Culture Marvel Comics facing backlash for black stereotypes in "What if." - Miles Morales is Thor

  • Want to keep track of this thread?
    Accounts can bookmark posts, watch threads for updates, and jump back to where you stopped reading.
    Create account
Story here.

Miles Morales' Thor Variant Receives Social Media Backlash​

Marvel's controversial comic in which Miles Morales becomes Thor receives strong backlash from fans on social media days after its release.

BY JOSHUA ISAAKPUBLISHED 2 DAYS AGO
Miles-Morales-becomes-Thor.png

Warning: contains spoilers for What If...? Miles Morales Became Thor? #4

Marvel's latest comic in which Miles Morales becomes the mighty Thor received strong backlash from fans on social media after images from the issue began circulating online. Part of a series where Miles transforms into other heroes from across the Marvel Universe, What If...Miles Morales Became Thor? #4 depicts the second Spider-Man (after Peter Parker) in an all-new Asgard as he struggles with his responsibilities as the successor to Odin as the realm's new King. Fans have widely ridiculed the issue, stating that many of the creative choices are insensitive and even insulting towards Black culture, and even Miles himself as an Afro-Latinx character.

In anticipation of Spider-Man's upcoming 60th anniversary at Marvel, Marvel is releasing a considerable amount of Spider-Man content. Among the new stories is a What If? series centering around Miles Morales, the Spider-Man from the Ultimate Universe (who was since brought over to the 616 mainline universe) who has become a popular character in his own right. In previous issues, Miles has already become Captain America, Wolverine, and the Incredible Hulk, and now the character wields the hammer Mjolnir as Thor.
In What If...Miles Morales Became Thor? #4, written by Yehudi Mercado with art by Luigi Zagaria, Miles (here called Thor) lives in a hybrid world of Asgard and Brooklyn. Graffiti adorns buildings, shoes hang on power lines, and cars are even pulled by goats. The criticisms by fans point out this aesthetic immediately, pointing out the stereotypical environment and Miles' narration ("Of all the five realms, Asgard is his hood" for example). The shoes hanging on power lines in particular was a confusing part of this new version of Asgard, as shoes thrown onto power lines often belong to someone who has died. Here, however, they are used as decoration. His look is another point of consternation; Thor wears sneakers and carries a version of Mjolnir covered in graffiti, and after the weapon is summoned, he shouts "Hammer time!" These stereotypical elements and misinformed depictions of Miles's neighborhood have led many fans to liken the issue to minstrelsy.

Miles-Morales-as-Thor-walks-through-Brooklyn-Asgard.png



To add insult to injury, this Thor doesn't possess the typical loquacious Asgardian vocabulary; instead, he speaks as 616 Miles with an exaggerated stereotypical slang (and in the entire book, no other character speaks like this). Fans on social media have likened these and other stereotypical elements to a comic version of a Blaxploitation film, and it's not hard to see their point of view. By combining Miles Morales with Thor, the writers have also created yet another Black superhero with electricity-based powers; whether or not this move was intentional is immaterial, as the sheer overabundance of these heroes is a long-running trope that is impossible to avoid.
It is worth noting that, although Miles was created by Brian Michael Bendis, a white writer himself, this issue of the series is the only one not written by a Black writer, as previous issues have been written by Cody Ziglar, Anthony Piper, and John Ridley. While the story has effective character moments, with Loki being Thor's uncle rather than his brother, and Thor's reluctance to take the throne in stark contrast to the 616 version, it is too reliant on exploitative elements and outdated cultural stereotypes. Perhaps this is a sign that continually combining characters such as Miles Morales and Thor is less effective than simply writing these superheroes as themselves; Miles Morales is a fan-favorite in part because of his everyman qualities and his desire to help others, and that is more than enough to tell an effective story.

miles-morales-thor-4.jpg


RCO006_1655324861.jpg


I don't even...
 
you know the brain rot's bad when they start defending hilariously out of touch caricatures

although if I'm being honest I'd rather urban blacks acted like hippity hop jive turkeys instead of niggers

edit: are those fucking shoes on power lines lmao? do the artists not understand that they're a drug dealer symbol and not some cultural thing? no inner city nigga is going to waste more than one pair of jordans on a single intersection
 
Stereotypes exist for a reason. There's a reason every rich rapper and b-baller leaves the hood the moment they get money.
 
Shouldn't this offend White people more than blacks? I mean, they are appropriating European culture.
 
Didn't know what if was even a comic, I thought this was complaining about the cartoon thing way too late. Admittedly it too has some stupid messaging, though I would guess there were more articles supporting it than not.
 
Didn't know what if was even a comic, I thought this was complaining about the cartoon thing way too late. Admittedly it too has some stupid messaging, though I would guess there were more articles supporting it than not.
What If...? has been a series since the 1970s
 
as shoes thrown onto power lines often belong to someone who has died.

Is that true? I thought the shoes on power lines thing was some sort of cruel “prank” that blacks did to their fellow man to effectively destroy them and taunt them, seeing as how shoes (especially designer shoes) are seen as more valuable commodities than something merely to cover their feet with…it’s one of those things like black weddings and black funerals.
 
Is that true? I thought the shoes on power lines thing was some sort of cruel “prank” that blacks did to their fellow man to effectively destroy them and taunt them, seeing as how shoes (especially designer shoes) are seen as more valuable commodities than something merely to cover their feet with…it’s one of those things like black weddings and black funerals.
Going to bet on urban myth, or it started out like that then just became a shitty littering trend.
 
How does someone else "become" Thor? Isn't Thor just... Thor? It's not a title, it's just the dude's name. You don't take on someone's name when you take their position.
 
Is that true? I thought the shoes on power lines thing was some sort of cruel “prank” that blacks did to their fellow man to effectively destroy them and taunt them, seeing as how shoes (especially designer shoes) are seen as more valuable commodities than something merely to cover their feet with…it’s one of those things like black weddings and black funerals.

Going to bet on urban myth, or it started out like that then just became a shitty littering trend.

They do it to bring down the property values of the neighborhoods they move in to.
 
LOL black Asgard has graffiti everywhere, cars pulled by goats and all prose written in rap meters. What, no room for a Popeye’s stand on every corner and thumb-sized joints raining from the sky?
 
Back
Top Bottom