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Tony Stark

Marvel introduced a black female Iron Man – is that a good thing? (Yes.)

July 6, 2016 by krisis

Today, Marvel and writer Brian Bendis broke the news via Time Magazine that at the end of the currently-running event “Civil War II” the mantle of Iron Man will be taken over by a 15-year old black MIT student named Riri Williams

(This IIM - 2016 - promois a major shocker, because the vast majority of fans assumed Riri’s introduction in the pages of Invincible Iron Man (visit the guide) – where she was reverse-engineering Tony Stark’s armor – was a set-up for her to take over the mantle of War Machine. Rhodey has become unavailable to carry that title due to the events of Civil War.)

Riri Williams as Iron Man is a very good thing. We do not have enough female heroes or heroes of color, and to see a that in a character who is both as she takes over the mantle of ostensibly Marvel’s most popular single hero outside of Spider-Man is a huge, visible step not only for Marvel comic readers, but for their film fans who this news will surely reach. To have Williams also be a female super-scientist when Marvel generally boasts only a handful is even more wonderful.

(The most prominent female geniuses of Marvel are Kitty Pryde, who is frequently shown to be nearly as genius as Beast; Valeria Richards, whose preternatural intelligence is partially attributed to super powers; the new Moon Girl; and Mockingbird, an oft-forgotten PhD) .

So Riri Williams as Iron Man is a good thing, right?

On the face of it, yes. Inclusion means representation. I love reading books about heroes that are women, and so does my daughter – also a girl of color.

However, there are some aspects of this character choice that have given some fans and critics pause, which I’d like to discuss here – three in particular. I’m very interested in your input. (Edited to add: Here is a post with similar critique from black writer Son of Baldwin, Here is another from black female nerd BlerdGurl.)

1. Minority legacy heroes are only useful until the original makes their return; then their marginalization can be worse than the average minority hero.

“Legacy Heroes” is a term applied to heroes that are the replacement or junior version to their original heroes. They are sometimes used by creators as an opportunity to change the gender or race of the character bearing the main mantle.. The easiest examples to give are from DC comics (Superboy, Batgirl, Wondergirl, etc), because Marvel simply isn’t known for this practice outside the past few years.

Let’s stick with Marvel, for the moment. For a brief time in the 1980s, Tony Stark could not serve as Iron Man and Rhodey Rhodes took over the title. Rhodey is the best possible example of a Legacy Hero – he was a dynamic, well-developed character long before he became Iron Man, and that means that he was able to continue to be featured even when Tony Stark returned.

Ms-Marvel - 2014 - 0004As War Machine, he’s lead his own title on many occasions (though they are usually short-lived) and he’s and been a significant character in both comics and now films (though he’s frequently sacrificed as a narrative reason to make Stark feel bad, as has happened twice this year alone).

His time as a Legacy Hero made him more visible, but after being Iron Man he didn’t stay an A-level hero. The white guy bumped him.

Another terrific example is the relatively new Ms. Marvel, the Pakastani-American Kamala Khan (visit the guide). Kamala is a wonderful analog to the original Spider-Man as a new, unsure hero, and Carol Danvers is very unlikely to ever retake her “Ms.” hero mantle now that she is officially Captain Marvel.

Her books sell ridiculous amounts of copies and have been nominated for Eisners. She’s now an Avenger. Things are going well … but we’re only in year two.

There are examples that don’t go as well. At the end of the comics version of the original Civil War, Captain America appears to die, and Bucky takes over the mantle as Cap (visit the guide). His days as Cap are amazing – great, layered storytelling. When Cap came back they shared the mantle for a while before Bucky was spun back to being Winter Soldier, at which point he began to sink back into obscurity – and he’s a white guy who stars in movies.

As with War Machine, he’s now a character Marvel needs to periodically kickstart into a new title or team only to watch him sink again.

Despite those concerns, check out the amazing list of Legacy Heroes Marvel is currently fielding: [Read more…] about Marvel introduced a black female Iron Man – is that a good thing? (Yes.)

