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Wednesday, February 20, 2008

Hannah Montana Is A Superhero and Betty Is A NASCAR Champ


As I was helping put together a panel on Girls & Comics for the New York Comic Con on behalf of Friends of Lulu, I began to think about girls and popular culture. The old refrain about girls and comics is, "girls aren't interested in adventure stories," or "girls aren't into superheroes."

Leaving the manga question completely out of the equation, and focusing on entertainment directed at girls aged, 6-12, I still don't buy that argument.


Take, for example, the case of Hannah Montana, arguably the biggest character for girls at the moment.

Ordinary Miley Cyrus puts on a wig and costume and transforms into...Hannah Montana, idol of millions! But, she has to be careful not to let anybody discover her secret!

To me, this is the classic superhero formula.


We can skew even younger and examine the Dora the Explorer phenomenon. That whole franchise is based off a little girl who is an Explorer -- a pint-sized Indiana Jones. To me, that is as action-adventure as you can get (for preschoolers). And Dora is another certified phenomenon, selling millions of dollars of DVDs and toys every year.


Now let's look at the popular American Girl line of dolls. Every character in that line has a rich historical backstory built into her. Here's Kitt Kittridge's story:

"As a girl growing up during the Great Depression, Kit sees her dad lose his business overnight. In hopes of saving her family’s home, she pitches in with the endless list of chores. During these hard times, Kit turns to writing as an escape. Can she write a happy ending for her family?"

Kitt doesn't surround herself with fashions and fairies. She's a writer. Admittedly, writing is not the same as swinging around on a vine. But, she is a role-model for girls who is a writer, something serious and intelligent.

Lastly, take the whole phenomenon of girls and their love of horses and ponies. Horseback riding lessons are among the most popular activities for girls. That seems to be an action-oriented activity. Nothing stereotypically "girly" about it.

Archie & Friends #116 features a story about Betty as a race car driver. In the tale, Old Man Lodge tells Betty she can't participate in the race because "she might get hurt" -- the inference being, that she is delicate because she's female. It takes a star race car driver (seemingly styled after race champ Danica Patrick) to convince Lodge otherwise. Then the comic follows a heated car race for several pages, Betty emerging victorious.

Kudos to Archie Comics for writing a story like that. I think part of the Betty racing story stems from the publisher being aware of what is going on in girls' entertainment in other media.

(But don't go to the Barbie website. Yuck. It's like My Little Pony threw up. What happened, Mattel???)

7 comments:

  1. I have been saying the same types of things for years. It is not like Nancy Drew or Harriet the Spy were not adventurers in their own right.

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  2. I also feel that too many people now associate/pigeon hole/force the round peg into the square hole/wtfever superheroes or adventurers within the Joseph Campbell mold/formula, were for some reason the hero's thousand faces are all male.

    Truly mind boggling....

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  3. This comment has been removed by the author.

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  4. I agree, except for the American Girl doll example.

    American Girl dolls are pretty implcitly marketed as a conspicuous consumption class-consciousness item for high end parents to buy their high end kids. Its like "all wood" toys versus plastic.

    Not as mass marketable as barbie, horses, or pink faeries.

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  5. American entertainment companies are run by stupid people greedily trying to get every last dollar from the lowest common denominator - stupid consumers.

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  6. Kim Possible.

    "She can do anything" is the simplest, most inspirational tagline ever created.

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  7. I'd love to see Marvel Adventures do Dazzler as a Hannah Montana type character - secret identity, career, romance, and the occasional villian. Daz was basically a character ahead of her time. :) Put it in manga or digest format and put it by the "girl" books in B&N and Waldenbooks and you could have a hit.

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