Thank you for She-Hulk, a woman ahead of her
Everyone who loves superhero storytelling has a Stan Lee moment. ‘‘ ‘With great power comes great responsibility’ is one of the greatest single moral injunctions in all of American pop culture,’’ the comic book writer Greg Pak wrote of SpiderMan’s motto.
The critic Maureen Ryan recalled a personal kindness Lee showed her son. Dorkly editor Tristan Cooper praised his sense of humour.
Let’s take a minute to honour the brilliance of Stan Lee. When he created the She-Hulk, he wanted a character that could rival the Hulk, but could retain all of her femininity. He didn’t want her to be Hulk’s love interest who could only exist in his shadow. She had her own life and personality. Even when Lee drew her in a provocative manner, he always treated the character with respect and always made a point to let the readers know that Jennifer Walters was in control, and even had her not only beating her enemies physically, but outsmarting them as well.
As one of the first and few muscle-bound women of the Marvel Universe, She-Hulk was way ahead of her time and she continues to prove that women can be both strong and sexy.
She-Hulk illustrates Lee’s commercial savvy and his creative instincts. The character was essentially a rights grab, created in an attempt to make sure that the Bionic Woman wouldn’t become the go-to superpowered woman in the public imagination.
Lee created Jennifer Walters as Bruce Banner’s cousin, who acquired his propensity to get big and green – though not mindless – through an emergency blood transfusion.
Lee didn’t write the character for long. But one measure of his accomplishment in creating her is that she has been such a fertile template for other writers.
She-Hulk is an enduring fantasy for reasons that have nothing to do with some male readers’ (and creators’) dreams of being dominated by powerful women. She-Hulk speaks to a world where women are compelling and alluring when we’re at our most powerful, where our anger must be reckoned with and can’t be an excuse to marginalise us.
In the midst of a years-long conversation about sexual violence, female vulnerability and sexual freedom, Dan Slott’s Single Green Female She-Hulk stories are a blast of liberating fun.
She-Hulk’s romantic adventures let us imagine what it might be like to be a woman who could never be hurt or overpowered by a partner.
Because her superpowers manifest in the form of physical transformation, she’s harder to distort or reduce to a pinup, as some artists have done to superheroines whose powers are more intangible.
She-Hulk is strong, and that strength is a source of pleasure to her as much as it is a reason for us to admire her.
And at a time when the women confronting United States senators over Brett Kavanaugh’s nomination to the
She-Hulk’s romantic adventures let us imagine what it might be like to be a woman who could never be hurt or overpowered by a partner.