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Summary
Summary
Trina Robbins, author of A Century of Women Cartoonists, has written the ultimate book on superheroines. The Great Women Superheroes is the first book of its kind. Robbins covers good girls and bad in one fascinating volume. Over 200 illustrations!
Summary
Traces the development of women super-heroes in newspapers and comics from the 1940's to the present.
Reviews (5)
Booklist Review
Most would be hard-pressed to name one female superhero besides Wonder Woman. Robbins shows that there have been hundreds. When psychologist William Marston (inventor of the lie detector, by the way) created WW in 1941, her success opened the floodgates for such exotically named but generally undistinguished imitations as Liberty Girl and Madame Strange. The '70s saw a rash of "women's lib" -influenced characters sporting what Robbins terms a "slightly addled feminism." The backlash came with "bad girl" comics starring buxom, scantily clad heroines appealing to an adolescent fanboy's worst instincts. The '90s offer such alternatives for girl comics readers as the punkster Tank Girl and spunky young Action Girl. Although some sense of absurdity might have been appropriate to the task, Robbins is generally straightforward in describing frequently silly characters. While she always brings a distinctly feminist sensibility to the subject matter, she is never strident, even about the most egregiously intelligence-insulting conceptions, such as the Black Canary, who fights crime in high heels and fishnets. (Reviewed January 1 & 15, 1997)0878164820Gordon Flagg
Library Journal Review
When was Wonder Woman created? Who is Miss Fury? What is Supergirl's disguise? Here comic illustrater and writer Robbins (A Century of Women Cartoonists, Kitchen Sink, 1993) answers these questions and a great many more. In this detailed history of female superheroes from the Forties through the Nineties, the author covers not only well-known classics like Wonder Woman but also includes more obscure comics. She chronicles comic-book heroines and their creators and also analyzes these characters from a feminist standpoint. Robbins explores the roots in the booming comic industry of the 1940s, when the new characters provided powerful role models for female readers. And she criticizes the "bad girl" comics of the 1990s, wherein scantily clothed pinups spend their adventures bathed in blood. Written in a witty, entertaining manner and filled with black-and-white illustrations, this book packs as much punch as the superheroines it chronicles. Not just for comic aficionados, this volume is highly recommended.Erin Cassin, "Library Journal" (c) Copyright 2010. Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.
Publisher's Weekly Review
The most famous female superhero is Wonder Woman, created in 1940 by a William Moulton Marston, a psychologist who also happened to invent the lie detector. But superheroines like the Blonde Phantom (1946); Ultra Violet (1947) and Miss Masque (1946) have long been forgotten. Trina Robbins (A Century of Women Cartoonists) resurrects the story behind these early characters and introduces a new generation of superheroines and their creators in The Great Women Superheroes (Kitchen Sink, $21.95, ISBN 0-87816-481-2; cloth $31.95 -482-0) (c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved
Booklist Review
Most would be hard-pressed to name one female superhero besides Wonder Woman. Robbins shows that there have been hundreds. When psychologist William Marston (inventor of the lie detector, by the way) created WW in 1941, her success opened the floodgates for such exotically named but generally undistinguished imitations as Liberty Girl and Madame Strange. The '70s saw a rash of "women's lib" ^-influenced characters sporting what Robbins terms a "slightly addled feminism." The backlash came with "bad girl" comics starring buxom, scantily clad heroines appealing to an adolescent fanboy's worst instincts. The '90s offer such alternatives for girl comics readers as the punkster Tank Girl and spunky young Action Girl. Although some sense of absurdity might have been appropriate to the task, Robbins is generally straightforward in describing frequently silly characters. While she always brings a distinctly feminist sensibility to the subject matter, she is never strident, even about the most egregiously intelligence-insulting conceptions, such as the Black Canary, who fights crime in high heels and fishnets. --Gordon Flagg
Library Journal Review
When was Wonder Woman created? Who is Miss Fury? What is Supergirl's disguise? Here comic illustrater and writer Robbins (A Century of Women Cartoonists, Kitchen Sink, 1993) answers these questions and a great many more. In this detailed history of female superheroes from the Forties through the Nineties, the author covers not only well-known classics like Wonder Woman but also includes more obscure comics. She chronicles comic-book heroines and their creators and also analyzes these characters from a feminist standpoint. Robbins explores the roots in the booming comic industry of the 1940s, when the new characters provided powerful role models for female readers. And she criticizes the "bad girl" comics of the 1990s, wherein scantily clothed pinups spend their adventures bathed in blood. Written in a witty, entertaining manner and filled with black-and-white illustrations, this book packs as much punch as the superheroines it chronicles. Not just for comic aficionados, this volume is highly recommended.Erin Cassin, "Library Journal" (c) Copyright 2010. Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.