Friday, June 25, 2010

Notice the Difference? Eliminating the Feminine in Superhero Comics

In the coming posts I will be going retro and presenting pieces on comics produced in the 1990s, specifically the comics Wetworks, Darkchylde, and Witchblade,

In this three part essay I discuss how the feminine is effectively eliminated in superhero comics by eradicating the difference between the sexes reducing them to an economy of the same.

Part 1 compares standard human anatomy with bodies in superhero comics showing how female characters are depicted with characteristics of the ‘standard’ male body. Male bodies are subsequently rendered as hypermasculine. Using the work of Jean Baudrillard I show how the female superhero body is phallicised thus creating ‘erectile’ parts.

Part 2 uses Baudrillardian theory to analyse the superhero comic Wetworks demonstrating how the phallicised female body is eliminated when it is used as a mirror that reflects male dominance and desire. The female is further not allowed to become a body due to her potential threat of castration (the vagina dentata and the phallic woman) which is eliminated when she is eliminated as female.

Part 3 covers how armouring the male superhero body is an attempt to elicit self-control and thereby control the feminine that is embodied in chaotic, uncontrollable and changing ‘outside forces’. I further establish how armouring the body is unworkable due to its passive mode of resistance. I describe the next step in the process to control outside forces as becoming the weapon/machine and the consequences that this can have for culture at large.



Notice the Difference? Eliminating the Feminine in Superhero Comics
(Part 1)

Of course the female form has absurdly exaggerated sexual characteristics; of course the costumes are skimpier than one could (or should) imagine; of course there’s no visible way that these costumes could stay in place; of course these women represent simple adolescent masturbatory fantasies (with a healthy taste of the dominatrix) (Bukatman 112).

The female superhero body is constructed as hyperfeminine, as a spectacle insistent on breasts, thighs, crotch, and hair. In the quote above Scott Bukatman answers why female superheroes are drawn the way they are – they’re eye candy to satisfy the male gaze. You might also answer that because the vast majority of superhero comic artists are male, they draw female superheroes that way because they can. But what is it about these female superhero bodies that make them so good to look at so that, of course, they must be drawn with absurdly exaggerated sexual characteristics? Why are their costumes skimpier than one ‘should’ imagine? There must be more to it, and there is.

In part one of this essay I’ll undertake an anatomical comparison of ‘real’ female bodies against bodies represented in superhero comics. This line of reasoning will explicate how the female superhero body is depicted according to characteristics normally associated with the male body. The male body, in turn, has been exaggerated to hypermasculine proportions. I’ll argue that superhero comics reduce all ‘others’ to the economy of the same by eradicating the difference between the sexes (Irigaray 74). I’ll use the work of the French theorist Jean Baudrillard to demonstrate how the male and female superhero bodies and body parts are phallicised as ‘erectile parts’.

In her book An Introduction to Drawing the Nude Diana Constance recognises that the standard female torso is longer than a male’s, the distance from her waist to crotch is also longer, and her hips are wider than her shoulders – ‘no amount of dieting will ever give her the slim hips of a man’ (Constance 23-4). The ‘standard’ body of a male has longer legs than a woman and his shoulders are slightly wider than his hips (Constance 23). Comparing the ‘standard’ body of a human to that of a comic book character might seem silly or even absurd but there is nothing to say that characters shouldn’t, at least proportionally, exhibit the characteristics of a ‘standard’ body. However, in superhero comics there is a radical inversion of the female’s standard body characteristics where the female superhero body exhibits characteristics of the standard male body. Their shoulders are wider than their hips and their legs are longer than a males (sometimes alarmingly so). Because of this fusion of the female into the male form, the distinctive sexual characteristic of the female – her breasts – are made prominent to distinguish the character’s “femininity”. This in turn makes the breasts appear unrealistic, ‘stuck’ on, and disharmonious with the rest of the body. The effect this has on the depiction of the male superhero body is that male features need to be exaggerated to a hypermasculinity. The male’s shoulders and legs are made wider (by muscles or armour/costume), and the torso becomes overtly muscled and lengthened.

