On the ambiguous
creation, evolution, and cultural images of our first female superhero.
Wonder Woman was
created only a few years after Superman and Batman, debuting in the December
1941 issue of All Star Comics;
but this superhero was hugely distinct from those and other contemporaries, and
not just in the basic and obvious fact of her gender. For one thing, her
creator, William
Moulton Marston, was a Harvard-educated psychologist who was hired first as
an educational consultant for comics companies before he developed the idea for
this new character. And the circumstances behind that creation were
particularly complex: in terms of the inspiration for the character, who was
based partly on Marston’s
impressive wife Elizabeth (who also, according to one article, suggested the
character’s gender in the first place) and partly on a young student with
whom the couple were supposedly having a polygamous relationship; and in terms
of Marston’s
stated goals, which included both giving young women a sense of their
“force, strength, and power” but also molding them into adults as “tender,
submissive, [and] peace-loving as good women are.”
As Wonder Woman
evolved over the next few decades, she similarly shifted between more and less
progressive and traditional roles and characteristics. For example ,when she
joined the
Justice Society of America, the first comics super-group (created to help
America fight Hitler and the Axis forces in World War II), she did so in large part
to
serve as the group’s secretary (I suppose a super-group needs a
super-secretary); similarly, in a late 1960s storyline she retired the Wonder
Woman identity in order to run
a mod clothing store as Diana Prince (although she still fought crime on
the side). Yet despite such connections to entirely or somewhat traditional women’s
worlds, Wonder Woman’s mythology was similar to Superman’s—she came to our
society from a distinct and superhuman race and world, in her case as an
Amazonian princess, and so her human identity as Diana was the creation and
mask—making her at her core a larger-than-life and particularly strong and
powerful woman. And I would argue that the 1970s Lynda Carter TV show
engaged with both sides of this coin: using skimpy costumes to capitalize on
Carter’s physical appearance; yet consistently portraying her strength and
toughness against any and all adversaries.
So how do we
analyze this character and her social and cultural images and meanings? A
historicizing answer doesn’t seem sufficient, since in each era and stage
Wonder Woman has had both progressive and traditional, boundary-pushing and
stereotypical, sides. Given Marston’s own double-sided quote about what he
hoped to convey to young female audiences, a reader-response analysis would
also be problematic—that is, while we could argue that readers would emphasize
one or another aspect of the character, depending on their own perspectives or
goals, Marston seemed to be arguing that both ends of the spectrum were part of
his explicit purposes. In both cases, and perhaps in any analysis, the baseline
truth seems to be that Wonder Woman has been a multi-layered and contradictory
character, one who can reinforce some of our culture’s attitudes and identities
while at the same time taking them in distinctly new and radical directions.
Not much that’s more AmericanStudies than that combination!
Next hero
tomorrow,
Ben
PS. What do you
think? Thoughts on this character? Other comics you’d highlight?
TV folklore has it that before the Wonder Woman show with Linda Carter aired the show was originally written and (legend has it) that out there on the magic of youtube there's a pilot as a comedy of a young wonder woman living with her cantankerous mother in a retirement village in Florida. Think Golden Girls, but without the two other chicks, and Bea Arthur's way younger... and has superpowers... not to say that Bea Arthur doesn't have superpowers... I'm sure she did.
ReplyDeleteAnyway, thanks for writing about the female superheroes. She taught us young girls a lot about life. Like if we want to be taken seriously, we should walk around in a strapless bathing suit.. An American theme inspired strapless bathing suit!