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Showing posts with label Sentry. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Sentry. Show all posts

Jun 20, 2020

The 40 Years of Comics Project - Day 1942: The Age of the Sentry #3, January 2009

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https://www.comics.org/issue/545917/


Today's featured creator, Colleen Coover, won my heart with her amazing, amazing girlie porno series Small Favors. As I was looking for comics to read to celebrate my LGBTQ+ family, I was delighted to come upon her name and this excellent faux-history romp with the Sentry.

For a moment when I was reading the second story, illustrated by Ms. Coover and written by her partner Paul Tobin, I was a little mystified as to why the story was so, so straight. On the one hand, it's definitely because it's a mainstream superhero comic from about 10 years ago, when they weren't quite ready to have so much queerness on display. But then I also thought about the fact that Ms. Coover, according to her wiki, identifies as Bisexual. We're a mysterious breed, we bis, sometimes accused of greed, sometimes of not existing at all. But we exist, and persist, and as a bisexual creator, Ms. Coover is going to create some art that, sometimes, doesn't look very queer at all. I think in these cases, we have to read a little more deeply into both art and words, to see if there is a different inflection to the heterosexual stories that are told by bisexual creators. How do we identify them as bisexual stories?

And, really, do we need to?

More to follow. 

Further Reading and Related Posts

I've got a couple of other posts about Ms. Coover's work here.

And there's some other stuff about The Sentry here.


Nov 23, 2018

The 40 Years of Comics Project - Day 1367: The Sentry (2018) #2, September 2018


I am so behind. I've read the comics, but I'm falling behind on the writing. To be honest, I've started a new medication, and it's kind of messing with my head a bit while I'm getting used to it. I'll catch up on these over the next little while.


Nov 22, 2018

The 40 Years of Comics Project - Day 1366: The Sentry (2018) #1, August 2018


I'm on my way out the door and back to Ontario for a few days, so this'll have to be quick.

I was going to catch up on this series and pre-post all four issues I have so I could make sure they got online this weekend, but the day got away from me.

I'd also hoped that these four issues constitute a whole story, but, no, I am missing part 5, the final issue.

*sigh*

Another admission? Honestly, I don't think there should have been anything to do with the Sentry after the end of his original series, with the possible exception of the awesome Age of the Sentry series. I loved the idea of a Superman-level hero living in the Marvel Universe unable to be that thing that he wants to be, but never really realizing it. I was pretty excited when Brian Bendis brought the character back, but I'm not sure I like how he was handled in that otherwise excellent decade (?) of Avengers stories. And his other solo series has kind of receded from my memory, much as his adventures were supposed to have at the end of the first series.

That said, I'm always going to buy a comic about the Sentry, and it's written by Jeff Lemire, which means it's very likely going to be amazing. The last of my favourites he had a hand in was Animal Man, and that run during the New 52 was wonderful.

The Sentry is Superman. The Sentry is also the Void. I think my worry is that this is always going to be the central conceit of any story about this character, which is ultimately very limiting.

Right. So. Benefit of the doubt. Off to Ontario.

More to come...

Apr 14, 2015

The 40 Years of Comics Project - Day 49: 1602 #3, December 2003


There's a couple of parts of this comic in which we get an inkling that the 1602 world isn't just an experiment in displacing the characters of the Marvel Universe, but actually a part of that very same universe. "...I merely watch," the text of the final caption box on the first page, is the blatant clue as to the narrator's voice, and the back of his head shows up in a later panel. That Uatu makes his presence known makes 1602, at the very least, a possible What If world, which, by this point, have been acknowledged as part of the Marvel multiverse.

These questions of multiversality (or, to quote Morrison, multiversity) offer some interesting ways of coming at superhero comics. Leaving aside for a moment that a newly-published theory is actually positing interaction between parallel universes, in many ways, especially for the last decade or so, we've seen rampant tacit interaction between parallel comics universes. There is a long history of multiverses and alternate realities in superhero comics, stemming from the "imaginary stories" of the fifties and sixties all the way to Morrison's current meditation on the concept in Multiversity. Interesting shorthands have been created that allow writers to deal with multiverses, the notion of "the Bleed" being perhaps the most useful, and most used. These veins of the multiverse not only separate the various dimensions, but also parse the universe in terms of the biological, a metaphor with which we are fundamentally in tune. And while this notion, and its genesis in the differing vibrational rates of alternate Earths (see Flash v.1 #123) primarily finds its origins in DC Comics and their eventual offshoot Wildstorm, Marvel writers, Jonathan Hickman notable amongst them, have taken up the concept in the Marvel Universe(s). The Bleed, or the veins of the multiverse, become a concept in numerous multiverses from different publishers, and thus become a metaphoric link between economically disparate fictions. Thus we see a version of the Sentry show up in Final Crisis, gathered together with other versions of Superman (along with a version of Supreme), or we see the Avengers take on a barely concealed version of the Justice League in a recent issue of that series. These veins allow us to think superhero comics not as disparate fictions attempting to grapple with the mythic resonances of these kinds of characters, but as parts of an organic whole, combinations and permutations moving toward some kind of solution. Whether or not the solution even exists is beside the point. It is the movement that matters.

Not that this says anything about the comic in question, really. This issue, at least, combats the problem I was thinking about yesterday, that of the novelty of revelation carrying the story more than the narrative itself. Things happen in this issue. Major events propel the plot forward and characters are developed in such a way that they are made distinct from the archetypes from which they are drawn. Not too distinct, mind you, but enough that we can see the way in which the different time period manages to change the surfaces of the characters at the very least. But I still can't get away from the idea that this story would not be nearly as well-regarded if it didn't feature the Marvel superheroes. Only three issues in and I'm already getting ready to set it aside and read something else before finishing the series. But I did say there'd be music by next weekend, which means the series needs to be finished, in which case, I'll see you again tomorrow, direct from the 17th century.