 

There is further evidence to suggest that female and male superhero bodies are ascribe to the one ideal. The ‘standard’ female body requires the pubic area to be just below the mid-point of the body (Constance 23). Moving the pubic area above a females’ natural mid-point, lengthens the legs and shortens the torso thereby eliminating the hips (a defining female body feature), leaving the legs to butt straight on to the waist. With the torso shortened the female gains another ‘standard’ male body feature. This elimination of the female characteristics is demonstrated in the WILDC.A.T.S advertisement (Figures 1 and 2) where the male and the female characters, Ripclaw and Zealot, have virtually the same body (high heels and hair too)! (See further images in the Image Appendix). The elimination of the female body, I believe, has to do with the fetishisation/phallicisation of the female form. The work of theorist Jean Baudrillard provides a useful framework for understanding this phenomenon.

Superman’s value as the first ‘super’ hero was of a symbolic nature. All the drive he needed was the inherent goodness in doing the job. No rewards necessary or wanted. The ‘S’ on his chest is his sign; his symbol of recognition. Without the ‘S’ he’s just a big guy in a blue suit. The costumes of more contemporary superheroes are conspicuously devoid of individual signs, (characters from the Image titles of the early 1990s are a case in point). They are just big guys in colourful suits. Far from being superheroes for the sake of it, many are employed by an individual, corporation, or governmental department, consequently embedding them in the political economy of the sign. By accepting money for their heroic actions they become rationalised subjects, turning them into items of exchange value – the abstract, meaningless value of quantity measured in monetary terms. A superhero’s exchange value can subsequently only be measured against that of other superheroes.

Without individual signs that designate identity (or only ones that align them with a certain group or corporation) the superhero is now merely a sign that reproduces the capitalistic economy. Now to designate a superhero’s individuality the superhero’s body becomes a sign – the guy in this suit is bigger and different that the guy in that colourful suit. However, Baudrillard states that signs covering the body reduce it to uniformity or an ideal type. Signs cover, divide and annihilate the body’s difference in order to organise it into structural material for sign-exchange (101). Thus the superhero’s body can also be reduced to an ideal type. This ideal is derived from one source – a body and an economy derived from ‘a sexuality taken as a determining agency, a phallic agency entirely organised around the fetishisation of the phallus as the general equivalent’ (Baudrillard 101). The hypermasculine male ideal of which the superhero stands as an emblem is designed around this phallic general equivalent. As Scott Bukatman argues –

Indeed, with their thick necks, bulging veins, and protruding tendons tightly swathed in coloured skintight hoods, these heroes really become enormous dicks sheathed in an array of distinctly baroque (and somewhat painful looking) condoms – an effect both menacing and comical (111).

In Baudrillard’s terms – ‘the entire body has become a phallic effigy’(102). For Baudrillard the body has moved into representation, it is a sign that is constructed via a structuralist mode consisting of the phallic effigy/fragment of the body/subject as signifier, and sexuality as signified. The body is not an erogenous zone anymore, but an eroticised zone in a capitalist economy of exchange value. It is a site that does not produce excitement but is produced to excite.

