The University of Calgary Gauntlet®
  2008-02-07
(NOTE: Archived content:
Current issue here)

[image]
Previous Issues

News
The Security Prosperity Partnership
Incorporating environment into education
Outdoor centre changes leadership, programs remain
Birth control patch raises health concerns
Events forum: bringing the good times
Women fighting for Afghan women
External forum: hopeful VPs debate experience
U of C adopts carshare program
SU Presidential Forum

Opinions
Editorial: Blessed be the qualified
To the letter of the law
The Rise and slow decline of Mike Gravel
SU View: SU General Election Stand Up and Be Counted!

Sports
Basketballers play hard at home
Dinos win all over the weekend
Hockeysaurs take loss against SAIT
NCAA moves towards allowing Canadian membership
Captain Caitlin leads team to wins
Dinos left scrambling for playoff spot
Sportspinions: Is Phaneuf worth it?
Dinos tested by Wesman

Entertainment
Alberta Theatre Projects has the Rite stuff
Your guide to the sights and sounds of playRites
Say whatever you want, just don't say die
Attacks of various sizes, shapes and colours
Bustin' a Cap'n your ass
SPUN: Sebastian Bach
SPUN: Raul Midon
SPUN: Johnny Hollow
SPUN: Black Mountain




  Bustin' a Cap'n your ass





[Print] Print this story
 (Click for larger image.)

ADVERTISMENT

ADVERTISMENT

Last March, comic book fans of all ages mourned as Marvel Comics' famed wartime hero Captain America was assassinated within the pages of Captain America #25. Since then, his eponymous title has published despite not having a title character, prompting speculation that a new Captain America would soon find his way onto the book's pages.

The series finally saw the debut of a red, white and blue-clad hero in last week's Captain America #34, but the new Cap has garnered Marvel a bit of criticism--not for replacing a beloved character, but for the weapons he carries.

Days before the new Captain America officially debuted, media across the globe were questioning that the new Cap carries a knife and gun in addition to the shield that Captain America has carried since the 1940s. A Daily Telegraph headline proclaimed "Gun-toting Captain America comes back to life," while an ABC News photo caption comparing the old and new heroes noted, "The former Captain America wards off danger with his shield. The new Captain America wields a gun."

Luckily, media-savvy Marvel Comics wasn't wholly unprepared for the backlash. Much as they did when they killed Captain America, unmasked Spider-Man or disbanded the Avengers, Marvel had their writers speak with the media and reveal the rationale behind Captain America packing heat: he always has.

The debut issue of the original Captain America in Jun. 1941, Captain America Comics #1, featured Captain America punching out Adolf Hitler on the cover. Later covers featured Captain America shoving Nazis into an oven, his sidekick firing a machine gun at enemy troops and Cap throwing grenades at Russian troops. While many of these were blatant wartime propaganda images, they still involved Captain America and friends using the weapons of war.

Issues in the 1980s aimed to sanitize Cap's history, and the events of the Second World War suddenly became much less gory. When Ed Brubaker began writing the re-launched series in 2005, he returned Cap's wartime escapades to canon and also revised the role of his teenaged sidekick, Bucky. Instead of traipsing around war zones as a platoon mascot, Brubaker's Bucky became a knife-wielding scout who dealt with threats covertly while the colourful Captain America acted as a distraction. Most of all, Brubaker established very firmly that Captain America--while marketed as a super-soldier--was at heart a soldier involved in a war. He used guns, knives or grenades along with his trademark shield to fight Nazis in the 1940s,his successor fought against communists in the 1950s and he fought terrorists following 9/11.

The new Captain America--who was the original's former sidekick Bucky, recently revived by Brubaker as a brainwashed secret Soviet assassin called the Winter Soldier--carries a gun. The old Captain America carried a gun. Since technology allowed them to do so, soldiers worldwide have carried guns in pretty much every military conflict. Police officers carry guns. As long as he also uses his shield and doesn't just solve problems by shooting at them, there's no reason why, given history, this Captain America can't carry a gun. After all, he is American.

Share this story: del.icio.us digg Fark NewsVine Reddit YahooMyWeb


Reader Comments:

 Add your comment or send a letter to the editor

No comments found. Be the first!

 Views expressed are those of the posters and do not necessarily reflect that of the Gauntlet.

ADVERTISMENT

ADVERTISMENT

RSS icon RSS Feeds:
[ Main - News - Opinions - Entertainment - Sports ]
Volunteer at the Gauntlet®
.