‘Watchmen’ Is a Revolution — So Why Are the X-Men Still Afraid of Blackness?

The show is an unflinching reminder that a comic book can do more than simply feel like it speaks to my experience.

David Dennis, Jr.
LEVEL

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Photo: HBO

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WWhen I was six years old, I bought a VHS tape of the early-’90s cartoon X-Men: The Animated Series. At the beginning of the tape, Stan Lee discussed the Marvel mutants he’d created as being a stand-in for the civil rights movement of the ’60s. Professor X represented Martin Luther King Jr.’s vision of nonviolent protest, fighting for acceptance from a group of people who hates and fears him; his nemesis Magneto, who fought for mutant separatism and supremacy, played the Malcolm X-shaped foil to that vision.

At least, I think that’s what happened. Memory being what it is, I can’t prove to you that he actually said this. While people have pointed to the obvious analogy for decades, there’s little to suggest that Lee ever acknowledged it. Not that it matters: since the X-Men came to mainstream popularity in the ’80s, writers and fans alike have treated the franchise as an allegory for the way marginalized people — namely Black folks — are treated in America. That’s…

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David Dennis, Jr.
David Dennis, Jr.

Written by David Dennis, Jr.

Level Sr. Writer covering Race, Culture, Politics, TV, Music. Previously: The Undefeated, The Atlantic, Washington Post. Forthcoming book: The Movement Made Us