Was Batman ever sexually assaulted by a villain?
3/5 Male Batfamily members have been either raped (Bruce/Dick) or sexually assaulted (Tim) and it's generally not played for laughs.
Was Batman ever sexually assaulted by a villain?
Give it a restThese don't answer my questions except for the first one. Maybe that should tell you something
These don't answer my questions except for the first one. Maybe that should tell you something
No, the exact same specific events did not happen to batman as they did to Barbara. Although I don't think that happens very often to multiple characters. As in, the exact same specific events.These don't answer my questions except for the first one. Maybe that should tell you something
Well, the three other question are kind of very specific.These don't answer my questions except for the first one. Maybe that should tell you something
These don't answer my questions except for the first one. Maybe that should tell you something
Haha yea. You showed them.These don't answer my questions except for the first one. Maybe that should tell you something
I don't see a big deal. Looks good. Also, do some of these outraged fans even read Killing Joke?
Was Batman ever sexually assaulted by a villain? was he photographed while it happened? were those photographs used as a cheap sadistic plot device to hurt a man rather than focus on the female victim herself? If so, is there a cover of Batman that reminisces on that scenario?
There's a lot going on in this image besides "oh noes! She's crying!"
Joker's "I'm going to enjoy this" grin
His arm wrapped around her, pulling her up against him
The bodily fluids smeared around her mouth.
when you combined that with her look of terror and the fact that Joker has sexually assaulted Barbara in canon, it definitely comes together as an extremely rapey image.
These don't answer my questions except for the first one. Maybe that should tell you something
When you mind control Superman, and your first instinct is to make him star in a porn movie, you really got to get your priorities straight.Superman was mindcontrolled and forced to make a porn movie with Big Barda
Superman was mindcontrolled and forced to make a porn movie with Big Barda
Superman was mindcontrolled and forced to make a porn movie with Big Barda
welcome to the SIMPified world of today.
So... it's not the assault that's important. It's the photography.
Really.
The point that needs to be explained is why when men superheroes are raped/victimized it's swept under the rug and forgotten, and why when it happens to female superheroes they become defining moments of the character, the trauma of which can't be forgotten from that day forward.
Was Batman ever sexually assaulted by a villain? was he photographed while it happened? were those photographs used as a cheap sadistic plot device to hurt a man rather than focus on the female victim herself? If so, is there a cover of Batman that reminisces on that scenario?
I don't even know if they read Batgirl.
welcome to the SIMPified world of today.
The point that needs to be explained is why when men superheroes are raped/victimized it's swept under the rug and forgotten, and why when it happens to female superheroes they become defining moments of the character, the trauma of which can't be forgotten from that day forward.
So... it's not the assault that's important. It's the photography.
Really.
The point that needs to be explained is why when men superheroes are raped/victimized it's swept under the rug and forgotten, and why when it happens to female superheroes they become defining moments of the character, the trauma of which can't be forgotten from that day forward.
It's the sexist angle of portraying a woman as a victim purely used to inflict emotional damage on a man.
For me, what makes the reference uncomfortable is knowing how gross DC's reaction to the comic was, not just how much of a non-character Barbara got to be in the story. But that stuff was actually dealt with pretty well in the past (like Oracle's "origin story") so it's not beyond a writer's ability to reference TKJ and do it in a way that doesn't make it super shitty.This is an image that wants to be nightmarish and twisted, attached to the front of a book that isn't that at all, referencing a part of the character's history that not even the writer of that specific event (Alan Moore) thinks is very tasteful.
Why is this so horrible compared to all the other Joker Barbara covers in the last 25 years?
Isn't Batman victimized by the death of his parents? Sure, it wasn't physical harm directly to him, but that stuff sure traumatized him.The point that needs to be explained is why when men superheroes are raped/victimized it's swept under the rug and forgotten, and why when it happens to female superheroes they become defining moments of the character, the trauma of which can't be forgotten from that day forward.
And it's also something the cover barely references. The Joker isn't carrying a camera or handing out pictures, this is about him paralyzing her.It's the sexist angle of portraying a woman as a victim purely used to inflict emotional damage on a man.
I don't know why this discussion has now become a competition of "which masked crimefighters get raped more"
Anyway, as to the OP it's a good variant cover. Good callback to a classic storyline.
It's pretty easy to surmise what kind of problems people will have with it though as has been effectively pointed out multiple times. They'd never have someone like Batman being that terrified on the cover without some kind of unnatural outside influence being implied. It's kind of why I like this Batgirl cover... it's very humanizing and doesn't feel like a forced reaction. It feels like a legitimate human reaction while effectively and simply conveying the Joker's derangement.
I don't know why this discussion has now become a competition of "which masked crimefighters get raped more"
Haha yea. You showed them.
Oh and do you read invincible?
i repeat...with this people its always the same,moving goalpost by the minute
because the internet dont give a fuck if a man is raped
I mean, there are definitely people who go all out on the Internet when they see things they don't like, but generally these sorts of situations are just prompts for serious conversations that a lot of people who appear to be far angrier at everything like to fit into a binary war so they can kneejerk dismiss one side as crazy so they don't have to think about it. Why not just have the genuine conversation and debate?I don't think anyone is disputing what the image is communicating or insinuating, we're rolling our eyes at the professional outragers on the internet.
I don't know why this discussion has now become a competition of "which masked crimefighters get raped more"
Target demos of readers, the events didn't really resonate with the readers, the character didn't have much going for them so it became an easy attachment, etc.The point that needs to be explained is why when men superheroes are raped/victimized it's swept under the rug and forgotten, and why when it happens to female superheroes they become defining moments of the character, the trauma of which can't be forgotten from that day forward.
ah your MRA colors are showing
Superman was mindcontrolled and forced to make a porn movie with Big Barda
It's the sexist angle of portraying a woman as a victim purely used to inflict emotional damage on a man.