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Magical Negress: Re-Reading Agent 355 in Brian Vaughan's Y: The Last Man

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Magical Negress: Re-Reading Agent 355 in Brian Vaughan's Y: The Last Man. / Tembo, Kwasu.
In: Open Cultural Studies, Vol. 3, No. 1, 01.02.2019, p. 161-173.

Research output: Contribution to Journal/MagazineJournal articlepeer-review

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Tembo K. Magical Negress: Re-Reading Agent 355 in Brian Vaughan's Y: The Last Man. Open Cultural Studies. 2019 Feb 1;3(1):161-173. doi: 10.1515/culture-2019-0014

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Tembo, Kwasu. / Magical Negress : Re-Reading Agent 355 in Brian Vaughan's Y: The Last Man. In: Open Cultural Studies. 2019 ; Vol. 3, No. 1. pp. 161-173.

Bibtex

@article{aefa245ee354441093e33e49c2140b2b,
title = "Magical Negress: Re-Reading Agent 355 in Brian Vaughan's Y: The Last Man",
abstract = "Be it Pride of Baghdad (2006), Ex Machina (2004), Runaways (2003), The Private Eye (2013) or Saga (2012), the comic book author Brian K. Vaughan is renowned not only for the scope of the projects in his oeuvre but the nuance with which he portrays his characters, many of which are of types that usually receive less mainstream attention than their white, heteronormative, superhero counterparts. This paper will perform a close reading of Agent 355 as she appears in Vol. 1-10 of Y: The Last Man. As an analytical framework through which to parse the character, it will make recourse to the literary, cultural, and theoretical concepts associated with the magical negro. In doing so, this paper will analyse and explore the ways in which Vaughan's writing simultaneously countermands and reinforces these stereotypical stock character arrangements in a precarious balancing act. Strong, intelligent, and determined in her expression and use of agency, 355 often fulfils the function of the magical negro, sanctified, and infused with black girl magic. On the other hand, Agent 355's entire characterisation is also simultaneously circumscribed within the strong black woman stereotype replete with noble suffering and enduring perseverance.",
keywords = "Vaughan, Y: The Last Man, magical Negro, race, representation, sexuality, stereotype",
author = "Kwasu Tembo",
year = "2019",
month = feb,
day = "1",
doi = "10.1515/culture-2019-0014",
language = "English",
volume = "3",
pages = "161--173",
journal = "Open Cultural Studies",
issn = "2451-3474",
publisher = "de Gruyter",
number = "1",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Magical Negress

T2 - Re-Reading Agent 355 in Brian Vaughan's Y: The Last Man

AU - Tembo, Kwasu

PY - 2019/2/1

Y1 - 2019/2/1

N2 - Be it Pride of Baghdad (2006), Ex Machina (2004), Runaways (2003), The Private Eye (2013) or Saga (2012), the comic book author Brian K. Vaughan is renowned not only for the scope of the projects in his oeuvre but the nuance with which he portrays his characters, many of which are of types that usually receive less mainstream attention than their white, heteronormative, superhero counterparts. This paper will perform a close reading of Agent 355 as she appears in Vol. 1-10 of Y: The Last Man. As an analytical framework through which to parse the character, it will make recourse to the literary, cultural, and theoretical concepts associated with the magical negro. In doing so, this paper will analyse and explore the ways in which Vaughan's writing simultaneously countermands and reinforces these stereotypical stock character arrangements in a precarious balancing act. Strong, intelligent, and determined in her expression and use of agency, 355 often fulfils the function of the magical negro, sanctified, and infused with black girl magic. On the other hand, Agent 355's entire characterisation is also simultaneously circumscribed within the strong black woman stereotype replete with noble suffering and enduring perseverance.

AB - Be it Pride of Baghdad (2006), Ex Machina (2004), Runaways (2003), The Private Eye (2013) or Saga (2012), the comic book author Brian K. Vaughan is renowned not only for the scope of the projects in his oeuvre but the nuance with which he portrays his characters, many of which are of types that usually receive less mainstream attention than their white, heteronormative, superhero counterparts. This paper will perform a close reading of Agent 355 as she appears in Vol. 1-10 of Y: The Last Man. As an analytical framework through which to parse the character, it will make recourse to the literary, cultural, and theoretical concepts associated with the magical negro. In doing so, this paper will analyse and explore the ways in which Vaughan's writing simultaneously countermands and reinforces these stereotypical stock character arrangements in a precarious balancing act. Strong, intelligent, and determined in her expression and use of agency, 355 often fulfils the function of the magical negro, sanctified, and infused with black girl magic. On the other hand, Agent 355's entire characterisation is also simultaneously circumscribed within the strong black woman stereotype replete with noble suffering and enduring perseverance.

KW - Vaughan

KW - Y: The Last Man

KW - magical Negro

KW - race

KW - representation

KW - sexuality

KW - stereotype

U2 - 10.1515/culture-2019-0014

DO - 10.1515/culture-2019-0014

M3 - Journal article

VL - 3

SP - 161

EP - 173

JO - Open Cultural Studies

JF - Open Cultural Studies

SN - 2451-3474

IS - 1

ER -