We must remember that for the most part superheroes – ‘Despite accoutrements such as logos, masks, gauntlets, epaulets and other superhero accessories… are essentially presented as nudes (costumes are more coloration than cover up)’ (Bukatman 106). This colouration/costuming of superhero nudity produces ‘Certain marks… (that) render the body more nude than if it were really nude… these marks may be clothes or accessories’ (Baudrillard 121n). Accessories such as ‘the tight fitting bracelet round the arm or the ankle, the belt, the necklace and the ring’ are staple parts of superhero attire which for Baudrillard ‘establish the foot, the waist, the neck or the finger as erectile parts’ (102). While both male and female superheroes sport these accessories, the female superhero body, with exaggerated legs and breasts, is the most prominent in this process of phallusisation. While we have already seen that male superheroes are bulging ‘dicks’. However it is not only certain bodies or body parts that can be transformed into phallic effigies. In fact –
Any body or part of the body can operate functionally in the same way, provided that it is subject to the same erotic discipline: it is necessary and sufficient that it be as closed and as smooth as possible, faultless, without orifice and “lacking” nothing, every erogenous difference being conjured up by the structural bar that will design(ate) this body (in the doubles sense of “designate” and “design”), visible in clothing, jewellery or make-up, invisible but always present in complete nudity, since it then envelops the body like a second skin (Baudrillard 104-5).
Baudrillard is arguing that anything that marks the body as ‘closed and smooth as possible’ (including make-up, lipstick, tattooing, scarring) can be placed in the structural demarcation of phallic effigy as signifier, alongside male sexuality, or phallic agency, the general equivalent everything is defined against. In other words the phallus is the standard marker or measure of identity.

Reference

Baudrillard, Jean. Symbolic Exchange and Death. London: Sage, 1993.

Bukatman, Scott. “X-Bodies (the torment of the mutant superhero).” Uncontrollable Bodies: Testimonies of Identity and Culture. Ed. Rodney Sappington and Tyler Stallings. Seattle: Bay Press, 1994.

Constance, Diana. An Introduction to Drawing the Nude. London: New Burlington Books, 1993.

Irigaray, Luce. This Sex Which Is Not One. Ithaca, New York: Cornell University Press, 1985.

Friday, June 18, 2010

Dissecting Why All-Star Batman and Robin Leaves Fans Cold

Why does Frank Miller's All-Star Batman and Robin, the Boy Wonder (ASBRBW) really get under Batman fans' collective skins? Much has been said in reviews about the storytelling being not up to par with previous Miller efforts. There's the constant repetition of phrases which in contrast to their intention to reinforce the seriousness of certain situations (e.g.: Dick's reaction to the murder of his parents) come across as simply 'space filler'. While Miller has done this in his other Dark Knight Universe stories, it wasn't to the extent it is in ASBRBW, and in The Dark Knight Returns (TDKR) he had a lot more to say. Take out all the repeated phrases in ASBRBW and on some pages you'd be lucky to have a sentence left. Yes, ASBRBW rambles and seems to throw in females characters (Black Canary, Batgirl) just so Jim Lee can draw them in skimpy costumes. And yes, there's that annoying 'goddamn' phrase...

But is there something else? For me, I think a clue came when I was re-reading my copy of TDKR 10th Anniversary Edition. In the introduction Miller writes about what inspired him to write TDKR, who he bounced ideas off about the project, and generally about Batman. Specifically he says -
And there was Batman himself. He was the real boss. As he was quick to assert, Batman has a personality and purpose all his own, a definable core. He's neither petty nor petulant. He's no whiner; there's not a trace of self-pity in his soul. He's smart. He's noble. And most important, he's big. His passions are grand. Even his unhappiness is not depressing, but a brooding.
I think the most relevant part of this quote is - 'He's neither petty nor petulant. He's no whiner; there's not a trace of self-pity in his soul.' In TDKR this is exactly the case. In ASBRBW I'm not so sure. Cases in point

  • Batman being petty trying to impress Dick - 'Just watch, kiddo. This is gonna be great!'

  • Batman being petulant (i.e.:unreasonably irritable or ill-tempered) -
Dick: Didn't you just waste a whole pile of cops, Big Guy?
Batman: You little snot!

