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Black Panther (character)

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Marvel Comics fictional character
"T'Challa" redirects here. For the film Black Panthers, seeT'Challa (Marvel Cinematic Universe),T'Chaka (Marvel Cinematic Universe), andShuri (Marvel Cinematic Universe). For the 2024Earth-6160-set reboot series, seeUltimate Black Panther.

Comics character
T'Challa
Black Panther
Black Panther as depicted inOriginal Sin #2 (May 2014), byGabriele Dell'Otto.
Publication information
PublisherMarvel Comics
First appearanceFantastic Four #52
(July 1966)
Created byStan Lee
Jack Kirby
In-story information
Alter egoT'Challa
Place of originWakanda
Team affiliationsAvengers
Fantastic Four
Mighty Avengers
Fantastic Force
New Avengers
Ultimates
The Crew
PartnershipsStorm
Shuri
Notable aliasesBlack Leopard
Black Panther
Mr. Okonkwo
Panther King
Abilities
  • The power to draw upon the knowledge, strength and every experience of every previous Black Panther
  • Enhanced strength, endurance, speed, agility, reflexes, stamina and senses
  • Master hand-to-hand combatant and martial artist
  • Highly proficient tactician, strategist and inventor
  • Genius-level intellect
  • Utilizingvibranium suit and equipment

Black Panther is asuperhero appearing inAmerican comic books published byMarvel Comics. Created by writer-editorStan Lee and artist-coplotterJack Kirby, the characterfirst appeared inFantastic Four #52, published in July 1966. Black Panther's birth name isT'Challa, and he is the son of the previous Black Panther,T'Chaka. He is the king and protector of the fictional African nation ofWakanda, a technologically advanced society drawing from a supply ofvibranium, a fictional metal of extraordinary properties. Along with possessing enhanced abilities achieved through ancient Wakandan rituals of drinking the essence of the heart-shaped herb, T'Challa also relies on his proficiency in science, expertise in his nation's traditions, rigorous physical training, hand-to-hand combat skills, and access to wealth and advanced Wakandan technology to combat his enemies. The character became a member of theAvengers in 1968, and has continued that affiliation off and on in subsequent decades.

The storylines of the 1970s written byDon McGregor were critically acclaimed and introduced T'Challa's nemesisErik Killmonger. These stories also engage with significant social issues of the time, such as the resurgence of theKu Klux Klan in the U.S. state ofGeorgia. A subsequent story addressed the issue ofapartheid inSouth Africa. However, Black Panther was a somewhat neglected character of low popularity until his reinvention byChristopher Priest in the late 1990s. Priest re-emphasized the importance of Wakanda as an independent and technologically advanced African nation. Priest also introduced theDora Milaje, Black Panther's female bodyguards. In subsequent series written byReginald Hudlin, T'Challa marriedStorm of theX-Men. Hudlin's stories emphasize Black cultural pride and achieved greater commercial success. In Hudlin's era, the role of Black Panther and leadership of Wakanda was also temporarily given to T'Challa's sisterShuri while he was briefly in a coma. While T'Challa and Storm's marriage was annulled in a subsequent storyline, their relationship has continued in other narratives. The Black Panther comics became particularly commercially successful in 2016, partly as a result of the literary fame of their writer, the journalist and essayistTa-Nehisi Coates. The first issue of his series was the best-selling comic book of that month. Coates's series call into question the legitimacy of monarchy in Wakanda and articulate a more democratic vision.

Black Panther is the first Black superhero in American mainstream comics. The character is also an early example of theAfrofuturist aesthetic. He has made numerous appearances in various television shows, animated films, and video games.Chadwick Boseman portrayedT'Challa inPhase Three of theMarvel Cinematic Universe's films:Captain America: Civil War (2016),Black Panther (2018),Avengers: Infinity War (2018), andAvengers: Endgame (2019). He also voiced alternate versions of the character in the first season of theanimated seriesWhat If...? (2021), which was released after his death. TheBlack Panther film was a notable critical and popular success.Letitia Wright's characterShuri, who had appeared in previous MCU films, took on the Black Panther mantle inBlack Panther: Wakanda Forever (2022), following Boseman's death in 2020.

Publication history

[edit]
Further information:Black Panther collected editions

Creation

[edit]
Black Panther first appearance inFantastic Four #52 (July 1966).

