Fans hope Marvel comic book improves Native representation

Past por­tray­als of Native Amer­i­can or Indige­nous com­ic book super­heroes would often fol­low the same check­list — mys­ti­cal pow­ers, an abil­i­ty to talk to ani­mals and a cos­tume of either a head­dress or a loincloth.

“Poor research was done. They were just going off of TV and film,” said artist Jef­frey Veregge of the Port Gam­ble S’Klallam Tribe in Wash­ing­ton state. One of his biggest com­plaints is that main­stream “heroes from every place else had actu­al cos­tumes” while Native char­ac­ters weren’t rep­re­sent­ed well.

Grow­ing up read­ing com­ic books on his tribe’s land out­side Seat­tle, Veregge relat­ed more with non-Native heroes like Iron Man or Spi­der-Man. Now, he’s “liv­ing a dream,” over­see­ing a Mar­vel com­ic book about Native sto­ries told by Native people.

Mar­vel Comics announced this month that it’s assem­bled Native artists and writ­ers for “Mar­vel Voic­es: Indige­nous Voic­es #1,” an anthol­o­gy that will revis­it some of its Native char­ac­ters. It’s timed for release dur­ing Native Amer­i­can His­to­ry Month in November.

Native com­ic book fans hope it’s a new start for authen­tic rep­re­sen­ta­tion in main­stream super­hero fare. Mar­vel says the project was planned long before the nation’s reck­on­ing over racial injus­tice, which has prompt­ed changes includ­ing the Wash­ing­ton NFL team drop­ping its decades-old Red­skins mascot.

“It’s cor­rect­ing a prob­lem that start­ed a long time ago,” Veregge said of the com­ic book project.

Veregge, who has drawn more than 100 cov­ers for Mar­vel and oth­er major com­ic book pub­lish­ers, was a nat­ur­al fit to lead the project. In Feb­ru­ary, he wrapped up an exhib­it at the Smith­son­ian Nation­al Muse­um of the Amer­i­can Indi­an in New York City. “Of Gods and Heroes” was his inter­pre­ta­tion of Mar­vel pro­tag­o­nists like Black Pan­ther and Thor, inte­grat­ing shapes and lines inspired by trib­al art styles.

“You want to make sure peo­ple rec­og­nize the char­ac­ters them­selves, but I also want them to see it’s a Native voice behind that,” Veregge said.

Lee Fran­cis IV, own­er of Red Plan­et Books & Comics in Albu­querque, New Mex­i­co, and an inde­pen­dent pub­lish­er of Native comics, helped find up-and-com­ing Native artists to join the Mar­vel anthol­o­gy. An orga­niz­er of an annu­al Indige­nous Com­ic Con who’s descend­ed from the Lagu­na Pueblo, Fran­cis said com­ic books aren’t far off from some tribes’ sto­ry­telling traditions.

“I don’t want to speak for all Native folks, but I think there’s a visu­al acu­ity and sto­ry­telling sense that aligns per­fect­ly with the com­ic book medi­um,” Fran­cis said. “Not only words and writ­ing, but this visu­al sto­ry­telling that harks back to our own sto­ries and pet­ro­glyphs — rock art — ties it back to our ancestors.”

Racist stereo­types found their way into the medi­um because com­ic book artists often relied on what they saw in movie and TV West­erns, Fran­cis said. And before West­erns, polit­i­cal car­toons dat­ing to the 1700s demo­nized or ridiculed Native people.

For so long in comics, Native Amer­i­cans have either been the vil­lain or the sto­ic side­kick. It’s frus­trat­ing when a gen­uine “Indi­gen­erd” sees “every­body else gets span­dex and you get a head­dress,” Fran­cis said.

Dezbah Evans, mean­while, always iden­ti­fied with Marvel’s “X‑Men.” The series about young mutants strug­gling with pow­ers while being per­se­cut­ed by soci­ety seems to par­al­lel how Amer­i­ca treats Indige­nous com­mu­ni­ties, said Evans, a 24-year-old com­ic book fan and cos­play­er from Tul­sa, Okla­homa, who’s Nava­jo, Chippe­wa and Yuchi.

She’s look­ing for­ward to the Mar­vel book because it will fea­ture one of her favorite mutants — Danielle Moon­star, a Cheyenne hero­ine who con­jures illu­sions based on people’s fears.

“It’s very val­i­dat­ing that these are my peers, these are peo­ple I see at con­ven­tions and I’ve had rela­tion­ships with,” Evans said of the writ­ers and artists cre­at­ing the book. “I’m real­ly proud they’re able to get to this level.”

She hopes it’s the begin­ning of an expan­sion of the com­ic book world — not just the Mar­vel Uni­verse. Main­stream pop cul­ture still has far more Native male super­heroes than female ones.

“When­ev­er I think of super Native women, they’re all moth­ers — my mom, my grand­ma. They’re the first heroes in all of our lives,” Evans said. “It would be real­ly inter­est­ing to have a mod­ern Indige­nous mom liv­ing and being a superhero.”

Ver­land Cok­er, 27, a com­ic book fan of the Musco­gee (Creek) Nation in Okla­homa, calls Marvel’s endeav­or a step in the right direc­tion but says com­ic books could go further.

It’s rare, for instance, to see Native super­heroes talk in their own lan­guage. Incor­po­rat­ing some lan­guage would be an oppor­tu­ni­ty to edu­cate non-Natives and pro­mote tribes — many of which are strug­gling to pre­serve their lan­guage for younger gen­er­a­tions, said Cok­er, who lives in Albuquerque.

“My wor­ry is that we can occa­sion­al­ly lean into the mono­lith myth, and while any rep­re­sen­ta­tion is great, we often only get a select few tribes,” Cok­er said via text. “I just would like to see more Native artists on main­stream products.”

That may not be far off based on the recep­tion Veregge gets. When he meets chil­dren on the reser­va­tion where he grew up or at com­ic book con­ven­tions, their par­ents like to point out his work for Mar­vel. It’s an inter­ac­tion he takes seriously.

“I get to tell kids: ‘I grew up on this reser­va­tion, too. You can do this, too,’” Veregge said. “I know who I’m rep­re­sent­ing. … I car­ry them wher­ev­er I go.”



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