It really ought to have been a red-letter day for Princess Diana of Themyscira, also known as Wonder Woman, when the 75-year-old comic-book pioneer was unveiled on October 21 last year as the United Nations’ honorary ambassador for the empowerment of women and girls.
Until then, the superhero whose exploits have been in print every year bar one since 1941 had been enjoying a sparkling diamond anniversary. She had made her big-screen debut with a brief appearance in the film Batman v Superman: Dawn of Justice, and just two weeks earlier, the United States Postal Service had issued a set of stamps commemorating the iconic DC Comics superhero.
But then, in the presence of her human alter-egos, the actors Lynda Carter and Gal Gadot, protesters rose in the UN chamber and literally turned their backs on the proceedings in silent protest.
In a petition, UN staff expressed amazement that the organisation "was unable to find a real-life woman [who] would be able to champion the rights of all women on the issue of gender equality and … empowerment". It was "alarming and … disappointing" that the UN had picked a fictional character "with an overtly sexualised image … a white woman of impossible proportions [and] the epitome of a ‘pin-up’ girl".
Two months later, Wonder Woman was quietly dropped from the UN’s campaign. The furore did no harm to her career, though – indeed, this weekend’s release of the film Wonder Woman sees her headlining for the first time in a blockbuster set to make global box-office history. Well, not quite global, perhaps. This week, the film was banned in Lebanon – a country still technically at war with Israel – because its star, Gadot, is Israeli.
But that local difficulty aside, the furore at the UN highlighted Wonder Woman’s broader cultural flaw, by encapsulating the contradictions of a character hailed by some as a feminist icon, and by others as a disconcertingly sexist parody of womanhood.
Wonder Woman was the protégée of Dr William Moulton Marston, a psychology professor hired as a consultant in 1940 by All-American Publications, a comic-book publisher. Marston was himself a complex character, who advocated feminism while living with two women. Wonder Woman, Marston once wrote, "satisfies the subconscious, elaborately disguised desire of males to be mastered by a woman who loves them".
He probably meant well. There was, he believed, "great hope for this world [because] women will win" and "when women rule, there won’t be any more [war]". He conceived Wonder Woman to promote "a great movement now under way – the growth in the power of women". But when he was paired with 61-year-old artist Harry G Peter, the two men proceeded to create, in the words of Jill Lepore, author of the 2015 book The Secret History of Wonder Woman, "a scantily clad [and] divisive female icon", complete with "kinky boots … blue short shorts [and] a tight-fitting red halter top".
Regardless, it isn’t too far-fetched to suggest that, despite her controversial dress sense, as a woman never in need of rescue by any man, Wonder Woman may have paved the way for the more modestly attired Muslim superheroes who have emerged more recently – characters such as Marvel’s Sooraya Qadir, alias Dust, an Afghan recruit to the X-Men; and the Pakistan-made, Peabody Award-winning Burka Avenger, who in the words of US news site Mic, "fights crime, much of it gender-based, by owning what many see as a symbol of suppression".
Source: The National
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