The origin of the character has been disputed by both Stan Lee and Jack Kirby, with both claiming the impetus for the idea. However, both of the creators have said they were motivated by general humanistic and inclusive values, rather than any social or political awareness of thecivil rights movement.

Kirby claimed sole credit for creating the character inThe Comics Journal #134 (February 1990), stating that he realized an absence of Black characters in his comics, and believed that they should be added for "human reasons".[1] In this interview, Kirby declared: "I came up with the Black Panther because I realized I had no blacks in my strip. I'd never drawn a black. I needed a black. I suddenly discovered that I had a lot of black readers. My first friend was a black! And here I was ignoring them because I was associating with everybody else."[2]

Lee, in contrast, claimed he created the character because, in the mid-1960s, he wanted to include more African and African American characters in Marvel Comics. Lee later recollected: "I suddenly realized that there were no black superheroes, and I felt we ought to have one. There were no black heroes that I knew about, and there were certainly no black heroes who were the king of their own country in Africa. [...] He didn't live in a village with thatched huts--although that's what you saw on the surface. Underneath was that fantastic city that he had created, which was completely scientific and had all the latest equipment of every type in it. And we realize that the Black Panther is one of the world's great scientists--[just like]Reed Richards. So, again, I wanted to go against [stereotypes]."[3]

There is no documentation to establish the veracity of either claim to originality. However, Asher Elbein's research indicates that by 1966 Kirby largely plotted Fantastic Four independently, explaining the stories to Lee when the pages arrived in the Marvel offices.[4]

In 1963, Lee and Kirby included a black character,Gabe Jones, in the ensemble cast ofSgt. Fury and His Howling Commandos,[5] and Lee encouraged artists to include black characters in crowd scenes.[6] Soon after Black Panther was introduced, Marvel added two more recurring black characters: Jill Jerrold inModeling with Millie, andBill Foster inThe Avengers.[7]

Co-creatorStan Lee recounted that the name was inspired by a pulp adventure hero who had ablack panther as a helper.[8] Jack Kirby's original concept art for Black Panther used the concept name Coal Tiger; this was aswashbuckler. Lee asked for the concept art to be revised.[9]

There was some debate at Marvel, with Lee wondering how far to go with the introduction of a Black superhero, which was commercially risky in that era. In the first version of the cover forFantastic Four #52, Kirby drew the Black Panther wearing a cowl that exposed his face. In the published version, the cowl became a full facemask. Previews in other comics did not show the cover at all, indicating that Lee was hesitant.[10]

Black Panther first appeared inFantastic Four #52, published in July 1966, and the following issue in August of the same year.[11]

Predecessors

[edit]

The Black Panther is the first Black superhero in American mainstreamcomic books. Very few Black heroes were created before him, and none with actual superpowers. These included Lothar in the comic stripMandrake the Magician and the characters in the single-issueAll-Negro Comics #1 (1947).[12] Marvel's 1950s predecessor,Atlas Comics also introduced Waku, Prince of the Bantu, who starred in his own feature in the omnibus titleJungle Tales,[13] and theDell ComicsWestern characterLobo, the first Black person to star in his own comic book.[14]

Scholars have identified precursors to the character:Harry Wills, a champion boxer of the early 20th century nicknamed the Black Panther, and a predominately African-American armored combat unit inWorld War II also called the Black Panthers, the761st Tank Battalion of the US Army.[15] Lee and Kirby also borrow from typical pop cultural tropes of their era inspired byEdgar Rice Burroughs'sTarzan, but subvert or transformstereotypes common in the "jungle adventure" genre.[16]

The name Black Panther predates the founding of theBlack Panther Party in October 1966, though not the black panther logo of the party's predecessor, theLowndes County Freedom Organization (LCFO).[17] Scripter Stan Lee denied that the comic, which pre-dates the political usage of the term, was, or could have been, named after any of the political uses of the term "black panther", citing "a strange coincidence".[18]

In a guest appearance inFantastic Four #119 (February 1972), the Black Panther briefly used the name "Black Leopard" to avoid connotations with the Party, but the new name did not last.[19] The character's name was changed back to Black Panther inThe Avengers #105, with T'Challa explaining that renaming himself made as much sense as altering theScarlet Witch's name because of the negative associations of witchcraft, and that he eschews stereotypes.[20]Avengers writer Roy Thomas said that the Black Panther name "had more resonance," but that the political implications limited the character's prominence.[21]

