
To which I can only say... "No duh."
While the paper is interesting, it does raise a few questions. All of the strips that were examined are at least twenty years old, and "Blondie" turns a sprightly eighty years old this year. "Dilbert" is essentially nerd humor, something that tends to be pretty cruel to women in general. None of these strips are as modern as something like "Foxtrot," which has adjusted its jokes and style along with the times. No, these strips are essentially the great grandparents of newspaper strips, so is it any surprise that they have retrograde sexual politics?
This quote from the paper really says it all:
The henpecking housewife is a stereotype straight out of sitcoms and bad stand-up comedy. With these kinds of punchlines, is it any wonder that there are precious few comic strips that people still speak of fondly?Other than being a straight man or foil to the laugh-inspiring male character, women were used mostly to reinforce certain humorous stereotypes, such as the harried or henpecking housewife, Fernandez-Baca said.
























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