Sexism in American comics

Sexism, as defined by the Merriam-Webster Dictionary, is prejudice or discrimination based on sex.[1] Historically, the English-language comic-book field has been male-dominated.[2] This has led to rampant sexism and the harassment of female fans and creators in the comics industry.[2]

Historical exclusion of women

The 1940s and 1950s in America were a time when comic books rose to prominence in the public eye.[3]:5 There was a rise in the type and number of comics being published.[3]:5 Where before, comics had only found homes on the pages of newspapers, and were used as tools to sell papers and attract new readers, by the 40s and 50s, comics were becoming their own medium, independent from the papers, and being featured in their own magazines and comic books.[3]:22 According to David Hajdu:

By 1952, more than twenty publishers were producing nearly 650 comics titles per month, employing well over a thousand artists, writers, editors, letterers, and others—among them women, as well as untold members of racial, ethnic, and social minorities who turned to comics because they thought of themselves or their ideas as unwelcome in more reputable spheres of publishing and entertainment.[3]:5

According to Trina Robbins, many girls and young women were reading comics at that time:

In one year—1948–1949—romance comic titles jumped from four to 125, more than one quarter of comic books published were romance comics. This was the same year that a graph in Newsdealer magazine showed that females age seventeen to twenty-five were reading more comic books than guys.[4]:54

It is clear that many girls were engaging with the medium by reading romance comics, but writer Suzanne Scott warns in her 2013 essay Fangirls in refrigerators: The politics of (in)visibility in comic book culture that:

...comics scholarship often essentializes women's taste in comics among gendered genre lines, at the expense of engaging with the (admittedly small but robust) female audience for mainstream comics.[5]

In 1946, the National Cartoonists Society was formed in the United States of America.[6] Women were excluded from the organization.[6] Three years after its formation, the cartoonist Hilda Terry sent the National Cartoonists Society a letter saying:

We must humbly request that you either alter your title to the National Men Cartoonists Society ... or discontinue whatever rule or practice you have which bars otherwise qualified women cartoonists.[6]

She was accepted into the group the following year, and immediately nominated several other female cartoonists for membership.[6] In 1976, Trina Robbins produced Wet Satin, an anthology of erotic comics for women, by women.[4]:97 The printer used by publisher Kitchen Sink Press refused to publish it, denouncing it as pornographic.[4]:97 The same printer had previously published a sex book by all male creators, which according to Robbins had "such an obscene cover it had to be covered with plain white paper before it could even be distributed to the comic book stores".[4]:97

As Robbins tells it:

The printer insisted that the male sex book, Bizarre Sex, was satire, while Wet Satin was serious and therefore objectionable. Yet the underground sex newspaper Screw, hardly a feminist journal, said in a review, "The humour in Wet Satin is another welcome change from other undergrounds... What might have been a tedious and boring look into the sexual psyche of 'liberated' women turns out to be a series of clever, satirical, and entertaining cartoon strips."[4]:97

The popular women's comics anthology Wimmen's Comix, which ran for twenty years, ended its run in 1992.[4]:114

In explaining the reason for its end, editor Caryn Leschen said:

This book has been printed on cheap paper which will turn yellow in a few years. The print run was too small and all the stores, as usual, will sell out, but they won't reorder because 'Women don't buy comix.' Bullshit. How did they sell out in the first place? It's always like that. What a waste of time and energy. Forget it."[4]:114

Modern day gender gap

In modern-day American comics, there is still a wide gender gap in the profession. This is evidenced in Tim Haley's ongoing study called 'Gendercrunching' on the website Bleeding Cool.[7] Since 2011, Hanley has looked at the monthly titles published by Marvel Comics and DC Comics, breaking down how many men and women are working on each title.[8] In his August 2014 results, which are typical of the general results, 9.5% of people working on DC's titles were female, and 90.5% were male, as well, 9.8% of the people working on Marvel's titles that month were female and 90.2% were male.[9] Similarly, user deantlogic on LiveJournal broke down the number of men and women included in The Best American Comics Series published by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt.[10] Of the nine books in the series, six men acted as guest editors, and three women acted as guest editors, and of the 291 artists included, 222 were men and 69 were women.[10] In 2011, DC Comics relaunched many of its titles, christening this new beginning The New 52.[5]

While the gender balance in DC's creative teams has never been close to even, as shown in Tim Haley's ongoing "Gendercrunching" study, the number of women working on DC's titles dropped from 12% to 1% with this relaunch.[5] Suzanne Scott recounts the events of the 2011 San Diego Comic-Con where a woman dressed as the comic book character Batgirl, questioned creators and publishers at DC Comics about the company's gender imbalance.[5] The woman dressed as Batgirl, known as Kyrax2, waited in line at panels about the launch of the New 52 and asked questions about which creators and characters would be featured, and commented on the gender imbalance in the material she saw.[5] As Scott notes, Kyrax2 was not the only one asking these questions:

One sound bite that circulated widely featured a male fan posing a similar question, only to be testily challenged and ultimately silenced by DC copublisher Dan Didio.[5]