Early years: 1960s and early 1970s

[edit]

Subsequent to his first appearance, Black Panther made guest appearances inFantastic Four Annual #5 (1967) and withCaptain America inTales of Suspense #97–99 andCaptain America 100 (January – April 1968).[19] The Black Panther journeyed from the fictional African nation ofWakanda toNew York City to join the titular American superhero team inThe Avengers #52 (May 1968). He appeared in that comic for the next few years.[22] During his time with the Avengers, he also made solo guest-appearances in three issues ofDaredevil, and foughtDoctor Doom inAstonishing Tales #6–7 (June & August 1971), in thatsupervillain's starring feature.[23]

1970s and 1980s

[edit]

He received his first starring feature withJungle Action #5 (July 1973), a reprint of a story inThe Avengers #62 (March 1969) that focused on Black Panther. A new series, titled "Panther's Rage", began running the following issue, written byDon McGregor, with art bypencilersRich Buckler,Gil Kane, andBilly Graham, and which gave inkersKlaus Janson andBob McLeod some of their first professional exposure.[24] The critically acclaimed series ran inJungle Action #6–18 (1973-1975).[25] One now-common format McGregor pioneered was that of the self-contained, multi-issue story arc.[24]

"Panther's Rage" also introduces T'Challa's nemesisErik Killmonger, a rival for the throne of Wakanda who recurs in subsequent series. Rebecca Wanzo, a scholar of African-American literature, describes "Panther's Rage" as "the first major step indecolonizing the character." The cast of the story arc is almost entirely Black.[26]

The second and final arc inJungle Action, also written by McGregor, was titled "Panther vs. the Klan" and ran in 1976.[27] The subject matter of theKu Klux Klan was considered controversial in the Marvel offices at the time, creating difficulties for the creative team.[28] Scholars Burton P. Buchanan, Ivan Alcime, and Carlos D. Morrison point out that the story was published at a time of resurgence for the Klan inGeorgia, and that the story prescribes a self-defense strategy for Black people in response.[29]

Qiana J. Whitted points out that the artists in this period incorporated African American popular culture of the era, such as T'Challa wearing a "modified version of the gold-chain outfit worn by singerIsaac Hayes for the Watts, Los Angeles, community benefit concert that was released as the 1973 documentary filmWattstax."[30]

Though popular with college students, the overall sales ofJungle Action were low.[31] Marvel relaunched the Black Panther in a self-titled series, bringing in the character's co-creatorJack Kirby—newly returned to Marvel after having decamped to rivalDC Comics for a time—as writer, penciler, and editor. In the series, Black Panther searches for a magic artifact called King Solomon's Frog.[32] However, the series was commercially unsuccessful.[33] Kirby left the series after only 12 issues and was replaced byEd Hannigan (writer),Jerry Bingham (penciler), andRoger Stern (editor).Black Panther ran 15 issues (January 1977 – May 1979); the contents of what would have beenBlack Panther #16–18 were published inMarvel Premiere #51–53.[34]

In 1980, Black Panther appeared as a guest star inThe Defenders #84-86, written by Ed Hannigan. This story introduced Black Panther's rivalry withNamor and his kingdom of Atlantis, which becomes a recurring conflict in future story lines.[35] Later in the year, Black Panther appeared in a back up story inMarvel Team-Up #100 that establishes his relationship withStorm of theX-Men.[36]

A four-issueminiseries,Black Panther vol. 2, (July – October 1988) was written byPeter B. Gillis and penciled byDenys Cowan.[36] McGregor revisited his Panther saga withGene Colan in "Panther's Quest", published as 25 eight-page installments within the bi-weeklyanthology seriesMarvel Comics Presents (issues #13–37, Feb.–December 1989).[37] The story takes place inSouth Africa. In the view of critic Todd Steven Burroughs, "'Quest' attempts to show how oppressiveapartheid is for everyone involved."[38]

1990s

[edit]

McGregor later teamed with artistDwayne Turner in the square-bound miniseriesBlack Panther: Panther's Prey (September 1990 – March 1991).[39]

