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, DC Comics' first openly gay super-hero.

Extraño, DC Comics' first openly gay super-hero.

Quote1 He wants me to stop being a superhero. He's going after my community to bully me into it. Look, my community is vulnerable. This happens more than you could possibly know. And there are guys just like this jerk out there who want to hurt us. They want us to hide and to be afraid to be who we are. They wants us to disappear, and it happens... every day. He's not the first, and he won't be the last. And we haven't exactly been a priority for the cops. Quote2
Nia Nalsrc

LGBTQIA+ is an abbreviation for lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender queer, intersex, and asexual used as an umbrella term for the queer community. In the DC Universe, several characters identify as queer. Unfortunately explicit queer representation is relatively new to comics due to censorship - until the 1980s, the Comics Code Authority explicitly forbade the appearances of comic characters being depicted as queer. In recent years, however, comics have begun to feature more queer characters, both new characters and old characters who have finally been able to express themselves authentically.

History

Early History

, DC Comics' first openly gay super-hero.

Extraño, DC Comics' first openly gay super-hero.

The Comics Code Authority explicitly forbade depiction of homosexuality until 1989, influenced by Fredric Wertham's Seduction of the Innocent, who saw homosexual elements in the relationship between Batman and his ward Robin. The sidekick came about as an audience viewpoint for the young reader looking up to the reader, but because of this dynamic critics had long observed the subtext between wealthy single adult men and younger boys like Robin and Sandy the Golden Boy. Characters like Kathy Kane and Betty Kane were introduced to draw attention away from this "accusation".

Millennium #2 was not the first appearance of homosexual characters in DC Comics, however, it is the first time we have seen an openly gay character at DC Comics. It predates Marvel's Northstar's coming out by a few years. The series mostly focuses on a flamboyant stereotype of a gay man, but it does touch on sensitive topics like HIV/AIDS, and was controversial at the time.

The late 1980s/early 1990s saw the introduction of several characters that focused on the hardships and hatred LGBT people faced, like Kevin Mayer in the pages of Wonder Woman (Volume 2), John Constantine in Swamp Thing (Volume 2) and Hellblazer (Volume 1), Coagula in Doom Patrol (Volume 2) and Terry Berg in Green Lantern (Volume 3). This was partly influenced by an influx of writers and artists who were LGBT themselves like Rachel Pollack and Grant Morrison. Neil Gaiman's Sandman (Volume 2) featured several different topics, including elderly gay couple in Preludes and Nocturnes and a trans woman in A Game of You. Nevertheless, these adult themes were mostly reserved for supporting characters and adult oriented Vertigo comics. Issues would sometimes be addressed in a roundabout way, like Shvaughn Erin and Rebis (a sex changer and a gestalt of a man and a woman respectively) which explore trans topics without the characters being explicitly trans.

As general acceptance of LGBT shifted in the 21st Century, more characters came out as gay. At first this was mostly done to supporting characters and minor characters like Renee Montoya. WildStorm Productions introduced Midnighter and Apollo as an openly gay couple. DC introduced an openly lesbian Batwoman, Kate Kane, in 2006. As part of the New 52, Bunker was added to the roster of the Teen Titans and the Green Lantern of Earth 2, Alan Scott, was changed into a gay man. In the years that followed, a number of heroes and villains came out as bisexual, including Catwoman, Wonder Woman, Tim Drake and Jon Kent.

Since 2021's Pride Month, DC Comics has been publishing DC Pride anthologies, celebrating LGBTQIA+ characters and creators.

GLAAD Award

Since 1992, the Gay & Lesbian Alliance Against Defamation has included a comics category to its GLAAD Media Award for its portrayal of LGBT characters in media. DC has more wins and nominations for the award than any other publisher:

