Marvel Doubles Down On Campaign Against Bullying With One-Shot Comic

Featuring an Orphan Black comic writer! Yes please!
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After the success of their recent anti-bullying variant covers in honor of National Bullying Prevention Month, Marvel is following up with a special one-shot single issue to be released in January. If the artwork released yesterday is any indication, they should probably also be packaged with a large amount of tissues and a stuffed hulk toy to hug, because feelings will most certainly be had by all.

Avengers: No More Bullying #1 will feature short stories by Gerry Duggan (Deadpool), Sean Ryan (Uncanny X-Men) and Jody Houser (Orphan Black for IDW), with art by Carlo Barberi (Thunderbolts), Tana Ford (New Warriors) and Marcio Takara (Captain Marvel). The two variant covers are by Paul Renaud, below, and Pascal Campion, above.

ā€œFrom Peter Parker, Midtown Highā€™s only professional wallflower, to the ever-misunderstood Kamala Khan, Marvel has a proud history of working to raise awareness about bullying and representing its victims as much as possible,ā€ series editor Devin Lewis said in a statement released yesterday. ā€œBullying is a problem that can affect everyone in a community, and itā€™s up to that very community to come together to combat it, and, with this issue, Marvelā€™s Avengers, Spider-Man, and Guardians of the Galaxy are joining the fight! I know how comic books can help ease that feeling of isolation, and I couldnā€™t be more proud or excited about the talent weā€™ve pulled together for this project!ā€

An important thing to note: as we learned in the “ā€œEnd Bullying! Responding to Cruelty in Our Cultureā€ panel at New York Comic Con this year, the standard anti-bullying education that’s usually taught in schools around the country is actually pretty ineffective. Instead, Hero Round Table founders Adam Hartley and Matt Langdon advocate for “pro-hero” campaigns, which place their attention not on shaming the people who engage in bullying but instead making sure that kids feel comfortable reaching out to victims and taking a stand in the moment that they see bullying happen.

I want to point this out because despite what Marvel is choosing to call this campaign in their press releases, the art they’ve shown us here isĀ absolutelyĀ conforming to the “pro-hero” concept: if you look at the two covers, the focus is very much on checking in on the victim and making sure they’re not alone. No where is a costumed superhero beating up on a jock while a nerd watches, and considering the problematic power fantasy that such a scene would represent, it’s very refreshing to see what they’re bringing to the table instead.

Avengers_No_More_Bullying_Renaud_Cover

that’s okay I didn’t need my heart

Avengers: No More Bullying #1 will hit shelves, Marvel.com, and the Marvel comics app in January.

Previously in Bullying

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