Bitch Planet Volume 2: President Bitch
by Kelly Sue DeConnick, Valentine De Landro (Illustrator)
Bitch Planet collected (2), Bitch Planet (Collections and Selections — Volume 2)
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Eleanor's gambit: The "PRESIDENT BITCH" arc concludes. BITCH PLANET will return in August.Tags
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"Lean in, can you hear it?"
(Full disclosure: I received a free electronic galley for review through Edelweiss. Trigger warning for plot points involving rape, misogyny, and transphobia.)
About a month ago Goodreads started sending me emails every time I marked a book read: "You finished Heart-Shaped Box. What's next?" Usually I just send them to the trash without a second thought; just another gimmick to increase engagement, you know? But the one for Bitch Planet? Kind of gave me pause.
What comes next after that dope ass ending? I NEED TO KNOW! As for ideas on what we can do in the meantime? I'm down (though I somehow doubt that, say, volunteering as a clinic escort or showing up to your state capitol building in full Handmaid regalia show more will make Goodreads' top ten suggestions).
So I really dug the first volume, Extraordinary Machine, when it came out in October 2015. I think I even pre-ordered it, something I rarely do, on the strength of DeConnick's Pretty Deadly (which was released earlier that year, and I cannot recommend strongly enough). It was smart and unapologetic and feminist as fuck, with a diverse and believable cast of characters. (Black women are incarcerated at four times the rate of white women - a disparity that's only like to worsen under the Protectorate.)
When I reread Extraordinary Machine prior to diving into the second volume, my love for it only grew*: in today's political climate, wherein nearly 63 million of my fellow citizens voted a reality tv buffoon and admitted sexual assailant into the White House (due in no small part to a backlash against the first black President in addition to sexism and misogyny), dystopias like Bitch Planet seem more trenchant than ever.
And President Bitch? Well, it's even better than its predecessor. (With a name like that, was there any doubt?) Fittingly, the volume starts off with fallen hero Meiko's backstory - which spans a full issue and includes a prominent trigger warning for rape. Equal parts heart-rending and amazing, it left me in awe of the entire Maki clan - father Makoto in particular.
The narrative then picks up more or less where Extraordinary Machine left off, only shit doesn't go down quite how you'd expect. Kam finds who/what she's looking for (how did I miss that foreshadowing in Volume 1!?), the N.C.s realize they're not the only "auxiliary compliance outpost" on their ship, and we meet President Bitch - a black woman who's been labeled a terrorist by the (largely white, all-male) Protectorate. Naturally.
Things go sideways before you can say "Illegitimi non carborundum," and Volume 2 ends with a challenge, and a promise: as long as the women of earth and space have each other's backs, the resistance lives. All hail President Bitch!
Oh, and the end commentary? Don't skip it. It'll give you yet another layer of appreciation for the TLC that DeConnick, Soma, and De Landro poured into Bitch Planet.
* I bumped my rating up to five stars from the original four!
http://www.easyvegan.info/2017/06/06/bitch-planet-volume-2-president-bitch-by-ke... show less
(Full disclosure: I received a free electronic galley for review through Edelweiss. Trigger warning for plot points involving rape, misogyny, and transphobia.)
About a month ago Goodreads started sending me emails every time I marked a book read: "You finished Heart-Shaped Box. What's next?" Usually I just send them to the trash without a second thought; just another gimmick to increase engagement, you know? But the one for Bitch Planet? Kind of gave me pause.
What comes next after that dope ass ending? I NEED TO KNOW! As for ideas on what we can do in the meantime? I'm down (though I somehow doubt that, say, volunteering as a clinic escort or showing up to your state capitol building in full Handmaid regalia show more will make Goodreads' top ten suggestions).
So I really dug the first volume, Extraordinary Machine, when it came out in October 2015. I think I even pre-ordered it, something I rarely do, on the strength of DeConnick's Pretty Deadly (which was released earlier that year, and I cannot recommend strongly enough). It was smart and unapologetic and feminist as fuck, with a diverse and believable cast of characters. (Black women are incarcerated at four times the rate of white women - a disparity that's only like to worsen under the Protectorate.)
When I reread Extraordinary Machine prior to diving into the second volume, my love for it only grew*: in today's political climate, wherein nearly 63 million of my fellow citizens voted a reality tv buffoon and admitted sexual assailant into the White House (due in no small part to a backlash against the first black President in addition to sexism and misogyny), dystopias like Bitch Planet seem more trenchant than ever.
