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Push Comics Forward – The Female Super-Scientist

j4p4n_Scientist_Woman_(comic_book_style)Recently the head honchos at BOOM! Studios put out the idea that comics needs to change and to not be stagnant as a medium.  Long since dominated by superhero stories, the medium has indeed made a number of changed in the past couple of decades and the change is noticeable in some regards.  Equally though, comics are somewhat of a niche when it comes to their perception in popular culture.  Although there is an increasing amount of female readers, the medium is slower to make the changes to draw in fans of all backgrounds, and especially at the big two publishers instead still focuses on mostly a collection of characters who are both white and male.  While the interest in push comics forward doesn’t necessarily lie solely with the big two publishers, change has to happen there as elsewhere in order for the medium to evolve.

Science in comics was a bit of an x-factor until the onset of the silver age.  Until that point, science was usually grossly misapplied in order to move along a plot.  Gross inaccuracies were made and aspects of scientific knowledge would be presented, leaving what was actually used of the science to be misappropriated and simplistic.  As the silver age started, the focus on science is what rescued comics from being a medium for children, and instead allowed the medium to mature.  The changes first came at DC, though with the generally more god-like powers of the characters, the science was not as pertinent.  Hawkman and Green Lantern became intergalactic police, the Atom used White Dwarf matter to give himself powers, and the Flash became a scientist that gained powers by a scientific accident.  While the science was there, it was not until Marvel arrived that it redefined science in comics.  Although still unreal, the science was still presented in a way that it could be real, at least in our imagination.  Instead of characters that were either given or born with their powers, the new wave of heroes earned it the hard way, by building it themselves.  Not every Marvel hero was a scientist, but there were a few – Peter Parker, Bruce Banner, Tony Stark, Hank Pym, and Reed Richards.  While this did push the envelope forward for comics as a medium, what was left behind were the women.  The female leads to these heroes were still sometimes heroes, but they fell back into the template of having powers given to them.  Sue Storm was a college dropout, and Janet van Dyne was just an girlfriend.  They even did better than Betty Ross, Pepper Potts and Mary Jane Watson, who were often relegated to secondary status as damsels in distress (though Sue Storm also performed this role despite being a power superhero.)

lego women scientistsWhile there are perhaps more men than women in science still as a profession, there is no real clear reason why.  Women at younger ages are as adept as their male counterparts, and the interest for science is equally there.  Some consider it to be a genderized problem, that the “old boys club” of science discourages women from entering its field in some cases, and that women are taught gender roles by society to be less focused on science as opposed to other ventures.  While there is debate on these assertions, it is true that women have no more or less natural inclination to science than men do.  So why can’t there be a female version of a super scientist?  There are of course some very intelligent women in comics.  The female version of the Hulk is an accomplished lawyer, and others have shown an ability to pursue more academic fields than what is traditionally typified by their genders, but there is still a gap in terms of the heroes, and who can do what.  Female characters can still be powerful, but it is unlikely that their minds are capable of giving them those powers.  In fact a large portion of female characters derive their powers from either magic or the supernatural.

What has been an interesting and worthwhile development in the cinematic versions of comics, is that the women characters are presented in a way which is a lot more progressive.  Jane Foster is an astrophysicist and in the previous round of Fantastic Four movies, Sue Storm was shown to a be a scientific genius in her own right.  This is because as the characters move to a more popular medium, they are forced into a more acceptable presentation of the role that women play, more so than just damsels in distress, but also as able thinkers on their own.  So why is there no female superscientific genius yet in comics?  This comes back to the inherent idea behind #pushcomicsforward, that there can and should be such female characters, because the medium simply has not caught up yet to the reality of the world.  There is even maybe not a need for as many as Marvel has, but a character that is at least adept at science, and who knows the periodic table from the kitchen table.  There is no reason not to, as such a character wouldn’t even have to carry a series, but they could still be there, guiding the scientific discussion to a place that is more realistic.

Absorbing Man Absorbs the Past

Carl_Creel_(Earth-20051)The advent of the Marvel Cinematic Universe is undoubtedly one of the biggest developments in both cinema and comics in the past ten years. Before comic book movies were consolidated into shared universes, their continuities were non-existent, as the movie watchers had to accept the fact that although there was a comic universe with all of the characters acting together, that the rare appearance by heroes on the big screen were separate. All of this changed with the introduction of Iron Man to the big screen.  It was originally seen as a huge gamble, and Marvel was not sure how it would work, but it did pay off.  Laying in the background of the first movie was the key to binding the entire universe together, S.H.I.E.L.D.  But was Iron Man really the first in the sequence of films?  Some would argue no, that in fact it was not, but rather in The Hulk from 2003.

The Hulk was regarded by most as a bit of a misfire in terms of a movie. The story line was unnecessarily convoluted and the editing of the movie to appear comic-like confused some people. It was also completely unrelated to the Marvel Cinematic Universe. When The Incredible Hulk was released in 2008 as the second installment of the MCU it was labeled as a completely separate movie despite people asking “Why was Eric Bana replaced with Ed Norton?” Some of the problems with that were with the format of the movie itself. Despite the fact that it was supposed to be a standalone, it did rely in parts on the recent proximity of the previous movie to avoid repeating itself in terms of storytelling. There was no need to explain how Bruce Banner got his powers, nor was it necessary to describe who the Ross family was, even if they were played by different actors. The story seemed to pick up almost directly for where it had left off, to the point that when Eric Bana was last seen it was in the rainforests of South America, and then when Ed Norton is first seen it is in a favela in Rio de Janeiro.

One of the main criticisms of the first movie was the presence of Nick Nolte playing Bruce Banner’s father. The character was a scientific genius in his own right, and yet there was little sense in the character’s eventual turn into a supervillain. Comic fans were not able to figure out how to identify with him. Was he the madman that controlled Hulk-like dogs? The Absorbing Man? Zzzax? The lack of answers to this was another reason why comic fans turned away from this movie.

Agents_of_SHIELD_logoFast forward 11 years and there is finally an answer to the presence of this anomalous movie, and it came in the first episode of the second season of Agents of S.H.I.E.L.D.  This series has the daunting and maybe unfortunate task of carrying the weight of the Marvel Cinematic Universe in between the released of movies. Guardians of the Galaxy was a huge success, but now fans of the shared universe have to wait until next summer for the next Avengers movie.  In the meantime the fans are left with Agents of S.H.I.E.L.D.  Although the series has been at times frustrating to watch, it is definitely improving. Although it is unlikely as an answer to the earlier association with supervillains from The Hulk, what they have done with the first episode of season two is to take back the Absorbing Man. The character has now been thrust into the spotlight as a major player in this second season, perhaps taking the constant presence of Deathlok from the first season. Undoubtedly the series is going to lead into the second installment of the Avengers, if only in a subtle way, and if that is the case then the Absorbing Man is likely to play a prominent enough role in the lead up to the movie as well. This will even more help erase any connections of the new universe to the failed attempt of 2003, and help even more to establish the Marvel Cinematic Universe as a separate entity.