Happy Pride: Queer cartoon characters abound! (sort of)
Monday, June 14, 2021 at 1:00PM
NATHANIEL R in LGBT, TV, animated films

by Nathaniel R

The website Insider has compiled a list of 259 LGBTQ characters in recent American cartoon series. Despite all the research it's still highly debatable since the database includes dozens of characters that are only queer via creator statements and not in-show confirmation (and as we know from the JK Rowling's Dumbledore debacle, that is weak-sauce as representation goes; creators shouldn't get credit for pushing boundaries if what they're doing is much much closer to virtue signalling than true activism). Of course these things are more complicated with children's shows since, naturally, sexuality is less explicit than in adult television (apart from the prevalence of mom & dad units of course).  While we watch a lot of animated movies we aren't that familiar with animated TV shows so many of these characters are unfamiliar to us...

Unsurprisingly Cartoon Network's Steven Universe and Netflix's She-Ra and the Princesses of Power, both very queer shows, have the most representation and those two distribution platforms are in the lead in general, too, in terms of queer-friendly toons. Even if a lot of this is inferred it's an optimistic indicator than future generations will be growing up with less taught bias against themselves or their LGBTQ peers.

Two findings of note: It's more common for the queer characters to be POC rather than white. It's also more common for the characters to be female (both in the cis and trans numbers), than male (both in the cis and trans numbers). That's interesting if not surprising since in the history of (adjacent) mainstream movies, lesbians are much more common than gays as they were often considered non-threatening (even titilating) to men and so much of moviemaking was historically built for and around the male gaze. 

Shows with several characters implied or "out" as queer:

Steven Universe

 

 

Show with a few characters implied or "out" as queer:

 

 

Article originally appeared on The Film Experience (http://thefilmexperience.net/).
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