Flash
- be seen as a desire to remasculinize its audience - after Mark
Pedowitz was appointed head of the network in 2011 - or are these series
also dedicated to a female audience? If so, how can we explain the
inclusive approach of these television series that feature racialized,
homosexual, bisexual and soon-to-be transgendered characters and on
which the CW is basing its brand identity in a video announcing its
upcoming series for the 2018-2019 season (AlloCine)? While these
superheroic television adaptations play the card of a certain diversity,
it is worth questioning the timidity of the film adaptations on this
subject: we had to wait for the 21st film produced in the Marvel
Cinematic Universe, Captain Marvel (Boden and Fleck
2019), to have a superheroine as the main protagonist.
3) Superheroine stories and politics
This axis aims to analyse the place and role of television and film
superheroines by observing the narrative construction of these
characters. How is the scene set for superheroines? What role do
superheroines working alongside superheroes play, for instance in Heroes
(NBC, 2006-2010), the
Avengers film franchise, the Batman: The Telltale Series video game
(Telltale Games, 2016), Batman (ABC, 1966-1968), and Gotham (Fox,
2014-ajd)? More generally, these superheroines must be examined as
heroines (Cassagnes-Brouquet and Dubesset 2009), but also as women of
action (Monk
2010; Bilat and Haver 2011).
It is also necessary to question how superheroines can experience other
types of domination than gender. Superheroes and superheroines were
originally white, heterosexual characters - even if their sexuality was
never mentioned - and they often come from higher social classes. Today,
these
representations have diversified. Racialized and/or non-heterosexual
superheroines exist, and a transgender superhero appeared in the fourth
season of Supergirl (CBS, 2015, The CW, 2016-ajd).
The status of all superheroines must nevertheless be questioned. The use
of the image of Ms. Marvel (Kamala Khan), a Muslim superhero, to fight
Islamophobic campaigns in San Francisco evokes a certain political power
of these representations, but what is really happening? Do superheroines
contribute to challenging patriarchal norms or are they pure
post-feminist products devoid of any political substance (Cervulle
2009)? Are they simple feminist pop characters who spread a message of
individualistic empowerment without its political and collective side or
do they spread globally the idea that women, whoever they are, can be
heroines and even more?
Proposals for articles, accompanied by a short biography, should be sent to
(sbonade /at/ gmail.com) <mailto:(sbonade /at/ gmail.com)> and (rvallee /at/ univ-evry.fr)
<mailto:(rvallee /at/ univ-evry.fr)> before *15th December 2018*. The authors
will be advised by 15th January 2019 and the articles must be sent by
30th April 2019, for publication after proofreading in Autumn 2019.
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