Page 8 - The Michigan Daily - Thursday, February 23, 1989 I '. I Holy heroines! Comic books portray women not I i ke you'd think BY ANDREA GACKI B RIGHTLY colored pictures remain black and white in comic books. STATE OF THE With only pure good and only pure evil, comic books have invariably been the antidote to all earthly afflic- tions, to all inconsistencies and all unjust acts. Little boys too skinny to effect any damage on the school bully lived vicariously through crime-fighting Superman. Little girls outgrowing childhood dreamt of teenaged romance through Archie and Veronica and Betty. Hark... is that, perchance, a stereotype? Girls and romance versus boys and adventure? You bet. The medium is rife with such sexual constraints. In a survey conducted among its readers last year, First Comics (the publisher of such male- oriented comic books as American Flagg! and Grimjack) reported that 95 percent of its readers are male - a statistic characteristic of every pub- lishers' readership. Just walk into Dave's Comics and count the women - or lack thereof. A male-dominated audience supports the comic industry, and the industry caters to that audi- ence. Look at the male suffixes of such superheroes as Iceman, Batman, Spiderman - you name it. But there are women in male- dominated comic books, aren't there? Well, yes. There hasn't been much variation in the sex, however. Male heroes or villains can be enormously fat, short, or even have only three toes. The female heroes, however, are at the very least anatomically correct, if not downright voluptuous. And the villains are stunning - wanton se- ductresses, in fact. Male villains span a wide range of iniquity, but a female villain's degree of evil is determined by how low her neckline is - by how unlike your mother she is. Women also have less physical su- perpowers; they're generally telepaths, teleporters, or manipula- tors of the elements. The brutish guys get to knock each other around. These stereotypes typically tran- spire in the books governed by the Comics Code Authority, the censor- ing body of comicdom. You recog- nize these books by the little symbol next to the price in the upper left corner of the cover; they're usually from the major companies, D.C. or Marvel. But outside of the code, things really aren't so different. The independent/underground publishers have made great strides in the medium, and comic books are finally achieving some artistic significance. But you've got to satisfy your audi- ence, and that audience is male. So physical stereotypes persist in all comic books, and nowhere more glaringly than in the "nice " "clean" books. But the other stereotypes of women, beyond the stellar physical attributes, are really not what you'd expect them to be in comic books. Female characters are not weak, not subordinate to men in battle, and not relegated to the background in deci- sion-making. Women occupy a strangely hallowed, almost maternal, Reach 40,000 readers after class, advertise in -- --i-g-An AnI _ ________ _ ___ -~MAGAZINE place. In "team" books such as Alpha Flight, a woman is most often the leader - not because the men grant it, either, but because she is suppos- edly the most powerful. Most males are portrayed with emotional quirks and scars - Batman is haunted by his parents' murder by a mugger, Cyclops from the X-Men feels unloved because he's an orphan, and Doctor Zero is a megalomaniac. Fe- males are often the stable, bland characters. Women can form strong relationships between each other, but men usually fight over women, strangely enough. What does this mean? Female heroes really aren't denigrated, but (gulp) glorified. They're perfect. What hidden male persecution can be exposed if they insist upon exalting women? Sure, back in the '60s when Marvel Girl first joined the X-Men, all of her teammates told her how "cute" she was. But now, women are stronger and smarter than their male peers. In a fair fight between a woman and a man, the man will al- ways ultimately fall. That is, he'll lose if both combatants are either good or evil. And there's the catch: In all counic books, censored or otherwise, an epic fight between a hero and a villain will always result in a loss for the bad guys, a triumph over evil. Regardless of gender. In comic books, some things just have to be universal. SHORT OR LONG Hairstyles for Men and Women DASCOLA STYLISTS Liberty off State . . 668-9329 Maple Village . . . . 761-2733 Easterhouse Waiting For The Redbird Columbia Records Does pop music have a part tow play in revolutionary praxis? Easter- house's singer-songwriter Andy Per- ry would argue that it should, even w though his revolutionary advocacy' on vinyl is released by corporate' behemoth CBS. Contradictions aside, Waiting For;' The Redbird is an often powerful ' testament of one man's political en-, gagement. Perry is involved in left-, wing politics and Easterhouse is a" Marxist-Leninist rock group from Manchester, England. Their name is taken from one of the worst slums in Glasgow, and most of the songs on this, their second album reflecti on the quality of life in the 51st,* state of the U.S.A. - Britain. The lyrics on first impression appear very straightforward and quite: artless, but occasionally pierce the way Woody Guthrie's songs do;., sometimes the most direct way is the most effective. Words are often framed by lush music reminiscent of the sound and feel of Simple Minds' majestic New Gold Dream. Perry'sl big, rich voice places him as the prime contender for Scott Walker's crown as the singer with most, grandeur. Singing "Come Out Fighting", "Say Yes" and the title track, Perry could very well rouse some listeners from false conscious-. ness, but the most affecting mo- ments on the record are the slower songs; "Stay With Me (Death On The Dole)" is a poignant meditation on the suicide of two unemployed.P boys who had lost all hope. It's as sharp and crisp as a Mayakovsky poem - the embodiment of grace.,. The song sounds a little likeThe Cars' "Drive", and could be a Num- ber One hit both sides of the At- lantic if properly promoted. The plaintive "This Country" is an accurate depiction of Britain go-, ing down the drain under Fahrer Thatcher - "a nation of shopkeep- ers/becomes a nation of stockbro kers." Perry also expresses the wor-rao ries of many western Europeans in the depressing "America" in which he asks, "Who will protect us from Our Protector?" It's in these songs thatWaiting For The Redbird most assuredly assaults capitalism. It's a shame that the discourse of a song such as "Stay With Me" will be just another product, another marketable commodity, to be sold alongside Samantha Fox albums. -Nabeel Zuberi4, DJ Continued from Page 7 was really emotional - the type of; stuff that just hit you in your gut doesn't seem to be as common these days. However, that doesn't mean. that the music is getting worse. D: Musically, what distinguishes reggae music? S: Well, the beat obviously. There's no other music which flips- the beat backwards. I'm not sure what the technical terms are, I'm not a musician. D: Lyrically and consequently politically, with Michigan's campus being something of a focal point for publicizing the attitudinal and insti- tutional racism that is alive and well across this country, how do you feel your Reggae Night and other shows effect Ann Arbor's social environ- ment, if at all? S: I don't know how much effect it has. I don't consider myself a; burning crusader, however, I think, the ideas expressed in many of tho songs at Reggae Night are sung to.: pull people together and to den} stupid attitudes. If anything, it rein-" forces people's beliefs. I don't know if it's possible to' - change a racist with just a song. IC seems like it takes a lot more tha; k that. Although some of Marley's" songs strike home so well that they. seem to reiterate certain deeper- truths. I'm proud to be involved in4 the way that I am. ~ s rTins .F } Spring Break, gD Greyhound' instead. For just $49.50 each way, you and your friends can afford to pile on Greyhound. Whether it's the beach, the slopes or your hometown, going Greyhound won't cramp your style. r r r 5 fwtlv -ofl } z iE