godisawesome
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- Sep 6, 2011
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Part of the problem with strictly following canonical race and ethnicity is the lack of previous presence and power a new character or successor will bring right off the bat. Black Panther, Luke Cage, etc, were established, created and promoted early on enough to grab a fanbase's attention and become established.
But new, more diverse characters, especially successor characters, generally get pushed aside, retired, or butchered because they just aren't established like their competitors. Connor Hawke was white washed, killed, then neutered upon resurrection. Cass Cain was booted into limbo, than banished once more upon making a successful and largely applauded return. Orpheus was killed and forgotten. It's more an issue of being a popular character than racism when it comes to this issue.
So, you change up a popular canonical character. You weather the fan rage and anger, then if you write good stories you move on with your life and a more diverse cast. Like Nick Fury, Alan Scott, and Heimdall. All three were changed via some new media or format, and all three have just as much staying power as Miles Morales, but with a likely bigger fanbase from the word go.
So yeah, it's still an issue, but the reasoning is sound from a strictly capitalistic point of view.
But new, more diverse characters, especially successor characters, generally get pushed aside, retired, or butchered because they just aren't established like their competitors. Connor Hawke was white washed, killed, then neutered upon resurrection. Cass Cain was booted into limbo, than banished once more upon making a successful and largely applauded return. Orpheus was killed and forgotten. It's more an issue of being a popular character than racism when it comes to this issue.
So, you change up a popular canonical character. You weather the fan rage and anger, then if you write good stories you move on with your life and a more diverse cast. Like Nick Fury, Alan Scott, and Heimdall. All three were changed via some new media or format, and all three have just as much staying power as Miles Morales, but with a likely bigger fanbase from the word go.
So yeah, it's still an issue, but the reasoning is sound from a strictly capitalistic point of view.
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