Category Archives: Uncategorized

Superheroes Do Hanukkah

Over at the Brooklyn Comic Shop site, owner Joshua H. Stulman shares a few candle-kindling moments from Hanukkah in comics:

In truth it is still rare to find Jewish comic characters in comics and even harder to find mainstream comic stories about Chanukah. Although I must say that both Marvel and D.C. have been pretty good about including a one page Chanukah pin up in their holiday annuals since the 1990’s.

Jack Kirby's family Hanukkah card

This does, tangentially, raise the question whether Batwoman, as portrayed by Ruby Rose on CW crossover shows FlashGreen Arrow, and Supergirl, will be overtly depicted as Jewish on television, too.

Chanukah In Comics!

Kleefeld Questions Chuck Dixon on Racism, Islamophobia, Antisemitism, etc. of White Nationalist ALT-HERO

Sean Kleefeld
Sean Kleefeld

[The following piece was originally published at KleedfeldOnComics.com and it is reposted here with the author’s permission.]

On Business: Dixon on Alt-Hero

A couple of weeks back, Vox Day launched a crowd-funding campaign for his brand new comic called Alt-Hero which Day describes as “A new alternative comic series intended to challenge and eventually replace the SJW-converged comics of DC and Marvel.” It garnered a bit of news because Day is a right-wing petty asshole who’s an active racist. He led the 2015 and 2016 “rabid puppies” campaigns to deny any people of color from the Hugo Awards, mostly out of spite for not actually winning an award himself in 2014. He later described his actions as, “I wanted to leave a big smoking hole where the Hugo Awards were. All this has ever been is a giant Fuck You—one massive gesture of contempt.”

Now first off, it’s absolutely laughable that he thinks he can replace Marvel and DC. Politics aside, Marvel and DC have each been making superhero comics for the better part of a century; they do superhero comics very, very well. No one in the past fifty years has come close to even touching their sales on superhero comics. They’re not invulnerable, certainly, but any and every problem they have had and will have is of their own making, not because of a competitor. If someone else is able to usurp their place as premier superhero comic publisher, it will be because they got out of publishing comics.

Second, “SJW-converged comics of DC and Marvel”? What the hell is that supposed to mean? Seriously, no definition of “converged” makes sense in this context. If that’s the level of writing he’s bringing to Alt-Hero, Marvel and DC have nothing to be worried about. Hell, anyone making mini-comics out of their parents’ basement has nothing to be worried about. If I had to guess, I suppose he’s trying to say that Marvel and DC have been taken over by social justice warriors and that they have been pushing a decidedly leftist agenda. Which clearly is not the case if you actually look at any of their books. But Day is doing what he does — whipping up conspiracies to make it look like white men are being oppressed. Because his mediocre work isn’t celebrated enough.

OK, all of that is old news. I only mention it to make sure you’re up to speed on who this asswipe is. (And why I’m not linking to any of it!)

[EDITOR’S NOTE: Any links have been provided by Sacred and Sequential.]

Continue reading Kleefeld Questions Chuck Dixon on Racism, Islamophobia, Antisemitism, etc. of White Nationalist ALT-HERO

ISLAMiCommentary’s “Comics & Dialogue” Launches

For Immediate Release

Islam and Comic Books Column “Comics & Dialogue” Launches in February

January 28, 2014. BOSTON, MA. Beginning in February, ISLAMiCommentary will feature twice-monthly columns from Boston scholar Dr. A. David Lewis on Islam and the comic book medium. The column series Comics & Dialogue: Islam in Graphic Novels expands on Dr. Lewis’s previous work from the American Academy of Religion (AAR) annual conference and the Harvard University Center for Middle East Studies (CMES).

The following advance excerpt was provided from Dr. Lewis’s initial column outlining the goals of the series:

Muslim characters have appeared in American comic books for nearly as long as the market has existed. Yet, little analysis or examination has been devoted to them by Comics Studies and Religious Studies in tandem, certainly little within access of interested readers and informed spectators. The best scholarship on Islam in U.S.-market comics may get lost in unrecognized journals or far corners of the Internet. To remedy this in good faith, these columns will highlight both the latest instances of the medium’s interaction with the religion of Islam as well as the recent history of their engagements.

Lewis notes that it’s no coincidence his columns will begin the same month as Marvel Comics launches Ms. Marvel, their first title headlined by a Pakistani-American teenage Muslim superheroine, Kamala Khan. “I’m very excited for what Willow [Wilson] is bringing to the superhero genre as a writer and as a Muslim. But, as all the press coverage on this development has proven, there needs to be more informed and reliable information about comics and Islam together than can currently be accessed..”

In addition to analyzing this relatively new trend of the mainstream Muslim super-heroine, Lewis will also address in his columns the earliest portrayals of Muslim heroes in comics, grassroots attempts to produce comics featuring Muslims, and particular instances of the medium being used to promote Islamophobia.
“We are excited about this new partnership with Dr. Lewis, and are looking forward to increased engagement of the public and other scholars with his dynamic field of study, “ said Julie Poucher Harbin, Editor of ISLAMiCommentary.

ISLAMiCommentary is a public scholarship forum managed by The Duke Islamic Studies Center in partnership with the Carolina Center for the Study of the Middle East and Muslim Civilizations (UNC-Chapel Hill) and the Oxford Centre for Islamic Studies (a Recognized Independent Centre of at University of Oxford). Supported by a grant from the Carnegie Corporation of New York, it aims to inform public discourse and policy on Islam and Muslim communities from a variety of perspectives.

A. David Lewis, Ph.D., is the co-editor of Graven Images: Religion in Comic Books and Graphic Novels, co-author of Some New Kind of Slaughter from Archaia Entertainment, and a founding member of Sacred & Sequential, a collective of religious studies and comics studies scholars.

After the Crash…

The previous Caption Box site crashed a week or so back — but fear not! Everything will be back soon, both with a new design and a new (more reliable) server site.

In the meantime, email Dave at captionbox (at) gmail (dot) com, or find him on Twitter as @adlewis.

Lots of news to come; we’ll be back in action by Thanksgiving week — and thank you for your interest and patience.