And President Bitch? Well, it's even better than its predecessor. (With a name like that, was there any doubt?) Fittingly, the volume starts off with fallen hero Meiko's backstory - which spans a full issue and includes a prominent trigger warning for rape. Equal parts heart-rending and amazing, it left me in awe of the entire Maki clan - father Makoto in particular.
The narrative then picks up more or less where Extraordinary Machine left off, only shit doesn't go down quite how you'd expect. Kam finds who/what she's looking for (how did I miss that foreshadowing in Volume 1!?), the N.C.s realize they're not the only "auxiliary compliance outpost" on their ship, and we meet President Bitch - a black woman who's been labeled a terrorist by the (largely white, all-male) Protectorate. Naturally.
Things go sideways before you can say "Illegitimi non carborundum," and Volume 2 ends with a challenge, and a promise: as long as the women of earth and space have each other's backs, the resistance lives. All hail President Bitch!
Oh, and the end commentary? Don't skip it. It'll give you yet another layer of appreciation for the TLC that DeConnick, Soma, and De Landro poured into Bitch Planet.
* I bumped my rating up to five stars from the original four!
http://www.easyvegan.info/2017/06/06/bitch-planet-volume-2-president-bitch-by-ke... show less
President Bitch is a brutal, intense, and amazing installment in a series that was already brutal, intense, and amazing. Set in the same patriarchal dystopian nightmare world as the first volume, where women who have been deemed "Non-Compliant" by virtue of being not submissive enough, or insufficiently attentive to their husband's needs, or being interested in women, or just being unattractive or obese, are shipped off to a prison planet dubbed "Bitch Planet" where they are supposed to be reeducated into good little women. In reality, the women in the "Bitch Planet" prison system are treated brutally, and in the first volume, some were assembled into a sports team intended to compete against male teams as an political exhibition, but show more instead everything went wrong for them and one member of the team ended up dead.
With the stage thus set, President Bitch sets about expanding the world and increasing the depth of the story. This volume opens up with what amounts to a flashback involving Meiko Maki, the woman killed at the end of the first volume, and how she ended up an N.C. condemned to Bitch Planet. This sequence is harrowing - showing the length that parents will go to try to give their daughters a better life than the one allowed by the Patriarchs, and also showing the inherent corruption in the system that permits a man with a creepy fetish for young Asian girls to try to pressure those parents into handing one of their daughters over to him. The ultimate act that puts Meiko into prison is brutal and vicious, and entirely appropriate given the provocations that led to it. But what is striking about this portion of the book is the array of little background details about the world that crop up, from a mother being refused access to her daughter in a hospital, to the implications made about what is considered appropriate (and inappropriate) education for girls. Every aspect of the book serves to give the reader a view into the lives of the people who live in the dystopian society of the book, and the picture is stark and bleak.
Much of the book flows from Meiko's murder in book one. Meiko's father, not knowing Meiko is dead, agrees to travel to Bitch Planet to build a sports arena in the hopes that he can see her. His attempts to locate his daughter result in complete chaos for the administration, and allow much of what happens in the second half of the book to take place. Whitney, the former operative of the Specials Division finds herself removed from the staff and sent into the prison as an inmate - discovering that as a member of the oppressed class, her higher status was conditional and at the sufferance of the oppressors. Penny blames herself for Meiko's death. All of these threads become important plot elements as the story moves forward, serving as catalysts for other events that push the world to a larger scale and push the story further along. Although the story has not yet fully paid off on this score, Meiko's death seems to be the event that sets all other events into motion that ultimately results in fundamental change - in a sense, she seems destined to become the martyr that sparks the revolution.
