So we have a team of multicolored superheroes, and underneath their helmets their skin tones and races are also a wide spectrum. That’s great! …but do they actually acknowledge their differences and struggles?
To foster awareness, appreciation, and discussion of queer sequential art and its creators
To become an educational resource of queer experiences, storytelling, and critical theory
All tagged representation
So we have a team of multicolored superheroes, and underneath their helmets their skin tones and races are also a wide spectrum. That’s great! …but do they actually acknowledge their differences and struggles?
As many — if not all — queer people can attest, coming out is not a simple process. The obvious anxiety and fear of rejection aside, coming out is far from a one time done deal.
In the past several years, there has been an increasing demand for media aimed at “all audiences” to feature explicitly queer characters, this is to say, characters that explicitly state that they are not heterosexual or cisgender.