In November of 2013, S&S’s own Hussein Rashid wrote for CNN’s Belief Blog about the coming of a new Ms. Marvel: teenage, Muslim, and from Jersey. He predicted she’d have a “level of complexity [that] bodes well for the […] character.” Read here.
Tag Archives: G. Willow Wilson
ISLAMiCommentary’s “The Fight Begins for Ms. Marvel”
With the launch of G. Willow Wilson and Sana Amanat’s Ms. Marvel series featuring a teenage, American Muslim girl, S&S’s A. David Lewis discusses what’s at stake on ISLAMiCommentary. Read here.
The 99, Captain Israel, Habibi, Holy Terror, and More…
It has been a positively massive few weeks in the topic of Religion & Comics, particularly in terms of Islam and Western culture, and a bevvy of links and stories bear highlighting, even en mass. In no particular order:
- PBS will be airing a documentary on the rise of The 99 and the endeavors of its creator Dr. Naif al-Mutawa on Thursday, October 13th at 10 p.m. EST. Blogcritics.org has a brief overview of the show, entitled Wham! Bam! Islam!, as part of the new season of Independent Lens.
- Perhaps on the flip-side of The 99‘s message, Tom Spurgeon at The Comics Reporter relays a news story from the India Express on the arrest of cartoonist Harish Yadav (a.k.a. Mussaveer) on the charge of insulting Muslims with his work. Yadav was released later that day, apparently none the worse for wear, unlike Syrian cartoonist Ali Ferzat who was beaten for his outspoken opposition to his local regime.
- Al Jazeera has published the reaction of University of California – Irvine Professor Mark LeVine on the emergence of superhero Captain Israel by Arlen Schumer. LeVine says, “Turns out – as far as I can tell – this comic is not a prank dreamed up by the Daily Show’s writing team during their summer hiatus, or even more plausibly, by a couple of bored Hebrew School students. ‘Captain Israel’ means business! His task: Defend Israel at all costs from her most dangerous enemies!”
- The concurrent releases of Frank Miller’s Holy Terror and Craig Thompson’s Habibi during the 10-year anniversary of the September 11th terrorist attacks have gotten a great deal of notice in a number of distinct ways. NPR’s “On Point with Tom Ashbrook” dedicated an hour to Thompson and his latest effort, paying particular attention to the 600+-page graphic novel in terms of love and sexuality. (Moreover, of particular interest may be the Comments section for the broadcast’s web page.) Taking a different slant, Robot 6 over at ComicBookResources.com quoted writer G. Willow Wilson’s take on Habibi, praising Thompson’s effort and its beauty but also that “some of Thompson’s attempts to invert cliché get away from him.” Islamicate.org‘s Hussein Rashid also points to Wilson’s take on Habibi, that the book is more about mysticism and the Qur’an than about Islam: “I found myself wondering about the author’s own spiritual journey. How did Thompson, raised a conservative Christian, come to be interested in the mysticism of the Qur’an? That’s a book I’d read, if he were ever inclined to write it.”
Meanwhile, Miller’s work has garnered much more alarm. When Miller moved the project from DC Comics (perhaps with their blessing) to the new Legendary Comics imprint from Legendary pictures, the anti-terrorism graphic novel shifted from featuring the DC-owned Batman to Miller’s new vigilante, The Fixer. Wired magazine has called the terrorist-bashing extravaganza “fodder for the anti-Islam set,” and David Brothers of Comics Alliance calls it, for all Miller’s artistry, “a hateful, ill-considered, simplistic, ugly, nasty little book.” At the same time, though, Pakistani writer Avirook Sen with The International Express online says that “if this was serious, they wouldn’t just give the most important job of our times to some newborn superhero with a second-rate name.”
Converting to Islam Its Own Sin?
In June of last year, novelist and comic book writer G. Willow Wilson gave an interview to Bleeding Cool News upon the release of her memoir The Butterfly Mosque. In both the book and interview, she chronicles what led her to convert to Islam and the stigma sometimes attached to converting into another religion.
Last week, The Infidel Bloggers Alliance essentially proved her point. Whereas Wilson calls “[c]omics readers […] the most open-minded, try-anything-once, take-people-as-they-are,” Avi Green holds Wilson in disdain, largely for converting at all but particularly to Islam. Green says that Wilson’s assessment of comics readers is “naive” and that Wilson herself “fell to Islam.”
Bleeding Cool‘s Rich Johnston, incidentally, stands by Wilson on principle and calls The Infidel Bloggers Alliance “a rabidly pro-Israel, anti-Arab and anti-Muslim site.”
Religion in Comics on Fanboy Radio
Episode #578 of Fanboy Radio features a discussion on “Religion in Comics“ with A. David Lewis and G. Willow Wilson.
The two were contributors to the book Graven Images: Religion in Comic Books & Graphic Novels for which Lewis was also a co-editor. Wilson had spoken at the conference of the same name back in 2008 and has since gone on to author Air from Vertigo Comics and her own prose novel The Butterfly Mosque. Lewis, an independent comics writer, is a Ph.D. candidate in Religion & Literature at Boston University.
Fanboy Radio is hosted by Scott Hinze with David Hopkins, Oliver Tulls, and Sean Jackson. It broadcasts live weekly on KTCU FM 88.7 and is available as a podcast free from iTunes.