Celebrating diversity in culture, myth and history
LGBTQ Comic Book Characters: A Brief History and Timeline

LGBTQ Comic Book Characters: A Brief History and Timeline

What follows are a list of LGBTQ comic book characters (with a focus on LGBTQ superheroes) by the year they were introduced and links to associated articles when present.

1940

Madam Fatal

Other LGBTQ Characters from the 1940s

LGBTQ Comic Book Characters of the 1980s

1982

Hopey and Maggie from Love and Rockets

Northstar1984

Cloud of the Defenders

Northstar of Alpha Flight

Extrano1988

The Desert Peach

Extrano of the New Guardians

Maggie Sawyer of Superman

Other LGBTQ Characters from the 1980s

LGBTQ Comic Book Characters of the 1990s

1991

Pied Piper of Flash

1992

Victoria Montesi of Darkhold

1993

Transgender Characters’ Imperfect Breakthrough

Coagula of the Doom Patrol

Mantra

Masquerade of Blood Syndicate

Spectral of The Strangers

Donner and Blitzen Shadow Cabinet1994

Donner and Blitzen of the Shadow Cabinet

Lord Fanny of the The Invisibles

Sarah Rainmaker1995

Sarah Rainmaker

Spectral of the Strangers

1998

Ash Lynx of Banana Fish

Midnighter and Apollo

Other LGBTQ Characters from the 1990s

LGBTQ Comic Book Characters of the New Millennium

2001

GoGo Fiasco of Codename: Blackout

LGBTQ Superheroes2002

Josiah Power of the Power Company

2003

Grace Choi and Thunder

Rawhide Kid

Renee Montoya LGBTQ SuperheroesRenee Montoya

Revolutionary Girl Utena

2004

Eroica of From Eroica with Love

2005

Scandal Savage and Knockout

Wiccan and Hulkling

Batwoman2006

Batwoman (Kate Kane)

2009

Shatterstar and Rictor

Other LGBT Characters from the 2000s

Kevin Keller2010

Kevin Keller

2011

America Chavez of Young Avengers

Bunker of Teen Titans

2015

Iceman

2016

Aqualad of the Titans

Chalice of Alters

2017

The Ray of Justice League of America

Mark Carlson-Ghost

2 Responses to LGBTQ Comic Book Characters: A Brief History and Timeline

  1. Great list. As a massive fan of classic shoujo and josei manga, I do have to wonder about you including Eroica from From Eroica with Love and Ash from Banana Fish. Eroica premiered in 1976–but of course his sexuality was kinda, sorta, hidden. But a superhero? Or is this just comic books in general (in which case the list for manga should be massive 😉 ).

    As for Ash–Banana Fish is one of my fave pieces of fiction in any format, ever (I’m anxiously awaiting the anime version premiering in July). People have debated his sexuality in general for ages–he was sexually exploited and abused as a kid and teenager with other men, and of course his intimate relationship with Eiji is central to the long manga. But their homoerotic relationship is never spelled out (something some criticize author Akimi Yoshida over, though I think it actually works well in context). So… vaguely bisexual might be a better definition (or so traumatized by his past that he can be intimate in every sense but sexually). But everyone seems to have different takes… I do question again his inclusion as a superhero–and to be clear, I’m glad to see him on any such list, I was just wondering why, out of so many manga characters, he ended up here 🙂

    • Good points, all, Eric. I think–in all honesty–I was influenced by SEO (Search Engine Optimization) considerations, knowing that “LGBTQ SUPERheroes” will draw more hits than the more ambiguous “LGBTQ heroes” which doesn’t clearly indicate fictional characters. Once I was doing the list I wanted to include Eroica and Ash as early influential queer manga characters. (Early was the main reason for including them and not others). Yes, their sexuality wasn’t explicit, but they both had a clear queer sensibility so given the Q in the title I think they count. But superheroes, no, you’re right. This list was more quickly done and didn’t get the TLC of some of my other posts.
      Keep the comments and constructive critiques coming. You’ll see their influence at some point, hopefully sooner than later. I will likely change it to “LGBTQ comic book characters,” which would be more accurate.

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