Smithsonian Magazine

National Treasure:

The black superhero who changed comics forever

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The Black Panther’s

costume

IT WAS CLEAR FROM the moment it reached multiplexe­s in 2018 that Black Panther wasn’t just a hit; it was a phenomenon. The title character, portrayed by the late Chadwick Boseman, became an inspiratio­n to millions of Americans. Black Panther, a.k.a. T’Challa, king of the fictional African nation of Wakanda, stood as a symbol of strength, honor and pride in one’s African ancestry. And the character’s essential qualities—his regal bearing and quiet determinat­ion—are captured in his costume, designed for the screen by Ruth E. Carter, the film’s costume designer, who built on the work of Ryan Meinerding, a Marvel artist and character designer.

Carter embellishe­d some versions of the costume with raised triangles, which she has called “the sacred geometry of Africa,” given the shape’s long significan­ce to the continent’s art and culture. Her emphasis on the essential dignity of the character captures the ambition of his originator­s, the writer Stan Lee and the artist Jack Kirby, who debuted Black Panther for Marvel Comics in Fantastic Four #52 in 1966. Following some of the most important moments of the civil rights movement, the comics pioneers wanted Black Panther to break stereotype­s and embody black pride.

“At that point I felt we really needed a black superhero,” Lee recalled in a 2016 interview. “And I wanted to get away from a common perception.” Thus, Lee decided to make T’Challa “a brilliant scientist” living in a secret, undergroun­d African technoutop­ia, “and nobody suspects it because on the surface it’s just thatched huts with ordinary ‘natives.’ ”

But as much as the Black Panther portrayed by Boseman (under the direction of Ryan Coogler) fits this vision, he is also different from the character created by a white writer and a white artist for a white audience more than 50 years ago. Today’s T’Challa is indebted to a generation of black writers and artists who moved beyond mere representa­tion to build a character with more depth than the one dismissed in his first appearance by fellow comics crimefight­er Ben Grimm, a.k.a. the Thing, as “some refugee from a Tarzan movie.” In the evolution of the Black Panther, you can see a clear arc in the history of black superheroe­s—how they’ve become richer, fuller and even inspiring characters.

Black characters have had a fraught history in comic books from the outset. They were “largely relegated to background and secondary roles and characteri­zed primarily through their figurative embodiment of racist stereotype­s,” Kevin Strait, a curator at the Smithsonia­n National Museum of African American History and Culture, says in an interview.

In the 1940s and ’50s, however, depictions began to change. In 1947, a group of black artists and writers published All-Negro Comics, a collection of stories featuring black characters. In 1965, the now-defunct Dell Comics published two issues of Lobo, a western starring a heroic black gunslinger. Still, most comics creators of the period—including the two men who launched Lobo—were white, and like the Black Panther, who was something of a token, most black characters who followed in his path over the next two decades would find themselves in a similar role. Luke Cage, for example, first appeared in Luke Cage, Hero for Hire #1s in 1972, the height of the blaxploita­tion movement, as a jivetalkin­g hustler who fought crime for money.

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