Yep, agreed, and this seems to have been one of the creative team's biggest goals. It's one of the things they sound most excited about in interviews:
": Be patient. And if we're surprising you, enjoy it. It's great to get outraged. I'm loving the reaction. Some of the name-calling, though, I could do without.....[Sales are good,] but for me, the cool thing is that we've got people talking about her! People actually care what's going on in Wonder Woman." (
http://www.newsarama.com/comics/bria...der-woman.html)
I think "it's great to get outraged" is a great and honest point. Being outraged is different from being alienated, or at least from being disengaged; outraged people like SteveGus (and critical readers like you) feed the buzz. If everyone was as sanguine about the run as I am, there'd be less to talk about and the buzz about the series would die down, to some degree.
Sure, that could happen--but is it happening? Most of that 50% was lost in the first few months, when there had hardly been time to drag the teases out. The loss of a few thousand in the last couple of months is, as you say, "hardly uncommon, but not great"--but it's easily withing the normal attrition in the industry, so it provides no evidence that "drag" is hurting sales.
But most of that loss was from the fist few months, when you could hardly say taht the teases had been dragged out too long.
Sure, nothing's perfect. I may be focusing more on the positive, because I'm enjoying the run a lot and just not feeling an urge to finding fault; but I'm glad there are people to argue with!
Marston didn't seem to think it was disingenuous to depict women who broke with prevailing stereotypes of weakness and passivity (even though he did believe that, in reality, many if not most women still complied with those stereotypes because that's how they had been taught). His depiction of a strong woman like Diana, and an appreciative man like Steve, wasn't a disingenuous representation of the actual behavior of women and men in a sexist society; it was a true presentation of an imaginary but possible alternative.
But if writers couldn't start from a relatively "simplistic" place, in which character seem morally "small" or lacking in complexity or depth, then they would be limited in their ability to show people progressing beyond that place. Persoally, I would consider that a loss, because I think showing that kind of growth can be interesting. And if he wants to foreground the Amazons' limitations at the beginning so that he (or the next writer) can eventually highlight their growth, it's just as well that the particualr limitations he's foregrounding don't, in the meantime, confirm the traditional stereotypes of passive women and masculine men. Later, I'd like to see both he male and female amazons grow and demonstrate more complexity; that's why I'd like to see them living side by side, clashing with and learning from each other.
Towards the beginning of the story? Yeah, could be, it really
could be a good idea,
at that point--because then you're not confirming the most established, culturally powerful stereotypes (e.g., belligerent men and weak, deferential women) but you're leaving lots of room for the characters to grow.
If there is no growth, no development, I can start judging that later, as the run turns towards a conclusion. For now, I can say that there is good set-up for development. We can say "good start or "bad start," but I won't fault the beginning, or even the middle, for not being a good conclusion.
Bookmarks