Original scientific paper
https://doi.org/10.15291/SIC/1.9.LC.5
Elisions & Illusions of Queerness: What Sacrifices Are Made in Appeals to a Mass Audience?
Frances Tuoriniemi
; University of Warwick, United Kingdom
Abstract
This paper examines the impact of sacrificing queerness when adapting comics into films, which cater to wider audiences – specifically, queer elision in Ryan Coogler’s Black Panther (2018) and illusions of queerness in Patty Jenkins’ Wonder Woman (2017). The difference between elision and illusion is crucial, and so approached using different analytical modes. Black Panther’s analysis is rooted in the production process, exploring how/why queerness is erased by drawing comparisons to the explicit queerness of Ta-Nehisi Coates and Roxanne Gay’s comics. The analysis of Wonder Woman focuses on in-depth textual analysis of both Greg Rucka’s comics and Jenkins’s film to illustrate how queer illusions functions across media. Despite these films being hailed as progressive, this paper illuminates how motivations to hide queerness when moving to wider audiences are rooted in homophobia and protecting profit margins.
Keywords
queer; comics; comic-book movies; superheroes; Marvel; DC; Wonder Woman; Black Panther; film adaptations; homosexuality
Hrčak ID:
215130
URI
Publication date:
17.12.2018.
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