Known LGBT Characters


Related Articles

Fictional Characters

Staff

See Also


Links and References

  1. The Gay Times Interview
  2. Wonder Woman (Volume 3) #33
  3. Weird War Tales Special (Volume 2) #1
  4. DC Pride #1
  5. Batgirl (Volume 4) #19
  6. Wonder Woman (Volume 2) #38
  7. Wonder Woman (Volume 2) #168
  8. Stephanie Williams on Twitter: "One of the newest Amazons is a Black trans woman"
  9. Wonder Woman (Volume 5) #2
  10. Wonder Woman (Volume 5) #15
  11. Greg Rucka on Queer Narrative and WONDER WOMAN | Comicosity
  12. Nubia and the Amazons #1
  13. 13.0 13.1 Wonder Woman: Earth One #3
  14. Red Hood and the Outlaws (Volume 2) #10
  15. Wonder Woman #758
  16. 16.0 16.1 Etta Candy at dccomics.com
  17. Wonder Woman: Earth One #1
  18. Wonder Woman: Bloodlines (Movie)
  19. Wonder Woman: Tempest Tossed
  20. Stormwatch (Volume 3) #17
  21. The Authority #29
  22. The Authority (Volume 2) #4
  23. Batwoman (Volume 2) #17
  24. Doom Patrol (Volume 2) #34
  25. Vigilante #5
  26. Doomsday Clock #12
  27. Secret Six (Volume 4) #14
  28. DC Pride 2023 #1
  29. Catwoman (Volume 4) #39
  30. Doom Patrol (Volume 2) #70
  31. Birds of Prey #59
  32. Teen Titans (Volume 6) #30
  33. Sapphic Planet: The Many Loves of DC's Bombshells
  34. Doom Patrol (TV Series) Episode: Dead Patrol
  35. The Sandman Universe: Dead Boy Detectives #6
  36. Y: The Last Man #33
  37. Enigma #8
  38. Enigma #7
  39. Blood Syndicate #8
  40. Blood Syndicate #33
  41. Dwayne McDuffie on Gay Characters
  42. World's Finest: Teen Titans #4
  43. WORLD'S FINEST: TEEN TITANS #4 on DC.com
  44. Screen Rant: "DC Introduced Its First Gay Superhero On TV Earlier Than You Think"
  45. Batman (Volume 3) #107
  46. Outsiders (Volume 3) #46
  47. Outsiders (Volume 3) #2
  48. 48.0 48.1 48.2 DC Pride 2022 #1
  49. Earth 2 #2
  50. Far Sector #2
  51. DC: Yes, they are Girlfriends
  52. Harley Quinn: The Animated Series: The Eat. Bang! Kill. Tour #1
  53. Lois Lane (Volume 2) #10
  54. Jericho on Gay League
  55. Convergence: New Teen Titans #2
  56. Nicola Scott on Twitter: "Yes, he is." (Archived)
  57. Jon Kent Finds His Identity in Superman: Son of Kal-El #5
  58. Justice League of America (Volume 2) #42
  59. The Power Company: Josiah Power #1
  60. Greg Weisman about Kaldur's sexuaity
  61. DCU: Rebirth #1
  62. The Legion #31
  63. The Legion #27
  64. DC Fandome Legion of Superheroes
  65. Justice League of America (Volume 2) #9
  66. Legion of Super-Heroes (Volume 4) #50
  67. Adventure Comics #529
  68. Legion of Super-Heroes (Volume 7) #5
  69. DC Comics Encyclopedia
  70. Legion of Super-Heroes (Volume 7) #18
  71. Madame Xanadu (Volume 2) #11
  72. Wonder Woman #754
  73. Dial H for Hero #12
  74. Teen Titans Academy #8
  75. Teen Titans Academy #9
  76. First African-American Gay Superhero Joins Arrow
  77. Justice League America #110
  78. Manhunter (Volume 3) #18
  79. Peacemaker: "Stop Dragon My Heart Around"
  80. James Gunn Says Peacemaker Isn't Straight
  81. Shazam! Fury of the Gods: Meet writers Chris Morgan and Henry Gayden
  82. Shazam!: Fury of the Gods Special - Shazamily Matters #1
  83. The Flash (Volume 2) #53
  84. Lucifer (Volume 2) #8
  85. Lucifer (Volume 2) #10
  86. CW introduces first show with a gay superhero – Freedom Fighters: The Ray
  87. Justice League of America: The Ray Rebirth #1
  88. Justice League of America (Volume 5) #12
  89. Unstoppable Doom Patrol #4
  90. Alan Scott: The Green Lantern #3
  91. Ram V on Twitter: "From his POV, yeah."
  92. Strange Love Adventures #1
  93. "The Dreaming: Waking Hours—Who is Ruin?" on DC.com
  94. Legion of Super-Heroes (Volume 4) #31
  95. DC's Legion of Bloom #1
  96. Demon Knights #14
  97. Superwoman #5
  98. Starman/Congorilla #1
  99. Green Lantern (Volume 4) #15
  100. Green Lantern (Volume 3) #154
  101. Green Lantern (Volume 3) #170
  102. Batman: Urban Legends #6
  103. Tim Drake: Robin #6
  104. Triumph: The Hero You Love To Hate