  • Batman whining about Dick after recruiting/kidnapping him -

'This little BRAT is going to ruin EVERYTHING.'
  • Batman not being noble - Batman throws Dick to the ground and then punches him in the face(Batman:'And stay down.') after Dick attacks Green Lantern. A thirty-two year old man punching a twelve year-old.
  • Batman displaying self-pity -

'What am I DOING to this kid? Who the hell do I think I AM?'
And later -

'What have I DONE? What have I ACCOMPLISHED? I RUSHED things. I DRAGGED him into MY world. I was RECKLESS. I RUSHED it. I BLEW it.'
I could go on. Summed up, in ASBRBW Batman displays the complete range of traits that Miller specifically says he isn't. I think it amounts to not being a hero. Sure Miller's point which he keeps stressing throughout the whole Dark Knight Universe stories is that Batman (and other heroes) have to be criminals to carry out their 'mission' against crime. That's fine. For seventy years we've known Batman is a vigilante. We like it when he gets mean with criminals and pounds them into the turf. But in ASBRBW he's also self-aggrandising, rude, contemptuous, and arrogant. Just generally unpleasant. It comes down to this: the 'Goddamn Batman' of ASBRBW is full of himself and that's just not a Batman we like.



Friday, June 11, 2010

The Dark Knight in Wonderland: Batman and... Rabbits?





The Dark Knight in Wonderland: Batman and... Rabbits?


"'what is the use of a book,' thought Alice `without pictures or conversation?'" Alice from Lewis Carrol's Alice in Wonderland

I've been re-reading the Frank Miller Batman stories that have become known as 'The Dark Knight Universe' (Batman: Year One, The Dark Knight Returns, The Dark Knight Strikes Again, and All-Star Batman and Robin, the Boy Wonder) in order to formulate an essay on the overall narrative cycle. In doing so I've noticed an animal that's popped up in the books and which seems somewhat out of place - the fluffy white rabbit. As a figure, the Rabbit in these Dark Knight stories isn't a strong motif, yet its appearance heralds an interesting portrayal of sexuality.


In The Dark Knight Returns (TDKR) Bruce Wayne dreams of an incident in his childhood where he chases a rabbit down a hole bringing to mind similarities with Lewis Carrol's Alice in Wonderland. When Alice chases the rabbit she finds -
The rabbit-hole went straight on like a tunnel for some way, and then dipped suddenly down, so suddenly that Alice had not a moment to think about stopping herself before she found herself falling down a very deep well.
Similarly Bruce's rabbit chase sees him fall into what will later become his Batcave and his first encounter with bats. In Batman Begins (Chris Nolan, dir.) young Bruce falls down an actual well which leads to the Batcave-to-be.

But the similarities between Alice and Bruce don't end in this superficiality. On his webpage The Symbolism of Rabbits and Hares Terry Windling writes -
In many mythic traditions, these animals were archetypal symbols of femininity, associated with the lunar cycle, fertility, longevity, and rebirth. But if we dig a little deeper into their stories we find that they are also contradictory, paradoxical creatures: symbols of both cleverness and foolishness, of femininity and androgyny, of cowardice and courage, of rampant sexuality and virginal purity.
Both Bruce and Alice are children on the verge of breaking into adolescence and the accompanying emergence of sexuality. Both are virgins and thus branded 'pure'.

When chasing the rabbit Bruce is warned, 'Don't go in that hole' (Miller 1996:17). Although the speaker of this warning is not in the panel we must assume it Bruce's father as the speech bubble points to him in the previous panel. Bruce of course ignores the warning and falls in. The warning is important coming from the father. Bruce is the Wayne's only child and is designated to take over the "masculine dealings" of the Wayne business estate. Symbolically Bruce is chasing his femininity which is being dominated by his father. Bruce's father, psychoanalytically speaking, sees the danger of a reconnection with the feminine which he as the father has worked hard to erase by asserting himself as 'the law'. This reconnection with the feminine will confuse Bruce dividing his allegiance due to the inability of the child to permanently go back to the womb, to be one again with the mother. As Barbara Creed writes in The Monstrous Feminine the inability for the mother and child, especially the female child, to fully separate through the Oedipal cycle produces monstrosity. In this case Batman has negotiated the Oedipal struggle yet his desire to return to the mother only to find he can't produces another kind of traumatic monster - the Bat-Man.

