Marvel Muslim Comics

Lewis

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In Marvel Comics, Ms. Marvel returns as Muslim teen

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http://news.msn.com/pop-culture/in-marvel-comics-ms-marvel-returns-as-muslim-teen
Marvel Comics
This comic book image released by Marvel Comics shows character Kamala Khan, second left, with her family Aamir, father Yusuf, mother Disha and friend Bruno, from the "Ms. Marvel" issue.
Marvel Comics' new Ms. Marvel series featuring a Muslim girl expresses a "desire to explore the Muslim-American diaspora from an authentic perspective."

Marvel Comics is bringing Ms. Marvel back as a 16-year-old daughter of Pakistani immigrants living in Jersey City named Kamala Khan.

The character — among the first to be a series protagonist who is both a woman and Muslim — is part of Marvel Entertainment's efforts to reflect a growing diversity among its readers while keeping ahold of the contemporary relevance that have underlined its foundation since the creation of Spider-Man and the X-Men in the early 1960s.

Writer G. Willow Wilson and artist Adrian Alphona, working with editor Sana Amanat, say the series reflects Khan's vibrant but kinetic world, learning to deal with superpowers, family expectations and adolescence.

Amanat calls the series a "desire to explore the Muslim-American diaspora from an authentic perspective" and what it means to be young and lost amid expectations by others while also telling the story of a teenager coming to grips with having amazing powers.

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AP Photo: Marvel Comics

This comic book cover image released by Marvel Comics shows character Kamala Khan on the "Ms. Marvel" issue.

"I wanted Ms. Marvel to be true-to-life, something real people could relate to, particularly young women. High school was a very vivid time in my life, so I drew heavily on those experiences — impending adulthood, dealing with school, emotionally charged friendships that are such a huge part of being a teenager," said Willow, whose previous comics work includes Vertigo's "Cairo" and the series "Air."

"It's for all the geek girls out there and everybody else who's ever looked at life from the fringe."

She can grow and shrink her limbs and her body and, Willow said, ultimately, she'll be able to shape shift into other forms.

The idea came after a discussion with senior editor Stephen Wacker as they compared stories about growing up.

From there it germinated into a "character for all those little girls who are growing up now the way you are growing up," she recalled. Wilson was brought on board to write the series and the team quickly got approval from Marvel's creative committee to move forward.

DC Comics last fall relaunched its "Green Lantern" series with Simon Baz, an Arab American and Muslim. The character reflects writer Geoff Johns' Lebanese ancestry and his upbringing in the Detroit area.

There have been a few others: Marvel Comics has Dust, a young Afghan woman whose mutant ability to manipulate sand and dust has been part of the popular X-Men books. DC Comics in late 2010 introduced Nightrunner, a young Muslim hero of Algerian descent reared in Paris.

The creative team said that Khan's backstory, growing up Muslim, is an element of the story, but not the critical foundation, either.

"Kamala is not unlike Peter Parker," said Marvel Editor-In-Chief Axel Alonso of the teenager turned wall crawler. "She's a 16-year-old girl from the suburbs who is trying to figure out who she is and trying to forge an identity when she suddenly bestows great power and learns the great responsibility that comes with it."

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They are the heathen; they have no standards. They will do virtually anything to get money or because of the voice of the devil masked as "popular opinion".
 
May the Lord raise up a new generation of Christian-based comics, led by a Christian-owned comic company that becomes greater than Marvel.
 
What's the problem?
I mean other than that it sounds like it's full of highschool cliché?
 
The main issue is that all that stuff, other than being a lie, only focuses on problems and how awful it is to have problems, but there is no solution with these things - they just keep you in the problem. If they do overcome, it's because they did it on their own (usually at great loss) and they are never told about Jesus and what the Word of God can do for you if you look at that instead of the problem and take the promises in the Word of God to overcome the problem with the power of God, and at no loss.
 
I have that same issue with grocery stores. They fail to thank God for the harvest they sell and profit by.
 
its entertainment! if its offensive then don't watch it. to expect the sinners to be Christ like is like being mad at the devil for being what he is.
 
Marvel always had characters of different ethnic/ religious/ racial backgrounds. Though they were usually kind of stereotypical, but what do you expect of comics. Soo it's well within their normal range to have a muslim character.

I had a good laugh about her superpowers, though.
She can grow and shrink her limbs and her body...
I have a good idea what a teenage girl would do with such an ability. :biggrin2
On a serious note though, if the authors are clever they could use the idea of those powers to adress the negative body image issues that many teenage girls and adult women have. That would be a more interesting detail than a muslim background.

And Marvel comics aren't made to spread the gospel. If you think spreading the gospel is the only purpose literature, film, TV, and so on should have then you would have to get angry at almost all entertainment out there. That'd probably be more effort than it's worth. Don't get mad at those that do something worldly instead of spreading the gospel. Use your energy for spreading the gospel yourself instead.

