For
Kids That Prefer Getting Their
Demonization
From Comic Books, Wired Magazine Is
Super-Hyping DC Comic's New Lesbian
Batwoman's
Sexual Politics
DC Comics’ high-profile lesbian
superhero
lands her first eye-popping hardcover
with Batwoman:
Elegy, out Wednesday. But can
she shoot
straight? You bet she can. Kate Kane,
aka
Batwoman, is by no means DC’s first
openly
gay character. But unlike the
flamboyant Extraño
or the seldom-used Pied Piper, she is
one of
DC’s roughest, toughest regulars
undergoing
a serious reboot. And she’s off to a
great
start with the literary-minded mayhem
of Batwoman:
Elegy. Smartly written by Greg
Rucka
with sublime art from J.H. Williams,
who is
also writing and drawing Batwoman’s
ongoing
series starting in July, the new
hardcover is
a promising, powerful and often
psychedelic
phenomenon in a sexualized superhero
landscape
dominated by men in tights. The
military-bred
Kate Kane goes through a few other
fashion
signifiers before donning the cowl in Batwoman:
Elegy, which is mostly driven
by the
back story. Kane’s tragic
metamorphosis from
dress-wearing Army brat to masked
vigilante is
communicated through standard-issue
Marines
wear, punkabilly tanks and tattoos,
and other
outwardly iconic gear. Batwoman:
Elegy
leans heavily on these appearances to
hammer
out Kane’s sexuality, which is
accentuated
by appearances from the various women
in her
life. Her one-time girlfriend,
policewoman and
latest inhabitant of The Question’
mythos
Renee Montoya, complains...