Pop Mythology, Buying and Selling: A Report from the First Asian American Comic Con

by Guest Contributor Joesph Shahadi, originally published at Vs. the Pomegranate

On my way out the door to attend the first-ever Asian American Comic Con in New York City last week I turned on the TV to keep my (awesome, but needy) dog company and suddenly my apartment was filled with the Owen Wilson/Jackie Chan vehicle Shanghai Noon. I averted my eyes (I can’t look at Owen Wilson’s face… I am sure he is a nice person who loves his mom but his nose, with its various planes and levels, is like an SAT math question). I changed the channel but not before Wilson could point that dodecahedron at the camera and say “She’s not the killer. She’s just a very, very, very, hot confused Chinese girl.” I looked at the dog and said, “Boy, these personal ads just write themselves, don’t they?” The dog gave me nothing so I settled on a soothing infomercial about mineral-based makeup, and left for the Con. But the random intrusion of that orientalist/sexist joke was a weird preface to the rest of the afternoon.

The Asian American Comic Con was presented by Secret Identities Media (the folks who gave us Secret Identities: the Asian American Superhero Anthology), The Asian American Writers workshop, Greg Pak’s Asianamericancomics.com and the Museum of Chinese in America, in whose beautiful new building the event was held. While it was modest compared to the San Diego Comic Con International, which has become the mother ship of pop culture, the first year of the AACC was impressive in its scope. The Con was designed along three separate workshop tracks: “Reading Comics”, “Making Comics”, and the “Spotlight Track”, which featured comic book industry professionals like Pak, Khoi Phan, Larry Hama and others. Organizing the event this way acknowledges that comic books have become a force in setting trends for mainstream pop culture and in a more academic sense, as models for looking at stuff like ethnic representations in popular media. According to the program, “ You might want to think of the ‘con’ as representing not ‘convention’, but ‘conference’—or even ‘conversation.’” Hmm. Interesting.

Before exploring the panels I went to the “Artists’ Alley” which featured tables with well-known comics professionals sitting elbow-to-elbow with lesser-known self-publishing indie creators. While the program provided a blank page to collect autographs (film actor and Secret Identities managing editor Parry Shen walked right past me) I was drawn to the indie creators. One of the more interesting of these was Alitha E. Martinez, whose portfolio pages showed some of the most dynamic comic art I have seen in a long, long time. Martinez, who has penciled such mainstream titles as Iron Man, Black Panther and Fantastic Four, among others, is not a newbie but is moving into the creator-owned realm with her Manga-inspired property Yume and Ever. And therein lies the rub: among Martinez’s fantastic pages were postcards emblazoned with images of her Japanese, female lead Yume, kimono hanging open, breasts front and center, sucking on a lollipop Lolita-style. Absent the context of the story I am not willing to condemn it (although that is what a postcard is, a representative image, right?) but this made me pause… and not just for the obvious reasons. This image raises all sorts of questions for me about the relationship between Orientalism, sex and gender, the fetishization of Asian women vs. the potentially empowering re-framing of stereotypes… and the use of use of these images by other PoC. When answering questions about her experience at AACC on her blog Martinez writes that she was “well received” but “some of the attendees said a few insensitive things… about my looks and heritage and what I ‘consider’ myself. I let it roll off of my back, the art is the thing. What I am or from whense (sic) my people hail has nothing to do with my work. It’s just very sad that such ignorance still exists.” I only spoke with Martinez briefly–to compliment her excellent artwork– and I didn’t ask her about her postcard specifically, although it really struck me. I’d be interested to hear more about what she intends with this character, so I may follow up with her.

At the apex of “Artist’s Alley” was a table set up by the group racebending.com, which was formed by Jordan White specifically to organize the boycott against the movie version of Avatar: The Last Airbender. While White talked with a reporter from MTV I was brought up to speed by an awesome Avatar fangirl, who turned out to be Nora (i.e.”nojojojo”), of the great blog The Angry Black Woman. The controversy around the casting of white actors in roles that were conceived as Asian and Inuit has been covered elsewhere, so I won’t repeat the details here except for three points that crystallized for me during my conversation with Nora (thanks Nora).