Alongside those stories driven by Meiko's death is Kam's quest to locate her sister Morowa, also consigned to imprisonment on Bitch Planet, although her crime was gender falsification - in short, Morowa is a transwoman kept in the compound reserved for other transwomen. The story provides a sequence showing Morowa's incarceration, and the brutal, open transmisogyny that accompanies it, as well as the ways in which the inmates hold each other up in the face of the indignities heaped upon them. This sequence does make one wonder what the compound with the transmen would look like, as I cannot imagine that the Patriarchs would not imprison them as well. One suspects that there might be a revelation concerning such a collection of inmates at some point in a future volume. In any event, Kam's single-minded dedication to locating her sister is brings together all of the threads resulting from Meiko's death, and serves as the unifying force that drives the plot forward. But this story line also serves to highlight the pervasive nature of the prejudices that underpin dystopian society within which Bitch Planet exists. Whitney, knowing Morowa's status, repeatedly misgenders her when speaking with Kam, in part to needle Kam, but also it seems clear, because she simply cannot conceive of a transwoman being a woman. When the populations of the two compounds find themselves in contact with one another, the women don't see their fellow inmates as women, but rather men trying to take something away from them. Even the oppressed buy into the way the world is framed by the oppressors.
As compelling as the main story is, where this book really hits home are the small touches that fill the interstitial spaces between the featured characters. Elements like a coffee mug with a sexist joke on it, or a group of men in a meeting complaining that there are no women to get them coffee and laughing about the idea that women might learn construction-related skills, or the casual assertion that serve to highlight that the world depicted in Bitch Planet is not that far removed from or own. Little interludes like the corporate response to a trio of young men trespassing to take a short cut across private property feel almost as if they could be real. The real terror in Bitch Planet comes from the realization that there are people for whom the society it depicts is their fondest desire. Not people living far away, or in some other place, but people living in one's own communities, some of whom have their hands on the levers of power. Bitch Planet is powerful, in part, because it is a dystopian future that sits just on the edge of reality.
As if to hammer this point home, Eleanor Doane - the President Bitch of the title - enters the story to show that the world the characters inhabit was once not so very unlike ours. While her direct impact on the story, and the impact the followers she inspires, is readily apparent, her presence also serves to show that the state of the world as it is depicted in the "present" of the books is relatively new, having been imposed not just within living memory, but within the span of a single politician's career. The true horror of the world of Bitch Planet becomes clear when one realizes that most of the women struggling to live under the constraints imposed upon them by the regime grew up in a world in which their actions, their dreams, and their horizons were not so limited. Doane is not merely an agent opposed to those in power, she is a symbol that demonstrates that the government is not merely unjust, but is also illegitimate.
Bitch Planet: President Bitch is a harrowing volume in a harrowing series. Even when it takes a mildly hopeful turn, the series drenches it with brutality and violence. This is not the story of docile women living submissively under a misogynistic regime, but rather a story about rage and anger that is bottled up and vented in an almost indiscriminate manner. The pages of this volume are full of fury, but it is a justified fury that feels both unsettling and entirely satisfying at the same time. From the main plot, to the subtext, to the little background details, and even to the fictitious ads that pop up from time to time, every piece of this book serves as a powerful thread that are all woven together masterfully by DeConnick to yield a story that feels like a punch to the throat in the best possible way.
This review has also been posted to my blog Dreaming About Other Worlds. show less
With the stage thus set, President Bitch sets about expanding the world and increasing the depth of the story. This volume opens up with what amounts to a flashback involving Meiko Maki, the woman killed at the end of the first volume, and how she ended up an N.C. condemned to Bitch Planet. This sequence is harrowing - showing the length that parents will go to try to give their daughters a better life than the one allowed by the Patriarchs, and also showing the inherent corruption in the system that permits a man with a creepy fetish for young Asian girls to try to pressure those parents into handing one of their daughters over to him. The ultimate act that puts Meiko into prison is brutal and vicious, and entirely appropriate given the provocations that led to it. But what is striking about this portion of the book is the array of little background details about the world that crop up, from a mother being refused access to her daughter in a hospital, to the implications made about what is considered appropriate (and inappropriate) education for girls. Every aspect of the book serves to give the reader a view into the lives of the people who live in the dystopian society of the book, and the picture is stark and bleak.
Much of the book flows from Meiko's murder in book one. Meiko's father, not knowing Meiko is dead, agrees to travel to Bitch Planet to build a sports arena in the hopes that he can see her. His attempts to locate his daughter result in complete chaos for the administration, and allow much of what happens in the second half of the book to take place. Whitney, the former operative of the Specials Division finds herself removed from the staff and sent into the prison as an inmate - discovering that as a member of the oppressed class, her higher status was conditional and at the sufferance of the oppressors. Penny blames herself for Meiko's death. All of these threads become important plot elements as the story moves forward, serving as catalysts for other events that push the world to a larger scale and push the story further along. Although the story has not yet fully paid off on this score, Meiko's death seems to be the event that sets all other events into motion that ultimately results in fundamental change - in a sense, she seems destined to become the martyr that sparks the revolution.
