I seemed to be able to make Mara's editor Sanna Amanat more like a girl, but she made a speech by TEDxTeen last Monday. I know what I know. I use that particular world too much. But I dare to see your conversation 3 times without agreeing with me.
You will remember that Amanat was the first collaborator of the personal series featuring Muslim women super hero Marvel. Her 16½ minute conversation is worth a look, but this is one of my favorite parts. It starts at 13:17
So, when a small girl saw X - Men on the TV screen years ago, they were concentrating on it - not just the reason they took her wonderful adventure. This is because they told them that she could do different things. In fact, you have to fight for it. I wonder if we all want to be heroes. If the hero looks like us, is not it a wonderful thing?
So why do characters like Kamala Khan sympathize with so many people? Like the first African American and Latin American Spider-Man, Miles Morales, Kamalakan is much bigger than pop culture icons. She gathered to respond to a global and conscious representational desire. For those Muslim Americans who like me, regardless of their gender, gender, race or religion, bacon sniffs, geek girls, and someone else are not suitable for themselves I just feel that.
In the actual Marvel series, Kamala Khan is just a girl who tries to fit exactly. She negotiates and renegotiates who she is. And all the rules that accompany it. Where does she belong? She does not understand. She is still thinking about her true journey. But what she knows is that she does not want to be limited by the labels she imposes on herself. Truly, the story of Kamalakan is a story of everyone. This is about what you face the assigned label. And carve them. Then redefine them. Until you understand who you are. And what do you truly believe?
In the meantime, she quotes a poem by Rumi, talks more about X-Men and stimulates psychology while waving a super hero's T-shirt. I am dead. Oprah, you have games
Kishwer Vikaas is co-founder and editor of The Aerogram. Follow her @ phillygrrl on Twitter or send an email to [email protected].
Sana Amanat, cartoon comic Sana Amanat has been in the publishing industry for the past nine years. Currently she is an editor of Marvel Entertainment and is in charge of developing and managing creative content for the company's various publishing businesses. Her famous work changes the image of Ultimate Comics's Spiderman Miles Morales, first African American and Latin American Spiderman, and epoch-making Captain Marvel, a female superhero image It is a series. Recently she attracted worldwide media attention and collaborated on her first solo collection, including Muslim's female superhero, Marvell, who stimulated excitement and dialogue about identity and Muslim - American struggle. She repeatedly appeared in the national media and told Tedx Teen about the transformational power of storytelling.
As a storyteller, looking forward to someone's audience and potential feedback, positive and negative are important. According to the New York Times, co-creators of Marvel's editors Sana Amanat and Pakistani-American teenager Kamala Khan (the fourth Marvel) and their creative team prepare Marvel's release in 2013. All possible reactions 10 The real personal story of American Muslims has influence and is supported by many American Muslims and Americans. That said, society often predicts that they should tell stories or who they should talk about, so always oppose the outside opposition and the American Muslim community There will be people.