In an interview with DC Women Kicking Ass, Kyrax2 talked about her experience at San Diego in 2011.[11] Kyrax2 had noticed that the makeup of every panel she had been to at the convention was overwhelmingly male.[11] At the panel, during the question period, she asked the panelists if they were committed to hiring more women.[11] The response that she received from Dan Didio was that he was "committed to hiring the absolute best writers and artists," to which she asked, "Are you saying you can't find any great women writers or artists?"[11] According to Kyrax2, the audience reaction was furious:

People yelled at me to 'sit down!' and shouted out Gail Simone’s name over and over again. I said, "Yes, I met Gail Simone yesterday. I like her very much. But I've attended all these other panels, and with the exception of her and one female editor, they’ve all been male."[11]

In an anonymously authored article from December 2013 on The Comics Journal website, a female writer shares a letter of harassment they received saying:

I don't normally feel like being a woman in this field is enough to justify having to answer questions about it all the time, most frequently: "What is it like to be a woman cartoonist?" Let's face it, this is not dangerous work. This is not even physically demanding. I am not a police officer, I am not a fireman, I am not in the army. I don't put my life on the line every day.[12]

They go on to say:

There are struggles. I would be a fool to deny that. I face the same anxieties as many of my male counterparts, but the difference is that once in a while something kind of gross happens: a weird pass is made, a sexist comment is said, someone checks me out, or some creep corners me at an art opening. Those are the real challenges of being a woman doing ANYTHING.[12]

In a 2014 article on Comics Alliance about why women in comics do not speak up about sexual harassment, Juliet Kahn opens by saying:

I have been a woman in the comics industry for a few months now. It has been wonderful. It has also been terrifying.[13]

She explains that:

When you grow up enveloped in the miasma of "tits or GTFO," "attention whore" and "fake geek girl," fear becomes the price you pay to enjoy you hobbies. You don't even think of it as fear most of the time. Sometimes you join in the fear mongering yourself, enjoying the a**hole glamour of not being too pussy to call another girl a slut. Sometimes you hide in woman-heavy spaces, which go maligned elsewhere ("Tumblrinas!") but do a pretty solid job of keeping you safe. The fear comes back eventually, though, as a slew of graphic rape threats or a simple joke about "feminazis" you are expected to chuckle along with. It might be in response to a screed worthy of Andrea Dworkin--or maybe you just tweeted something about disliking Guardians of the Galaxy. What matters is that you were a woman with an opinion on the internet, and now you must be punished. You must be made to fear.[13]

In her comics column on Comics Alliance, Kate Leth wrote:

If you are a woman in comics people will always be asking you: What's it like being a woman in comics? The question has always bothered me--it's never really mattered. The world of Indie and webcomics has always felt fairly welcoming and balanced. Queer-friendly, too! A few weeks ago, I found myself in the middle of a real old boys club, a first for me. It was...an experience. I spent a weekend trying to ignore the endless supply of sexist, racist, bigoted "jokes" I kept hearing ... If you don't know how to talk to a woman without either bullying or hitting on her, let me ask: what's it like being YOU in comics? 'Cause man, it must suck.[14]

gollark: Other human subspecies. It's not actually very scary.
gollark: I see.
gollark: I, at least, do not really want to be stuck with today's hardware limitations forever.
gollark: Which one?
gollark: I mostly meant that it is quite complex to make and if you want nicer ones you need to throw even more industry at it.

References

  1. "Sexism—Definition". Merriam-Webster.
  2. Quinn, Ben (28 December 2011). "Ker-pow! Women kick back against comic-book sexism". The Guardian.
  3. Hajdu, David (2008). The Ten-Cent Plague: The Great Comic-Book Scare and How It Changed America. United States of America: Picador.
  4. Robbins, Trina (1999). From Girls to Grrrlz: A History of [Women's] Comics from Teens to Zines. San Francisco, California: Chronicle Books.
  5. Scott, Suzanne (2013). "Fangirls in refrigerators: The politics of (in)visibility in comic book culture". Transformative Works and Cultures. 13: n. pag.
  6. Hix, Lisa. "Women Who Conquered the Comics World". Collectors Weekly. Retrieved 6 December 2014.
  7. Hanley, Tim. "Gendercrunching". Bleeding Cool. Retrieved 6 December 2014.
  8. Hanley, Tim. "Women in Comics: Statistics and Introduction". thanley.wordpress.com. Retrieved 6 December 2014.
  9. Hanley, Tim. "Gendercrunching August 2014 – The Big Two Fall From August Last Year But Variant Covers Show Some Developments". Bleeding Cool. Retrieved 6 December 2014.
  10. deantlogic. "Creators (artists and writers) included in the Best American Comics series, by gender". LiveJournal. Archived from the original on 6 December 2014. Retrieved 6 December 2014.
  11. DC Women Kicking Ass. "An Interview with the Batgirl of the SDCC panels". DC Women Kicking Ass. Retrieved 6 December 2014.
  12. Anonymous. "How to Discourage Women from Cartooning". The Comics Journal. Retrieved 6 December 2014.
  13. Kahn, Juliet. "Why Women in Comics Don't 'Just Report' Sexual Harassment". Comics Alliance. Archived from the original on 10 December 2014. Retrieved 6 December 2014.
  14. Leth, Kate. "Comics Alliance Presents "Kate or Die" in "What's It Like Being A Woman in Comics?"". Comics Alliance. Archived from the original on 10 December 2014. Retrieved 6 December 2014.
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