
The Gender Divide in My Graphic Novels Shelf
This content contains affiliate links. When you buy through these links, we may earn an affiliate commission.
I am not very “good” at being a “woman.” I am twenty-six years old and have never learned how to apply eye shadow or braid my own hair. I don’t experience any profound longing to bear a child. I did get married, like a good WASP, in the white dress and heels and jewelry, standing before a reverend and toasting with champagne I would pretend to drink, and while I adore my spouse and treasure those memories, I sometimes feel as though a different me from a distant world appears corseted and pristine in my photo album.
I’ve always been this way. As a kid I loved Barbies and horses, but I also loved dinosaurs and Yu-Gi-Oh! cards and the early-2000s TV show Battlebots. When grade-school friends wanted to do my hair or paint my nails, I let them, nervously and passively, like a poodle standing still as the groomer shaved it into an awkward shape. It wasn’t the fact that other girls did these things but the fact that my interest and participation were assumed that made me uncomfortable and lonely.
This isn’t gender dysphoria; I never, at any point, wanted to not be a girl. Boys were just as alienating – they seemed to place disproportionate emphasis on how far you could throw a football, and I had a vague sense that superhero stories were all about punching your way through problems. Worse, they thought girls were weak.
So when I started reading comics, I skipped the supes and devoured reams of action-adventure manga. Recommendations and gifts eventually steered me into Western comics, first mainstream, then indie. Over the years I’ve amassed a graphic novel collection that overflows the bookshelf at the foot of my bed. And recently I wondered: What do people see when they look at my bookshelf? Would they guess that I’m an adult woman?
As a representation of my interests, my graphic novel bookshelf has some serious flaws:
- It doesn’t reflect webcomics, or the small but growing number of comics I read through digital subscription services like Marvel Unlimited.
- Over the past three years I have read a large amount of borrowed comics from the library or from friends. Because of the lower cost investment, I’ve also been more willing to take a chance on unknown comics or comics outside my typical reading habits.