The year in women kicking ass and taking names in comics
It’s been a banner year for female characters and the women responsible for bringing them to life on the page. While comic book movies and TV shows are slowly including more female heroes on screen (hey Jessica Jones, love that jacket) the books those blockbusters are based on have redefined what makes strong, modern female characters. Here are the year’s top moments of women kicking major ass in mainstream comics.
Harley Quinn left the Joker, moved back to Brooklyn, and became a businesswoman
In Jimmy Palmiotti and Amanda Conner’s Harley Quinn solo series, the one time supervillain has gotten her shit together, dumped her abusive ex-boyfriend, and moved back to her Brooklyn hometown to start a “community outreach program.”
Kamala Khan became an Avenger and stood up against gentrification
G. Willow Wilson’s Ms. Marvel has gone from being a fresh-faced, Muslim comic book geek from New Jersey to being a fresh-faced, Muslim comic book geek-turned-full-time-Avenger who splits her time between Jersey City and New York City. Her super-villains of choice? Evil Nuhumans and insidious gentrifiers.
Gwen Stacy became Spider-Gwen
In the past, Gwen Stacy was Peter Parker’s first girlfriend whom he accidentally killed while trying to save her life. The experience was the beginning of a dark time for Peter and was, well, the end of Gwen’s life. Spider-Gwen reimagines Spider-Man’s origin story where the radioactive spider bites Gwen instead of Peter, creating the coolest of version of the Spider-hero trope EVER.