WriterChristopher Priest's and pencillerMark Texeira's 1998 seriesBlack Panther vol. 3 re-invented the character.[40] Scholar Todd Steven Burroughs describes the new vision for the Black Panther as "a combination ofFrank Miller'sBatman andSouth African presidentNelson Mandela."[41] Priest was the first Black creator to become an editor at Marvel.[42] Inspired by theEddie Murphy filmComing to America, Priest and his artists returned to the fundamental sovereignty of Wakanda.[43] He revisitedErik Killmonger and other characters introduced in "Panther's Rage", together with new characters such as State Department attorney Everett Ross and theDora Milaje, the Panther's female bodyguards. In their original characterization, the Dora Milaje are beautiful teenage girls who are, officially speaking, the Panther's potential wives.[44] Dora Milaje is said to translate fromHausa to "adored ones".[45]

The Priest-Texeira series was under theMarvel Knights imprint in its first year.[40] Priest's initial concept was inspired byBatman but also one of Batman's nemeses,Ra's al Ghul, the mysterious leader of a League of Assassins. Priest believed this "fearsome African warrior" would simply be too intimidating for the Marvel universe.[42] Priest says the device of Ross's character contributed greatly to his ability to write the series: "I realized I could use Ross to bridge the gap between the African culture that the Black Panther mythos is steeped in and the predominantly white readership that Marvel sells to." He added his opinion that the Black Panther had been misused in the years after his initial creation by Lee and Kirby. Priest believed Black Panther was generally considered a dull "also-ran" with no evident powers.[42]

To reinvent the character, he emphasized Black Panther's role as a monarch of a technologically advanced independent nation, and hence one of the most powerful figures in the Marvel universe. Influenced byChris Claremont andFrank Miller, he aimed to introduce moral ambiguity and political complexity to the world of Black Panther.[43] Priest also envisioned the series as a political satire, comparing it toThe West Wing. In Priest's characterization, T'Challa actually joined the Avengers in order to spy on them, protecting Wakanda's national interests.[46]Ta-Nehisi Coates has said that Priest "hadthe classic run on Black Panther, period, and that's gonna be true for a long time."[47]

Cultural critic Douglas Wolk agrees that Christopher Priest's run established the canonical version of the character, although: "The tone of Priest's run was wildly different from any other Black Panther stories before or since—it's basically a political comedy—but Priest's central insight was that T'Challa isn't actually a superhero in the ordinary sense," but rather a monarch. He also says that the first issue of the run makes no sense at first reading, and requires a continuing interpretation of future issues. He argues that this is unique in mainstream superhero comics.[48]

2000s

[edit]

Black Panther #25-27 (December 2000-February 2001) reintroduceStorm as a major character in Black Panther's world. Priest intended their love affair as a consistent aspect of their development, but did not believe they could form a durable relationship.[49]

The last 13 issues of Priest's series (#50–62) saw the main character replaced by amultiracialNew York City police officer namedKasper Cole, with T'Challa relegated to a supporting character.[50] This Black Panther, who became theWhite Tiger, was placed in the seriesThe Crew, running concurrently with the final fewBlack Panther issues.The Crew was canceled with issue #7.[51]

ArtistJohn Romita Jr. signing a copy of the fourthBlack Panther series atMidtown Comics in Manhattan

In 2005, Marvel began publishingBlack Panther vol. 4,[52] which ran 62 issues.[53] It was initially written by filmmakerReginald Hudlin (through issue #38) and penciled byJohn Romita, Jr. (through #6).[52] Hudlin is a Hollywood writer and director who was at that time the president of the entertainment division ofBlack Entertainment Television.[54] He wanted to add "street cred" to the title, although he noted that the book was not necessarily or primarily geared toward an African-American readership.[55] As influences for his characterization of the character, Hudlin has cited comic characterBatman, film directorSpike Lee, and music artistSean Combs.[56] The Black Panther comics that Hudlin wrote sold much better than any previous series featuring the character, including Priest's.[57] According toDiamond Comic Distributors,Black Panther (2005) #1 was the 27th best-selling comic book in February 2005.[58][59][60] Hudlin's series also received positive notice from figures outside the comic book world, such asIce Cube andZiggy Marley.[61]

