Originally posted by One Big Mob
Wait so because one manga artist won last year as the first manga artist ever to win one (and was only nominated twice), it instantly raises the bar to allow any? Not to mention it was adapted to comic format anyway.
... yes, manga is explicitly allowed, as is graphic work of *any* country. Bill Watterson ain't exactly French, you know? Nor is Bendis, Alan Moore, etc..
And we're just talking the shortlist of nominees, not even getting to the winner.
And that's just who came to mind for me.
There's also, say-
Jill Thomson, artist on Sandman, Swamp Thing, The Invisibles, etc.. Oh, and I will note, the award's traditionally favored artists. Writers are the minority.
Marie Severin, already in the Eisner Hall of Fame for her work on EC horror comics.
Colleen Doran, four-time Eisner award winning illustrator, Sandman and a whole ton of others.
Alison Bechdel, famous for the multi-decade long running 'Dykes to Watch Out For,' (the award's not just for comic *book* types, counterculture strips like that certainly count) and Fun Home which got adapted into an award-winning musical, as well as being highly praised itself.
Raid Sattouf, one of the declining nominees, mentions 5, including Rumiko Takashi- a name I'm sure pretty much everyone's heard, if another manga one- who he feel deserves his spot more.
Plus the others mentioned in the article....
You can't just expect them to start accepting any sort of manga work right away.
The question's not really about manga to begin with, just saying that some of the great mangaka would fit in the shortlist.
Might as well throw any male manga creator in there while we're at it.
Well, any that made a major contribution to the medium would fit on the list, yes.
I don't quite get the 'you just had a manga creator win, you can't have another on the shortlist' thing... I mean, manga is explicitly open ground.
And the world wide thing is kind of a misnomer as well. They're heavily biased towards french people and only 5 non europeans have even won one. Again, exception to the rule, not the norm.
Sure, but we're talking about the shortlist that had Brian Bendis, Alan Moore, Frank Miller, Stan Lee, and a number of other people from America and other non-French countries. The shortlist is less French than the results.
And it's not like it had any French women creators on the list, not even ones that'd been on the list before.
Marjane Satrapi tends to got brought up because she had such a world-wide splash in Persepholis.
Claire Bretécher is a famous and influential French political cartoonist.
There are major options.
The simple fact remains that there are not many female comic creators that are actually worthy of it.
There's less because the industry's historically been sexist, but there's still more than enough to include on such an open list.
The Guardian: The Not So Secret History of Women in Comics
There are good writers don't get me wrong, but are they better than any man who hasn't been nominated as well?
^^; Seriously? That's your argument?
There are some who've contributions are up there with just about everyone- remember my first example was of someone who helped forge a huge genre and specifically made a great impact on the French comic market.
Does their work standout on its own? Do they have enough accolades to be in contention for a "lifetime" award?
Yes. Easily. Definitely.
Grow up, comics is not a boys-only club, and even when the industry acted like it was much more than now, it still was not nearly as much as a boys only club as many pretend.
Which is exactly the point.
Heck, here is what Bendis said:
BENDIS: just off the top of my head i have fifteen female creator names i can think of that deserve the honor. not the nomination. the full honor.
And he doesn't think he should've been on the list. All in all, he's been pretty cool on this.
For example, should we be applauding Gail Simone getting nominated if say Grant Morrison has never been?
I believe the point would be more, both would reasonably deserve placement, so we should applaud either, but when someone picks to exclude all women creators, and then re-writes comic history a bit to cover it up when called on it, it raises an eyebrow.
I don't want to look up if either have been nominated, it's just a point of who deserves it more. If deserving creators are getting shafted over shitty choices, then by all means it's a shitty situation. But when the deserving creator's name is "Women", then it raises an eyebrow as to how legitimate the complaint is.
It's not that any individual women isn't on it- tastes vary, after all, and there's only 30 slots, not being on the list is not particularly a snub to an individual. It's that when chosen to compile a list of 30, they managed to pick precisely 0, and then when people pointed it out, they tried to downplay the number and impact of women in the industry.
And note when actually pushed on it, they didn't actually have much trouble rustling up a half-dozen more names themselves.
If people are upset that women aren't getting their just dues, then more women should write great comics. It's that simple.
Women are writing and creating many comics, have been since the beginning (there were women political cartoonist before they had the vote), and defending people pointedly excluding women because 'they should just make more comics,' is not exactly going to help anything.
I mean, multiple women mentioned have decades-long careers with world famous influential works.
Lesse, Wendy Pini, Elfquest, for another.
Though Bendis getting a nomination makes a huge joke out of the whole ordeal, especially when they broke their "rules" to nominate him.
That's not rules-breaking btw, he just doesn't really fit in, since it's mostly people with much longer careers and accomplishments.