Alongside those stories driven by Meiko's death is Kam's quest to locate her sister Morowa, also consigned to imprisonment on Bitch Planet, although her crime was gender falsification - in short, Morowa is a transwoman kept in the compound reserved for other transwomen. The story provides a sequence showing Morowa's incarceration, and the brutal, open transmisogyny that accompanies it, as well as the ways in which the inmates hold each other up in the face of the indignities heaped upon them. This sequence does make one wonder what the compound with the transmen would look like, as I cannot imagine that the Patriarchs would not imprison them as well. One suspects that there might be a revelation concerning such a collection of inmates at some point in a future volume. In any event, Kam's single-minded dedication to locating her sister is brings together all of the threads resulting from Meiko's death, and serves as the unifying force that drives the plot forward. But this story line also serves to highlight the pervasive nature of the prejudices that underpin dystopian society within which Bitch Planet exists. Whitney, knowing Morowa's status, repeatedly misgenders her when speaking with Kam, in part to needle Kam, but also it seems clear, because she simply cannot conceive of a transwoman being a woman. When the populations of the two compounds find themselves in contact with one another, the women don't see their fellow inmates as women, but rather men trying to take something away from them. Even the oppressed buy into the way the world is framed by the oppressors.
As compelling as the main story is, where this book really hits home are the small touches that fill the interstitial spaces between the featured characters. Elements like a coffee mug with a sexist joke on it, or a group of men in a meeting complaining that there are no women to get them coffee and laughing about the idea that women might learn construction-related skills, or the casual assertion that serve to highlight that the world depicted in Bitch Planet is not that far removed from or own. Little interludes like the corporate response to a trio of young men trespassing to take a short cut across private property feel almost as if they could be real. The real terror in Bitch Planet comes from the realization that there are people for whom the society it depicts is their fondest desire. Not people living far away, or in some other place, but people living in one's own communities, some of whom have their hands on the levers of power. Bitch Planet is powerful, in part, because it is a dystopian future that sits just on the edge of reality.
As if to hammer this point home, Eleanor Doane - the President Bitch of the title - enters the story to show that the world the characters inhabit was once not so very unlike ours. While her direct impact on the story, and the impact the followers she inspires, is readily apparent, her presence also serves to show that the state of the world as it is depicted in the "present" of the books is relatively new, having been imposed not just within living memory, but within the span of a single politician's career. The true horror of the world of Bitch Planet becomes clear when one realizes that most of the women struggling to live under the constraints imposed upon them by the regime grew up in a world in which their actions, their dreams, and their horizons were not so limited. Doane is not merely an agent opposed to those in power, she is a symbol that demonstrates that the government is not merely unjust, but is also illegitimate.
Bitch Planet: President Bitch is a harrowing volume in a harrowing series. Even when it takes a mildly hopeful turn, the series drenches it with brutality and violence. This is not the story of docile women living submissively under a misogynistic regime, but rather a story about rage and anger that is bottled up and vented in an almost indiscriminate manner. The pages of this volume are full of fury, but it is a justified fury that feels both unsettling and entirely satisfying at the same time. From the main plot, to the subtext, to the little background details, and even to the fictitious ads that pop up from time to time, every piece of this book serves as a powerful thread that are all woven together masterfully by DeConnick to yield a story that feels like a punch to the throat in the best possible way.
This review has also been posted to my blog Dreaming About Other Worlds. show less
There's a lot to love in this, not even scratching the surface of the deep, deep sarcasm and rage-filled need to break out of the whole cultural slavery of the thing.
I mean, let's face it, the artwork isn't good UNLESS you're aware of the horribly patriarchal men's club nonsense of the whole '70's comic era and how this particular comic glorifies it even as it flips the whole thing on its head. And then there's the blatant nudity with real bodies instead of pinups. And let's not ignore the fact that every woman here has a real story and real emotions and hardly any of them can be put safely in any box without invalidating everything they are.
And that's why it's freaking fantastic to have them all imprisoned.