Not long after Bruce's parents are murdered in an alley after seeing the film The Mask of Zorro (again we could use cinema and film as representations of going into a dark cave to be find another world), and Bruce is forever divided thereafter.

Bruce awakes from the dream sequence of falling into the Batcave-to-be to find he has sleepwalked to the batcave, and is completely naked. Symbolically Bruce is reborn, returning to the place that Batman was 'created'; he has returned to the 'womb'. The feminine-associated figure of the rabbit in TDKR propels Bruce toward a fertile, feminine space/place: the Batcave.

The Batcave is where Batman keeps all his "toys"; his inventions, the feminine space underneath the masculine rigid structure of Wayne Manor, built by Bruce's father; a product of his massively successful business empire. The Batcave 'doesn't end... It just doesn't end... The cave goes on forever... And it's just getting started... It's building itself' (Miller xx) and is 'endless' (Miller 1996:199). It is here, to this maternal space that Bruce brings his SOBs (Sons of Batman) and Robin (Carrie Kelley) at the end of TDKR, a place where 'it begins' (Miller 1996: 199), to build an army, to proliferate. Interestingly, at this point Batman is supposed to be dead, but it is the Batcave Bruce Wayne returns to start a new 'good life' (Miller 1996:199), the third of Bruce Wayne's rebirths in TDKR.

But as Windling writes the rabbit also represents 'rampant sexuality and virginal purity'. An example of this can be seen in All-Star Batman and Robin, the Boy Wonder (ASBRBW). In contrast to the clearly political themes in TDKR and The Dark Knight Strikes Again (TDKSA), ASBRBW seethes with sexual energy as a thirty-two year old Batman, now reveling in his 'terrorist' role, cuts a swathe through Gotham's body of crime.

Specifically in one scene, a rabbit, which seems completely out of place, bounds out of the way of a barreling Batmobile. If we wanted to push the point, then perhaps Batman is again chasing the Rabbit, leading him again to the Batcave. At this point in ASBRBW Dick Grayson (who will become Robin) is a passenger in the Batmobile. His parents murdered only hours before, Batman has 'drafted' twelve year old Dick 'into a war'(Miller 2008:xx), and Miller repeatedly lets us know that he is twelve, and yes, Dick Grayson is therefore a boy.

Essentially ASBRBW is the story of how Batman gets Robin as his sidekick. The rabbit? It represents two things - Batman's rampant sexuality and Dick Grayson's twelve year old virginal purity. But like the rabbit running for it's life Dick Grayson is also running for his. Lucky to be alive after his parents murder, Batman rescues him and transfers him to the Batcave, that place of feminine fertility where he will incubate and emerge reborn as Robin, the Boy Wonder. Batman tells him to choose a name and costume. Dick proclaims himself 'Hood' after the mythical Robin Hood. Batman disapproves, 'You're Robin.' (Miller 2008:xx) he says, and in naming him thus becomes his surrogate father in Robin's genesis.

Of course Batman stories themselves have bred like rabbits over the last seventy years and there looks like there's no stopping them any time soon.


Reference

Miller, F. (w). Lee, J.(p), and Williams, S.(i) (2008). All-Star Batman and Robin, the Boy Wonder, Volume 1. New York:DC Comics.[Collecting All-Star Batman and Robin #1-9, 2005-08].

Miller, F.(w,a) and Varley, L.(i) (1996).
The Dark Knight Returns. 10th Anniversary Edition.
New York:DC Comics.[Collecting The Dark Knight Returns #1-4, 1985]

Windling, T. (2005).
The Symbolism of Rabbits and Hares. at http://www.endicott-studio.com/rdrm/rrRabbits.html

Thursday, June 10, 2010

Cars I would drive...

I'm no revhead, but these are cars I would drive...




If I were a vampire...




If I had a license in the 1980s...








Anytime, just because they look freakingly cool...




Okay, I'm lying... I'd drive them all any time, if was allowed, had the money, or whatever...