And as for christian comics, or films, or books, or whatever, I take issues with them, because according to what I have seen or read in the past they are preachy, predictable (because you know what the message is and they usually aren't subtle about it), and thus boring. That's not how our Lord or our church should be represented.
(I don't like Hollywood entertainment either, for similar reasons: predictable and boring.)
 
Yes, there are some cheesy Christian movies out there, but there are also some good ones. The Passion was good; Facing the Giants, Flywheel, Courageous, FireProof to name a few. Joshua, to name another. Maybe you could make some?
 
If by the "The Passion" you mean The Passion of the Christ, that wasn't a good movie. The soundtrack was amazing. Some of the actors were good (some were horrible). But neither did the movie bring the message of the gospel across, nor did it make any sense unless you already are a christian. If you don't have any knowledge about the gospels or don't care about them it's just mere splatter. The cinematography was annoying, too (way too many slow motion shots, probably included in the movie to enhance the dramatic effect or so).

Courageous was one of the lame christian movies I was thinking about when writing that previous post. I felt like watching something faith based and found it online somewhere. Preachy and full of stereotypical people and backward gender roles.
The others you mentioned I haven't seen. If Left Behind or The Encounter or 2012 Doomsday are representative for christian movies I wouldn't even want to see more.

Quo vadis and Ben Hur were great movies. Not sure they count as christian movies but they had faith related themes in them.
Although sitting through them is quite a challenge. But they are amazing movies. So 60 years ago they made some good christian movies.
 
Marvel always had characters of different ethnic/ religious/ racial backgrounds. Though they were usually kind of stereotypical, but what do you expect of comics. Soo it's well within their normal range to have a muslim character.

I had a good laugh about her superpowers, though.

I have a good idea what a teenage girl would do with such an ability. :biggrin2
On a serious note though, if the authors are clever they could use the idea of those powers to adress the negative body image issues that many teenage girls and adult women have. That would be a more interesting detail than a muslim background.

And Marvel comics aren't made to spread the gospel. If you think spreading the gospel is the only purpose literature, film, TV, and so on should have then you would have to get angry at almost all entertainment out there. That'd probably be more effort than it's worth. Don't get mad at those that do something worldly instead of spreading the gospel. Use your energy for spreading the gospel yourself instead.

And as for christian comics, or films, or books, or whatever, I take issues with them, because according to what I have seen or read in the past they are preachy, predictable (because you know what the message is and they usually aren't subtle about it), and thus boring. That's not how our Lord or our church should be represented.
(I don't like Hollywood entertainment either, for similar reasons: predictable and boring.)
life is boring if want it to be. i can be the same about music or anything if choose to. so its wrong to direct and forward? if the audience is Christians then why be subtle? actually tolkein wasn't subtle then in the thirities but today he is considered subtle. ghandi didn't get his idea of passive resistance from Hinduism but from Christianity! that is what the hindus in india will and do say about him. they know that Hinduism has no such idea originally. they hate that but they like that approach.
 
Life isn't boring at all, especially christian life. But then why make boring movies about it?
If movies have a moral message it 's best presented somewhat subtle (the audience should have to discover it themselves), because otherwise it feels like mere propaganda. Non-christians just won't relate but feel like being force-fed so much christian world view. So that's no way of bringing people to Jesus. It may even repel people from Jesus. And christians may just feel offended that movies based on one dimensional characters and with horrible writing are supposed to edify them. Just out of curiosity I just checked imdb for Facing the Giants, and it's funny how many of the negative user reviews have some sort of a "I am a christian and I hated this movie" kind of sentence in it.
 
i don't like every movie, but if you don't like it then DONT watch it! i can say the same about a Christian form i do martial arts. really was the arts of KILLING ever meant to be romantic and means of making ones soul better? NO it wasn't. yes in the art of war one will find some type of purpose and order. but nothing like the Christian views that can be added to it. been there done it from both sides of the coin with the army and the arts.i know a bunch of sinners who wouldn't like being preached to in mma, not that medina is that direct but he does say it from time to time and he doesn't hide his faith.

trust me im not big into movies my self and tend to stay into my own electlic world of sci-fi and fantasy. but i don't have a problem with the others. if god leads them to do it then so be it. i wont knock it.

besides i find KENDO boring. lol. if i want to do sword arts , it would be for what? history? the jo and bo work would the most useful stuff for me. the footwork of the iado and battado is already in aikido and other jj's.
 
Ben Hur was a good one at the end, I agree. There are going to be "stereotypical" characters in any movie; the point is to enjoy the content of the movie, even if the paint and decorations aren't as desirable as you would like. You can extract a lot of scriptural things if you watch LOTR, and you can get a lot by watching Flywheel, which has no special effects at all and the acting is not top notch either. The Passion was good because it got people talking.
 
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