It's About Time for Wonder Woman to Wear the Pants

by Alex DiBranco · 2010-07-01 16:54:00 UTC
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Whether or not you're a comic books aficionado, you're no doubt familiar with Wonder Woman. When running down a line-up of some of those superheros who are best known among the only superficially comic-savvy public — for instance, Batman, Superman, Spiderman — hers is the only name that springs to mind as putting a "wo" in front of that "man." And Wonder Woman costumes make quite the popular Halloween get-up.

But if you have a Wonder Woman costume left over from last year that you thought you'd don again this October, be warned that you'll be woefully out of date, as DC Comics is presenting a Wonder Woman for the 21st century. In celebration of reaching issue number 600 of the Wonder Woman comic series, the superwoman is finally getting some pants.

That's right: pants. (Well, leggings, if you want to get technical.) The traditional Wonder Woman, who debuted in 1941, fights crime in a leotard and legs that are bare except for high red boots. The new-and-improved Wonder Woman gets to wear black leggings and a rad motorcycle jacket (check out a drawing of her new ensemble here). Basically, she's going to be a lot warmer during the winter months (as will be those who choose to dress up as her to go Trick-or-Treating).

She also looks a lot more like the kind of superhero who demands respect and can kick butt in the name of justice, rather than somebody who belongs in the Miss America swimsuit line-up. This is a refreshing update, even if Wonder Woman writer Jodi Picoult couldn't convince DC Comics to ditch the bustier, of which she complained, "as a woman, I know you wouldn’t fight crime in a bustier." While we'll have to see how the new Wonder Woman's sales go (and there are tales of a movie in the works), tuning in to female preferences for an empowered 21st century image might prove to be a big win for DC's marketing plan.

Photo credit: Loren Javier

Alex DiBranco is a Change.org Editor who has worked for the Nation, Political Research Associates, and the Center for American Progress. She is now based in New York City.
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