Wonder Woman, no. 81

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Title

Wonder Woman, no. 81

Description

Wonder Woman was created by the psychologist William Moulton Marston (using the pen name Charles Moulton) and artist Harry G. Peter. Though Marston died in 1947, “Charles Moulton” is still credited as the author of this issue’s Wonder Woman stories, and Peter draws them. As Jill Lepore has documented, Marston created Wonder Woman, with the help of his two domestic partners, to be an explicitly feminist hero. Marston claimed in a 1942 interview that “Wonder Woman . . . is a New Woman. ‘The one outstanding benefit to humanity from the first World War was the great increase in the strength of women—physical, economic, mental,’ he says. ‘Women definitely emerged from a false, haremlike protection and began taking over men’s work. Grealy to their own surprise they discovered that they were potentially as strong as men—in some ways stronger’” (232-233). (Reference: Jill Lepore, The Secret History of Wonder Woman. New York: Vintage, 2015.)

Publisher

Date

Contributor

Ellsworth, Whitney, 1908-1980 (Editor)
Kanigher, Robert (Editor)
Novick, Irv (Penciler & Inker)

Rights

RIT Libraries makes materials from its collections available for educational and research purposes pursuant to U.S. Copyright Law. You are free to use this Item in any way that is permitted by the copyright and related rights legislation that applies to your use. It is your responsibility to obtain permission from the copyright holder to publish or reproduce images in print or electronic form.

Language

English

Type

Still image

Identifier

wonderwoman_081_cover.jpg

Citation

“Wonder Woman, no. 81,” Cary Graphic Arts Collection at RIT Libraries, accessed November 21, 2024, https://cary-exhibits.rit.edu/items/show/226.