Status Updates From Latinx Superheroes in Mains...
Latinx Superheroes in Mainstream Comics (Latinx Pop Culture) by
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Julio Bonilla
is on page 185 of 232

March 1, 2017 saw the arrival of the LGBTQ-celebrated America Chavez (her lesbian mamas and her sexually nuanced witty banter and desire for Kate Bishop) as the eponymous hero of her own series, America.
— Aug 17, 2022 06:39PM
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March 1, 2017 saw the arrival of the LGBTQ-celebrated America Chavez (her lesbian mamas and her sexually nuanced witty banter and desire for Kate Bishop) as the eponymous hero of her own series, America.
Julio Bonilla
is on page 172 of 232
Director Pitof and his creative team do a great job casting an actual Latino actor to play the Latino love interest and detective, Tom Lone (played by Benjamin Bratt). There is also clearly a will to style involved in the film's casting of the racially ambiguous Halle Berry as artist-by-day Patience Phillips, and Catwoman by night.
— Aug 16, 2022 10:23PM
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Julio Bonilla
is on page 142 of 232
There have been some televisual versions of Latina superheroes from DC’s in-print protoworlds, but they are usually hypersexualized.
— Aug 15, 2022 11:56AM
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Julio Bonilla
is on page 127 of 232
In-print superhero comics tend to provide the origin stories or protoworlds for re-creations in the animation, film, and TV formats. However, given that these are all narrative media that have come into their on during the twentieth century, we also see a cross-pollination of shaping devices between them. 🖼
— Aug 15, 2022 01:42AM
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Julio Bonilla
is on page 124 of 232
Artists like Guara and Quesada want to breathe life into the geometric shapes—they want their visuals to fill the stories with the action and movement of life. Because comic books operate so foundationally on their visual shaping devices, we don’t want to read a superhero comic book where there is no movement, action; even if a dialogue is dynamic, if we only see panel after panel of heads ….🦸🏽♀️
— Aug 14, 2022 10:02PM
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Julio Bonilla
is on page 114 of 232
Jack Kirby’s great contribution to comics was his geometrizing of story.
— Aug 14, 2022 05:27PM
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Julio Bonilla
is on page 90 of 232
While these are not A-listers like apocalypse, Osborn/Green Goblin, Doctor Octopus, Magneto, Lex Luther, The Joker, and Bizarro, DC and Marvel do create a handful of interesting antagonists.
— Aug 13, 2022 10:46PM
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Julio Bonilla
is on page 74 of 232
In October 2006, Orson Scott Card created in
Marvel’s Ultimate line of comics the Latino Iron Man as Antonio Stark. To throw the net wide to attract new generations of young readers to comics…
— Aug 13, 2022 04:34PM
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Marvel’s Ultimate line of comics the Latino Iron Man as Antonio Stark. To throw the net wide to attract new generations of young readers to comics…
Julio Bonilla
is on page 61 of 232
As one might expect in terms of sociohistorical circumstances, it is not until
the last decade of the twentieth century that we begin to see the kind of rich and complex Latinx superhero of an Echo or an O’Hara, for instance.
— Aug 13, 2022 07:56AM
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the last decade of the twentieth century that we begin to see the kind of rich and complex Latinx superhero of an Echo or an O’Hara, for instance.
Julio Bonilla
is on page 52 of 232
Both Latinas choose to hang up the garbs of the civilian life long – Lopez was an extraordinary concert concert pianist and Reyes was a trauma surgeon. Both use their smarts and strengths to subdue bad guys. Reyes uses her mutant powers, which allow her to project a force field around her body, and Echo her uncanny knack at mimicry, a photographic reflex that, when she studies VHS tapes of martial arts fights….
— Aug 11, 2022 04:18PM
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Julio Bonilla
is on page 48 of 232
His outfit and slang locate him racially and as urban: he sports hybrid football gear and baggy overalls with hip-hop-style sneakers, as well as a six-o’-clock shadow and a gold earring—not the usual leotard getup of the superhero. 👨🏾🦲
— Aug 09, 2022 11:11PM
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Julio Bonilla
is on page 44 of 232
Moreover, it marks a moment when creators destabilize and decenter Anglo male superheroes and move more forcefully to its centers those Othered superheroes. The year 1993 is when DC introduces the smartest and most complex of the Latino supervillains: Bane, in Batman: Knightfall....
— Aug 09, 2022 09:38PM
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Julio Bonilla
is on page 34 of 232
In 1986, Roy Thomas (writer) and Todd MacFarlane (artist) introduce to the Infinity Inc. team the Latina Yolanda Martinez as Wildcat II; she's the goddaughter of Anglo superhero Ted Grant as Wildcat from the 1940s. Ted Grant's compadre was Yolanda's father, "Mauler" Montez.
— Aug 09, 2022 06:37PM
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Julio Bonilla
is on page 26 of 232
The Latino as a sociopath had a greater hold on the industry than do-gooders like The Whip. While The Whip does reappear in other series, he never quite gets the same attention or momentum as El Papagayo, who is endlessly resurrected over long stretches of time.
— Jul 17, 2022 09:01PM
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Julio Bonilla
is on page 12 of 232
… Even during the Bronze Age era in the comics means performing some superheroic scholarly acrobatics of my own colon to bend and twist like Plastic Man(DC) in all directions; to tell the strength of The Thing(Marvel) to turn over any and every block; penetrate beneath surfaces with interpretive X-ray vision; to use psionic forces to pull to the surface traces of brownness (Latinoness) white surfaces.
— Jul 17, 2022 09:22AM
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Julio Bonilla
is on page 7 of 232
In the early 1970s, George Pérez introduced the comic book universe to the Nuyorican empowered White Tiger.
— Jul 13, 2022 05:25PM
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