In 2006, during Hudlin's run, T'Challa marriesStorm of theX-Men, and she appeared as a prominent supporting character in many subsequent storylines.[62] Readers and critics compared the wedding to the relationship ofJay-Z andBeyoncé, although they did not marry until two years later.[63] This wedding takes place during Marvel'sCivil War event, and presented a temporary truce in the conflict of that storyline.[64] Subsequently, as a result of the conflict among superheroes during this era, the two characters replaceMister Fantastic and theInvisible Woman in theFantastic Four.[65] Douglas Wolk observes that the wedding is the most well-known moment in Hudlin's run, and contends that the "mutual admiration leading to matrimony seemed to come out of nowhere," that neither have much in common "besides being superheroes with somewhat formal speech patterns and connections to Africa and divinity," and that while "one is a champion of a cross-sectional group, the other is a monarch of a physical nation."[66] Hudlin responded to such criticisms in a 2010 interview, declaring that the wedding was set up for months by two different storylines and that the two characters are perfectly matched.[67]

In Hudlin's series, the Dora Milaje are a clearly military organization, with shaven heads, rather than the attractive teenage girls previously established by Priest.[68] In addition, Hudlin established T'Challa's complex friendship withLuke Cage, another prominent Black superhero created several years after Black Panther.[53] While T'Challa is from an African nation that was never colonized, Cage is a street-level New York superhero of a vastly different culture. Hudlin explores these differences in the interactions between the two heroes.[69] Like Priest, Hudlin emphasizes Black Panther's power and independence; as he puts it, T'Challa is "an INTERNATIONAL player who's equally at home at theDavos Conference in Switzerland, meeting withColin Powell in D.C., kicking it in Harlem withBill Clinton andAl Sharpton, and brokering deals off the coast of Cuba withFidel Castro and PrinceNamor."[56]

In 2008,Jason Aaron concluded the fourth volume ofBlack Panther with a war story about battling aSkrull invasion of Wakanda, tying in with Marvel'sSecret Invasion event.[70]Black Panther vol. 5 launched in February 2009, with Hudlin, again scripting, introducing a successor Black Panther, T'Challa's sister Shuri.[71] Hudlin co-wrote issue #7 withJonathan Maberry, who then became the new writer.[72]

2010s

[edit]

Both T'Challa and Shuri fightDoctor Doom, alongside members of the Fantastic Four and the X-Men, in the six-issue miniseriesDoomwar (April – September 2010).[71]Doomwar introduces the Midnight Angels, an armored division of the Dora Milaje.[73] In this period, T'Challa has given up his powers and has been replaced by his sister. At the conclusion of the story, Doom steals Wakanda's supply of vibranium, and T'Challa destroys all of it in response.[74]

T'Challa then accepts an invitation from Matt Murdock, the superheroDaredevil, to become the new protector of New York City'sHell's Kitchen neighborhood. Under writerDavid Liss and artistFrancesco Francavilla, he became the lead character inDaredevil beginning with issue #513 (February 2011); the series was retitledBlack Panther: The Man Without Fear.[75] He takes on the identity of Mr. Okonkwo, an immigrant from theDemocratic Republic of the Congo, and becomes the owner of a small diner to be close to the people.[74] He fights street crime and various enemies of Daredevil, in this case relying on his own athletic ability and without the traditional Black Panther powers and Wakandan technology. He also confronts a new version of theHate-Monger, a Silver Age emblem of bigotry who represents contemporary racist and anti-immigrant ideology.[76] InFantastic Four #608, written byJonathan Hickman, T'Challa again meets the Panther godBast. Bast reveals that catastrophe will come to Wakanda and that T'Challa will need to be reborn as a new Black Panther. His restored powers exceed his previous strength, and he is also given the collective memories of all the previous Black Panthers.[77] Black Panther then takes part in theAvengers vs. X-Men event. As a result of this conflict, his marriage to Storm is annulled.[77]

For three years, beginning in 2013, Black Panther did not have in his own solo title but instead appeared as one of the primary members ofNew Avengers, written by Jonathan Hickman. Hickman later recalled that this was a conscious cross-media marketing plan to lead toward a relaunch ofBlack Panther coinciding with the feature film. In this series, Black Panther works together with a secret team of the most powerful heroes, the Illuminati.[78] He often finds himself torn between the needs of his particular nation and more global concerns. In particular, he has a mortal conflict withNamor, who is responsible for a bloody invasion of Wakanda.[79] Black Panther then joinsThe Ultimates, written by Al Ewing. The group battlesGalactus.[80]

A portrait of Brian Michael Bendis
Ta-Nehisi Coates wrote a number of best-selling Black Panther series in the 2010s.

