Women in Refrigerators (or WirWomen in Refrigerators index, March 1999, retrieved January 11 2006.) is a website that was created in 1999 by a group of comic book fans. The site features a list of female comic book characters that had been injured, killed, or depowered as a plot device within various superhero comic books. The term was coined by writer Gail Simone as a name for the website.
The term ‘Women in Refrigerators’ comes from an incident in Green Lantern #54 (1994), written by Ron Marz, in which the title hero comes home to his apartment to find that his girlfriend, Alex DeWitt, had been killed by the villain Major Force and stuffed in a refrigerator.The Fanzig Challenge by Michael Condon, October 2002, retrieved January 11 2006. In 2004, Marz revisited this scene. Green Lantern found what he thought to be his mother's severed head in his oven; this was later revealed to be the head of a mannequin.Green Lantern Vol. 3 #181 by dcguide.com, retrieved January 11 2006.
The list is considered “infamous” in certain comic book fan circles.Buzzscope:: Detective Comics #809 review by Guy LeCharles Gonzalez, July 2005, retrieved January 11 2006. Respondents often found different meanings to the list itself, though Simone maintained that her, "... simple point (had) always been: if you demolish most of the characters girls like, then girls won't read comics. That's it!"Email as of 4/28/99 quote from response by Gail Simone, March 28 1999, retrieved January 11 2006.
Cases of 'Women in Refrigerators Syndrome' deal with a gruesome injury or murder of a female character at the hands of a supervillain, usually as a motivating personal tragedy for a male superhero to whom the victim is connected. The death or injury of the female character then helps cement the hatred between the hero and the villain responsible.Tragic Comics by Jason Zasky, retrieved January 11 2006.
Some fans believe the trend started when Gwen Stacy, girlfriend of Spider-Man, was killed by the Green Goblin. Some fans refer to the death of female characters via editorial mandate as Gwen Stacy Syndrome.Gwen Stacy entry at Book of the Dead by captaincomics.us, retrieved January 11 2006.
The term also describes the depowerment of female comic book characters as a plot device. Examples include the loss of Negative Woman’s powers, the maiming and depowerment of 1970s-era Legion of Superheroes member Dawnstar, and the lobotomization of Rachel Summers/Phoenix II.The List created by Gail Simone, March 1999, retrieved January 11 2006.
Simone decided to put the list on-line and include many of the responses she received. Journalist Beau Yarbrough created the initial design and coding on the original site. Artist and business executive John Bartol edited the content. Robert Harris,http://www.gayleague.com/members/profiles/displayProfile.php?id=181 a librarian and comic book fan, contributed to site maintenance and updates along with fan John Norris. The idea for placing the list on-line originated with software developer Jason Yu, who also served as the original site host.http://www.unheardtaunts.com/wir/index.html
Several contributors to the site and the original list later became comicbook creators and Entertainment industry professionals, including:
It should be noted original site editor and contributor Rob Harris was a long-time fan of the Legion of Superheroes, and created the Legion Academy student Nightwind (originally named Nightwing) through a fan submission to DC Comics.Rant Man’s Notebook by Jim MacQuarrie, retrieved January 11 2006. The character debuted in issue 12 of The Amazing World of DC Comics.http://lsh.freeservers.com/misc-images/AmazingWorld12.jpg The character was later renamed Berta Harris in honor of her creator.Legion of Superheroes Index by Dark Mark’s Comic Indexing Domain, retrieved January 11 2006. Robert Harris died in 2004. Nightwind is one of the characters from the original WiR list.
In response to that line of reasoning, content editor John Bartol wrote Dead Men Defrosting and argued that when male heroes are killed or altered, they are more typically returned to their status quo.Dead Men Defrosting by John Bartol, March 1999, retrieved January 11 2006. According to Bartol, after most female characters are altered they are, "never allowed, as male heroes usually are, the chance to return to their original heroic states. And that's where we begin to see the difference." In 2005, the characters Jason Todd and Bucky both returned as characters in regular publication.
Some comic book creators also responded, indicating that the list caused them to pause and think about the stories they were creating. The responses varied, and often contained reasoned arguments for and against the use of death or injury of female characters as a plot device. A list of some responses from comic book professionals is included at the site.Responding Creators by various authors, edited by Gail Simone and Rob Harris, retrieved January 11 2006.
Beau Yarbrough then registered a new domain, Unheardtaunts.com, and placed the original WiR site there.http://www.unheardtaunts.com This is the only version of WiR that is endorsed by the content creators.
The WiR content also often sparked discussion outside of comic book fandom. In 2000, several national newspapers ran articles that referenced the site. Some of those articles are still easily found on the Internet. The articles about WiR always generated discussion on the topic of sexism in pop culture and the comic book industry.Letters Wonder women; Cool Kidd; Give it a rest by various authors, May 25 2000, published in the Dallas Observer retrieved January 15 2006. This discussion often included healthy debate by those who believe sexism exists in those realms and those who believe it doesn't. There were many mainstream references to the site in the mass media. The references even trickled down to smaller mainstream media outlets. Some universities also list the content of 'WiR' as related to analysis and critique of pop culture.http://www.wsu.edu/~amerstu/pop/comix.html
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"Women in Refrigerators".
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