Está en la página 1de 7

Ortega !

1
Maria Ortega
Professor Beadle
English 115
12 October 2015
The Human Bees
Every species on Earth has organization in its life, a bees hive consists of the workers and
the queen bee. This may seem unfair and even inhumane for the working bees that spend most of
their lives doing this, but the differences from humans are not too far off. Humans also organize
their life with social classes that lead to someone being on the bottom. Patricia Collins and Gail
Dines are both writers on the topic of gender discrimination. They discuss how, like the bees, a
gender is put above another to create organization, a hierarchy. In this case males are placed
above the females. However, how is one a male or female? Where does one get their gender
from? A gender is pushed onto a person by their personality and physical looks. The two personalities are femininity and masculinity. A typical females first concern is on her looks, how she
dresses and what her body type looks like. Kamala Khan is a character in Ms. Marvel by G. Willow Wilson that struggles with the pressure of prescribed gender roles and even though she gains
superpowers, gender role expectations are so far developed that she is still not able to transgress
them.
The common gender roles are as follows: males or real men as Collins describes it in
Hegemonic Masculinity and Black Gender Ideology are expected to be forceful, analytical,
responsible, and willing to exert authority, all qualities that women seemingly lack (226). This
typically means that they are the dominant ones in relationships and are the providers and protec-

Ortega !2
tors. Whereas womens traits tend do be more physical so that they are, according to Dines in
Visible or Invisible: Growing Up Female in Porn Culture a hypersexualized, young, thin,
toned, hairless, and in many cases, surgically enhanced women with a come-hither look on her
face (252). This importance of physical attraction is meant for male pleasure showing how the
pyramid is laid out with males wants and desires put on discretion for females. Kamala displays
the concerns of a typical female by desiring to be beautiful with light skin, long hair, and an outgoing personality. She says I want to be beautiful and awesome and butt-kicking and less complicated (18), the fact that she mentions beauty first and foremost shows just how much society
has influenced the insecurity in herself. Kamala is not the only one that acts out on prescribed
gender roles in the beginning of the comic, it is also seen through many of her friends and family
members.
Aamir is Kamalas older brother who is pressured by their father to get a job so that he
can be a provider and not dependent. Their father says Prayer is noble, but when you spend all
day praying it starts to look like youre avoiding something. Like finding a job (6). This is an
example of the societal pressure that people like Kamala feel; because Aamir is a male, society
(his family) is pressuring him on displaying masculine traits. The setting of the comic is placed
in a porn culture according to Dines, this means that women are objectified to sex and therefore
the only way that Kamala can be noticed is to fit in. One becomes visible in adolescence by
looking like everyone else, and to look and act differently is to be rendered invisible (Dines
260). This seems like a contradicting statement but what Dines means by this is that if a female
wears the same revealing and tight clothing like Zoe in Ms. Marvel on page 10 then society will
notice them whether it be males that are attracted to them or females that are envious, but if a

Ortega !3
female were to wear clothing that is less revealing then she will be invisible because no one
will have a purpose to look at her. It is this very reason that causes Kamala to sneak out of her
house for a party, trying to fit in and therefore be visible.
When Kamala arrives at the party the audience can visually see the gender role being
played by Bruno (Kamalas friend) on page 11. Bruno is interfering in Kamalas situation by being protective of her when another male hands her a drink with alcohol, this shows that he views
her femininity like society, that she needs to be protected and only a male can do that. Though is
may seem like a kind gesture, the reality of the situation is that he is unintentionally devaluing
females with his actions. One of the most serious issues of gender discrimination is seen on page
17 of Ms. Marvel when Kamala says Zoe thought that because I snuck out, it was okay for her
to make fun of my family. Like, Kamalas finally seen the light and kicked out the dumb and inferior brown people and their rules to the curb. The issue is that society not only organizes by a
gender, but also a gender even has layers and is organized by race.
Collins discusses how the organization within a gender works: hegemonic masculinity
becomes defined through its difference from and opposition to women, boys, poor and working
class men of all races and ethnicities, gay men, and black men. In other words, hegemonic masculinity is a concept that is shaped by ideologies of gender, age, class, sexuality, and race (224).
Both with males and females white is the preferred race, a white women because she is prettier
(again physical looks are the key concept here) and a white male because he is more sophisticated. But as Dines goes into more detail the audience can see that there is not much of a difference between the white males at the top and black males below, both express violence and dominance just in different forms. Because the majority of government positions are held by white