1) The offense stems not only from the white washed casting, but from the purposeful re- imagining of an entire SF/Fantasy universe that was based on a panoply of Asian and Inuit cultures into a European one. For PoC fans of SF/Fantasy, who often have to endure racist and ethnocentric content embedded in their fiction ::cough:: Lord of the Rings Trilogy ::cough:: Avatar was a rare opportunity to see a PoC fantasy universe realized.

2) The controversy around the movie version of Avatar is proving to be a catalyst for activism beyond the fan community. Nora told me about a colleague of hers who is not an Avatar fan, who got involved with racebending.com because the movie represents a direct assault on representations of PoC in the mainstream media.

3) To paraphrase Jordan White, “we don’t just want the movie to fail, we want it to fail because fans rejected the casting.” Amen.

Wandering into the rest of the Con events I was lucky to catch pioneering Asian American SF/Fantasy author William F. Wu speak. Jeff Yang, Co-Chair of the AACC and Editor in Chief of Secret Identities, interviewed Wu about his Hugo, Nebula and World Fantasy Award nominated work, including the short story “Wong’s Lost and Found Emporium”, which was made into an episode of the Twilight Zone in the 80’s. Wu, who was born in Missouri and raised in Kansas, described himself as a “displaced Midwestern boy.” Easygoing and a natural storyteller, he discussed not only the content of Asian American representations in SF/Fantasy genres, but their lack overall. Yang summarized this situation by saying “Robot Americans are far better represented than Asian Americans (in genre fiction, despite the fact that) demographically, the future looks pretty damn Asian”. Wu expanded on this point by saying that when Asian American men do appear they are usually either “tamed” (i.e. the submissive sidekick) or the villain , while Asian American women are often the “exotic” love interest of the white hero.

In advance of his AACC appearance Wu donated his vast collection of comic book art and comic books, all of which feature Asian and Asian American characters to the Fales Collection at New York University. Despite the fact that many of the portrayals are inaccurate and/or offensive Wu said he was compelled to seek them out, a habit learned during his racially isolated Midwestern childhood. And it is this ambivalent relationship with–too often–problematic portrayals that characterizes the interactions many PoC have with media: You are forced to choose between not seeing yourself represented at all, or only as a creature of the white imagination, with its fears and fantasies about you. Wu made the point that often the way Asians are represented in pulp media offers a more immediate reflection of political reality. For example, in the Buck Rogers newspaper strip of the 1940s, Buck’s adversaries, who had been cat-like Aliens, became “Japanese” literally the day after Pearl Harbor. (Go back and read that again and then take a minute: The. Day. After.)

Wu discussed some of the other characters who appear in his collection, which range from the ridiculous (Egg Fu, an old Wonder Woman villain/Giant Talking Egg whose evil deeds were facilitated by his prehensile Fu Manchu moustache) to the sublime (Batman Villainess/Love Interest Talia al-Ghul, daughter of the Arab Supervillain Ra’s al-Ghul–whose name means “Demon’s Head”– and a mixed Chinese, European and Arab mother, which makes her a kind of orientalist combo-platter.) Torn between killing Batman and helping him escape her evil father and given to catsuits and mixed martial arts, Talia al-Ghul is the culmination of an orientalist ideal… in other words, “not a killer, just a very, very, very, hot confused (part) Chinese girl.”

I ended the day at a panel called “Nerd Pop”, which kicked off when Ken Chen, the Executive Director of the Asian American Writers Workshop proclaimed to the laughing crowd, “You are here because you are a part of our clan… not Asian Americans, but nerds.” The rest of the panel included Ben Nugent, author of American Nerd, Derek Kirk Kim, comics creator who announced, “I’m a total jock, so I don’t know what I’m doing here”, and moderator Hua Hsu, an English professor at Vassar, exemplifying the high/low mix the AACC was going for. The resulting discussion veered from jokey to serious and raised questions about the connections between nerd-dom and ethnic identity. Nugent asserted that a “nerd” identity was like a racial one, in that it can’t be simply changed by changing clothes, which made me arch an eyebrow. I am usually not happy with direct correspondences between race and less visible identities that cross cultures, like “nerd.” But Hsu took this point in a different direction, saying that “nerd” becomes more potent when mixed with ethnicity. He argued that the term is used to de-politcize and segregate Asian Americans in a way that isn’t often called out as racism. But at the same time, the panel embraced “nerd” as a descriptor and celebrated the “nerd-ification” of US culture, pointing out ruefully that, at least in New York, hipsters now dress like the 80s nerds they used to be… Except that looking like a nerd is not the same thing as being one, and “hipster”, like “nerd” could as easily be applied to a PoC as a white person, which is the problem with creating these equivalences. Still, it was a fascinating and often funny discussion that raised questions for me, but didn’t provide easy answers, a description I could apply to the entire Con.