Filed Under: comic books, critique, essays Tagged With: Ant-Man, Brian Bendis, Captain Marvel, diversity, Hulk, inclusion, Iron Man, Kitty Pryde, Miles Morales, Moon Girl, Ms. Marvel, Representation, Riri Williams, Spider-Man, The Falcon, Thor, Tony Stark, Wasp, Winter Soldier, Wolverine

Iron Man, Tony Stark – Definitive Collecting Guide and Reading Order

Updated Apr 10, 2025! The definitive, chronological, and up-to-date guide on collecting Iron Man comic books via omnibuses, hardcovers, and trade paperback graphic novels. A part of Crushing Krisis’s Crushing Comics. Last updated April 2025 with titles scheduled for release through December 2025.

Collecting Iron Man: Tony Stark

Tony Stark wasn’t Marvel’s first super-scientist super-hero, but over the course of more than 55 years of publishing he has become their most famous.

That’s in no small part thanks to Iron Man leading the way for the Marvel Cinematic Universe in 2008, but even before he made it to the big screen Tony Stark was one of Marvel’s most-memorable flawed heroes.Iron Man: Director of SHIELD (2008) #31 textless version

Tony Stark was born to riches and gifted with a superior intellect. That lead him into the family business, which turned into making weapons of mass destruction before he became one himself – both to escape his captors and to keep shrapnel from digging more deeply into his heart.

Only a few months into his heroic career, Stark become a founding member of The Avengers alongside Thor and, shortly after, the legendary Captain America. His initial run with the team wouldn’t last long – he took his leave in issue #16 and wouldn’t be back for the better part of a decade.

Tony Stark’s most significant early character development would be his “Demon in a Bottle” story in 1979. In the midst of an armor malfunction and an accusation of murder, Stark turns to a bottle for comfort.

After spending years portrayed as a carefree playboy with endless resources, adding Tony Stark’s struggle with alcoholism to his physical wounds made him seem more human than ever.

Stark went on to rejoin the Avengers and become an anchoring member of the West Coast Avengers before branching out to a new franchise with Force Works in the mid-90s before he was swept out of continuity into the Heroes Reborn universe along with all of the rest of the core Avengers in the wake of Onslaught.

Tony Stark took on a new higher profile in the wake of Avengers Disassembled as the troubled soul of the Marvel Universe. First, Warren Ellis reinvented his armor in the classic “Extremis” arc. Then, Tony found himself opposed to his longtime brother Steve Rogers in Civil War, where he took the side of Supehero Registration (much to the consternation of many fans).

In the wake of Civil War, Stark founded the Mighty Avengers and became the face of “The Initiative,” a plan to put an Avengers team in every state. However, he lost the public’s trust in the wake of Secret Invasion, with Norman Osborn usurping his role. This lead to Tony Stark’s most-acclaimed run to date landing at the height of his new-found film fame – the Eisner-winning Invincible Iron Man by Matt Fraction and Salvador Larroca. This period saw Tony losing Stark Industries, but reconciling with a revived Captain America, with the two of them returning to lead the Avengers.

Marvel Now and All-New, All-Different Marvel would bring more turbulence to Tony Stark’s life – reforming the Illuminati to destroy worlds in Hickman’s Avengers, learning he was adopted in Gillen’s Iron Man, becoming all the evil he had once sworn off in Taylor’s Superior Iron Man, and then being lead to his seeming death in Bendis’s Invincible Iron Man and Civil War II.

In 2018, Fresh Start finds Tony Stark reset back to status quo – anchoring the Avengers and heading up Stark Unlimited.

There are hundreds of different collections of Iron Man, especially his original run from 1963 to 1996. However, there are a few specific formats of books that cover large portions of this title, and I’ll cover those first – Essentials, Epics, Masterworks, and Omnibuses. [Read more…] about Iron Man, Tony Stark – Definitive Collecting Guide and Reading Order

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