Ortega !4
men, black men need to find another way to display their dominance and they do so in the
streets. Rather than expressing masculine authority by running corporations or holding highlevel government positions, black men search for respect from marginal social locations (Dines
228), this means within their own race and social groups. As for expressing violence, white men
do so through the military, police forces, and sports whereas black men once again express it on
the streets with street weapons and using their own bodies (Dines 228).
Femininity also is separated by race as Kamala noticed when she said inferior brown
people. Collins shows how this occurs Dominant gender ideology provides a social script for
Black women whereby everyone else needs Black women to be on the bottom for everything
else to make sense (238). Kamala understands that being a darker shade than white already puts
her at a disadvantage, and so when Captain Marvel asks her what she wants Kamala replies to be
beautiful. Captain Marvel does so by giving her superpowers and a new look that consists of being white, having blonde-long hair, and having a nice body. When Kamala receives superpowers
she realizes that she isnt happy, being beautiful and visible doesnt make her happy, but what
does make her happy is being able to use her powers to help save people from harm and trouble
(13). It may seem like Kamala is stepping on the boundaries between genders because she now
fights crime and no longer cares for beauty, but this is not the case. Kamala is very much restricted to her genders feminine traits, all of her friends and family treat her like in the beginning of
the comic showing that she made no progress on trying to defeat their gender expectations.
Even after obtaining her superpowers Kamala continued to be disciplined by her parents
and being concerned about by Bruno. When Kamalas mom finds her late at night in the kitchen
she says So this is how you repay your father and me for all that we have sacrificed to raise

Ortega !5
you! deliberately disobeying us, sneaking out, coming home looking like-like- (71). This scene
takes place well after Kamala has her powers and it shows that even though Kamala fights
crimes and is starting to take on the protective role of masculinity, she is still expected to act
feminine from her parents. They have raised her to be a female which means taking her place
below the males like in the mosque on page 26 where the women were separated from the men.
Bruno also shows his gender expectations of Kamala when he says Remember the panic code.
If something goes wrong, call and let it ring twice and then hang up. Ill call the cops (78). Even
though he knows that she is more powerful than him and can protect herself more than he can he
still has the urge and reaction to be dominant because he is the male, Kamala replies with Okay
grandma to show her frustration with him. Because Kamalas family and friends still view her
the same way from before she had superpowers it is clear that she was not able to distinguish
their gender expectations of her as Kamala Khan. The comic also visually shows that there is no
change.
The art and style of the pictures have a specific color to what the images are, for example
when Ms. Marvel or Captain Marvel appear the background colors are very vibrant and full of
life. However its a different story when the pictures are of Kamala at home, the colors the audience see are plain yellows and sometimes a gloomy grey. This is symbolic to the way Kamala
feels, when she is Ms. Marvel she feels great and free to do what she wants without the concern
of others.. Whereas when she is at home the colors represent the restraints that her family places
on her based on her gender. This is the exact issue that both Dines and Collins discuss, the way
people are restrained and limited because of their gender, this is a serious issue when women
think that they gain power with their looks, or being independent by being able to buy their own

Ortega !6
materialistic items. The truth of the reality is that women have yet to seize any real power and
The biggest lie is that conforming to this hypersexualized image will give women real power in
the world, since in a porn culture, our powers rest, we are told, not in our ability to shape the institutions that determine our life chances but in having a hot body that men desire and women
envy (Dines 252). The comic Ms. Marvel is the example of this put into the perspective of a
young teenage girl who struggles with gaining power beyond physical features. Humanity likes
to think they are far superior than animals but when analyzing their structure, it is seen that they
use the same techniques as animals to organize their lives.

Ortega !7
Works Cited
Collins, Patricia Hills. Hegemonic Masculinity and Black Gender Ideology Composing Gen
der. Ed. Rachael Groner and John F. OHara. Bedford: St. Martins, 2014. 222-260. print.
Dines, Gail. Visible or Invisible: Growing Up Female in Porn Culture Composing Gender. Ed.
Rachael Groner and John F. OHara. Bedford: St. Martins, 2014. 222-260. Print.
Wilson, G. Willow, writer. Ms. Marvel. Illustrated by Alphona, Adrian. Colorist Herring Ian.
Lettering by Caramagna VCs Joe. New York: Marvel, 2015. Print.

También podría gustarte