It will be interesting to see the direction the AACC takes in coming years, especially in terms of the complex issues around representation, but this was a great beginning.

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  1. THE BEAT » Blog Archive » Kibbles ‘n’ Bits, 8/3/09 on 03 Aug 2009 at 9:22 am

    [...] § Joseph Shahadi looks at sociological messages at the First Asian American Comic Con [...]

Comments

  1. Fiqah wrote:

    So I know it wasn’t the point of this post per se, but Sideways Racism – racist actions against PoCs by other PoCs – fascinates me. Anyway, that aside, it sounds like you had a good ole unabashedly nerdy time. I’m very jealous. :D

  2. Lxy wrote:

    Nugent asserted that a “nerd” identity was like a racial one, in that it can’t be simply changed by changing clothes, which made me arch an eyebrow.

    Heh. Next thing you know Nugent will be pushing the idea that White Nerds are the new Black–an oppressed minority that is subject to American police terrorism, imprisonment, etc ….

    This image raises all sorts of questions for me about the relationship between Orientalism, sex and gender, the fetishization of Asian women vs. the potentially empowering re-framing of stereotypes… and the use of use of these images by other PoC.

    I am not familiar with Martinez’ work.

    But, in general, Orientalist racism/sexism can be peddled by a “POC” just as surely as any White person.

    Being a so-called POC does not necessarily translate into some kind of “racially progressive ” politics generally–nor give one a political abili for uncritically pimping Orientalism in particular.

    After all, racism and sexism are fundamental to the American Way.

    It’s always much easier to go along with it than to oppose it.

  3. Joseph wrote:

    @Fiqah
    Me too.

    I don’t know if that was a factor here or not but I think part of the fuzziness comes from a lack of clarity about what the “Asian” in AACC means. Does it mean Asian creators? Books that feature Asian characters? People who work in an Asian genre, like Manga? What about South Asians?

    Know what I mean?

    It was definitely a multi-racial event and that was cool to see but it would be cool to see them answer some of these questions as it moves forward.

  4. ashlynn wrote:

    Well, this sounded like fun. But i have to admit, in my experience, I would hesitate to say that you could apply the term “hipster” to a PoC, at least easily. Alas, another conversation for another day, though.

  5. Joseph wrote:

    @Ashlynn
    I know what you mean but that may be a regional thing. There are a lot of PoC hipsters in New York. The example the panel used for their “hipsters who look like nerds” idea was the Brooklyn band TV On the Radio, who are mostly black. So I didn’t get the impression they were automatically assuming hipster = white in this context.

    Although, like I said, I know what you mean: Despite being a New Yorker when I read “hipster” I assume the person is white, although I guess I probably shouldn’t.

  6. eric p wrote:

    “For example, in the Buck Rogers newspaper strip of the 1940s, Buck’s adversaries, who had been cat-like Aliens, became “Japanese” literally the day after Pearl Harbor. (Go back and read that again and then take a minute: The. Day. After.)”

    with the lead time for creating a daily strip, i’m curious how this happened.

  7. Joseph wrote:

    @eric p
    with the lead time for creating a daily strip, i’m curious how this happened.

    Wu addressed this point. Due to the time lag the altered look of the villains, which was unexplained in the plot of the strip, did not appear right away… but the change itself was made the day after the attack on Pearl Harbor.

  8. El Santo wrote:

    On Alitha E. Martinez’s pin-ups:

    I can see where some of the concern lies, especially the ingrained notion of subservience. The flip-side, though, is the assumption that Asian females cannot dress like everyone else because they’re Asian, thus forcing a conservative standard that Asian girls might not want to live up to.

    It’s a weird debate that I don’t think anyone can really resolve. Most creators tend to go the safe route and portray Asian comic book characters (not of the manga variety) as pretty but bland.

    Note: Asian storytellers are pretty much guilty of the same stereotype. Every single Ang Lee heroine could be described as “not a killer, just a very, very, very, hot confused (part) Chinese girl.”