And, of course, REVOLTING. show more
Vol 2 can't be read on its own and I'm pretty sure no one is going to try. The stories flow naturally from the original and the real kicker is always going to be how close some families come to true happiness... and how awful and disgusting and injust the actions of anyone with just a tad bit more power differential are able to ruin everything. Not just brutal rapes, but the complete destruction of identity, hope, and sometimes, sanity.
To say I feel for this comic is putting it mildly. I want to revolt along with everyone else here. Who gives a flying f*** if I'm some middle-aged white dude? Everyone deserves respect. I don't care who you are. If you're not wearing your subversive lipstick, then I'll get you some. :)
This one's up for '18 Hugo for the best graphic novel. It's fantastic, but I've still got my heart set on another. That's NOT to say this isn't a globally kick-ass title that should ever be missed! It rocks. Hard. :) show less
I mean, let's face it, the artwork isn't good UNLESS you're aware of the horribly patriarchal men's club nonsense of the whole '70's comic era and how this particular comic glorifies it even as it flips the whole thing on its head. And then there's the blatant nudity with real bodies instead of pinups. And let's not ignore the fact that every woman here has a real story and real emotions and hardly any of them can be put safely in any box without invalidating everything they are.
And that's why it's freaking fantastic to have them all imprisoned.
And, of course, REVOLTING. show more
Vol 2 can't be read on its own and I'm pretty sure no one is going to try. The stories flow naturally from the original and the real kicker is always going to be how close some families come to true happiness... and how awful and disgusting and injust the actions of anyone with just a tad bit more power differential are able to ruin everything. Not just brutal rapes, but the complete destruction of identity, hope, and sometimes, sanity.
To say I feel for this comic is putting it mildly. I want to revolt along with everyone else here. Who gives a flying f*** if I'm some middle-aged white dude? Everyone deserves respect. I don't care who you are. If you're not wearing your subversive lipstick, then I'll get you some. :)
This one's up for '18 Hugo for the best graphic novel. It's fantastic, but I've still got my heart set on another. That's NOT to say this isn't a globally kick-ass title that should ever be missed! It rocks. Hard. :) show less
This book is so intense. So full of women backed into corners of shitty situations. So full of men who only see women as possessions, or trophies, or barely sentient sex dolls they can rub up against. The system of oppression is so heavy-handed and so complete that the violence that comes is actually a relief.
But there is nothing about this series that is black and white. This book is full of complications. A man who joins the revolution. Plenty of women willing to take part in the oppression of others. The conflict when the trans-women are suddenly mixed with the rest of the population. I'm eager to see how that last bit plays out in future volumes, as well as getting more back story on ex-leader turned political prisoner Eleanor show more Doane.
Very solid second installment. show less
But there is nothing about this series that is black and white. This book is full of complications. A man who joins the revolution. Plenty of women willing to take part in the oppression of others. The conflict when the trans-women are suddenly mixed with the rest of the population. I'm eager to see how that last bit plays out in future volumes, as well as getting more back story on ex-leader turned political prisoner Eleanor show more Doane.
Very solid second installment. show less
Wow. This volume is even stronger than the previous one. Several storylines are handled deftly, and saying a lot in relatively few panels: Meiko's backstory, the introduction of the trans women on the prison planet, and the choices Meiko's father ends up making. I'm intrigued by the titular character and her supporters that make an appearance towards the end of the volume.
Also, the end notes, where the creators discuss some of their artistic choices, are totally worth reading.
Also, the end notes, where the creators discuss some of their artistic choices, are totally worth reading.
Sometimes you can jump into the middle of an ongoing comic series; sometimes you're clearly not meant to. This was one of the latter times. President Bitch collects issues #6-10 of Bitch Planet, a series about a prison planet for women in a dystopian future where women can be jailed for "noncompliance" at the drop of a hat. The book makes no attempt to introduce characters and concepts for people who haven't read book one, and I found myself struggling to follow along, but enjoying it when I could figure it out. There's some sharp satire here, and Valentine De Landro (who I knew from a poor fill-in on Spider-Man Loves Mary Jane) is an excellent artist, with a good sense of page design.
This series more than intrigues me. It's dark unique, and relevant. I was even impressed that the book opened up with a trigger warning about an upcoming sexual assault scene, color me impressed. This book picks up right where volume one left off with Meiko's death and goes into her backstory and the important role that her father will soon have in the rebellion. Everything goes to hell and things are about to get even more violent then usual!
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