A newBlack Panther series written byTa-Nehisi Coates and drawn byBrian Stelfreeze was launched in 2016. Marvel intended the series to respond to contemporarysocial justice concerns.[81] Coates was previously a correspondent forThe Atlantic and won theNational Book Award for his essayBetween the World and Me. As Todd Steven Burroughs writes, "The announcement that Ta-Nehisi Coates––the writer whomToni Morrison called the heir to novelist and essayistJames Baldwin––was going to write a new, ongoingBlack Panther title shook both the Marvel Universe and café society."[82] In Coates's first storyline, titledA Nation Under Our Feet, T'Challa faces a popular uprising against his monarchy. At the conclusion of the story, Wakanda is reformed into a constitutional democracy, with the Black Panther continuing as a figurehead king rather than a ruler. This series introduces a new version ofThe Crew, now including Storm, Luke Cage,Misty Knight, andManifold.[83]

According toDiamond Comic Distributors,Black Panther (2016) #1 was the best-selling comic book in April 2016, while #2 was the 9th best-selling comic book in May 2016.[84][85][86][87][88][89] Critic Todd Steven Burroughs characterizes the story as "ultra-cerebral", and suggests that some of the previous authors of the character may have found it pretentious.[90] He interprets the story as a fascinatingdeconstruction of Wakanda that removes "what [Coates] might call the intellectual crutch ofBlack nationalism" from the mythos of Black Panther.[91]

In Coates' second storyline,Avengers of the New World, Wakanda's mythology was expanded, showing the panther goddess Bast as a member of a pantheon known as theOrisha.[92] Coates also wrote a six-issue series calledBlack Panther and the Crew that addresses the problem ofpolice killings and also suggests that the Marvel universe includes a number of previously unknown superheroes from theBandung Conference.[93] Coates also co-wrote a new series calledBlack Panther: World of Wakanda together withRoxane Gay that detailed more about the Dora Milaje.[94]

In 2017, theAfricanfuturist writerNnedi Okorafor wrote the seriesBlack Panther: Long Live the King.[95]

In February 2018, Christopher Priest, Don McGregor, and Reginald Hudlin each contributed one story to theBlack Panther Annual #1.[96]

In spring 2018, Coates wrote a new Black Panther series. TitledThe Intergalactic Empire of Wakanda, this is aspace opera.[68] According toDiamond Comic Distributors,Black Panther (2018) #1 was the fifth best-selling comic book in May 2018.[97][98][99]

2020s

[edit]

In 2021,John Ridley wrote a new five-issue Black Panther series.[100] According toDiamond Comic Distributors,Black Panther (2021) #1 was the 10th best-selling comic book in November 2021.[101]

Hannibal Tabu ofBleeding Cool gaveBlack Panther #1 a grade of 8.5 out of 10, saying, "T'Challa's secret balances both the old ways of Wakanda as personified by the White Wolf and the modern egalitarian Wakanda he's trying to build. Then there's the visual storytelling from Juann Cabal, Federico Blee, and Joe Sabino, which will tickle the fancy of fans of, well, any Marvel project featuring Sebastian Stan, basically. They feature a great Avengers fight scene (that also mixes in wonderful character work) with a gorgeous view of an evolving Wakanda."[102] Tim Adams ofComicBook.com gaveBlack Panther #1 a grade of 4 out of 5, saying, "Marvel's new era of Black Panther gets off to a captivating start. Whereas the previous volume by Ta-Nehisi Coates and Daniel Acuna primarily took place in the stars, John Ridley, Juann Cabal, and Federico Blue deliver the beginnings of an espionage tale. Marvel Stormbreaker artist Juann Cabal is quickly rising as a superstar artist after fan-favorite runs on X-23 and Guardians of the Galaxy."[103]

In July 2022 the limited seriesWakanda was announced, written by Stephanie Williams and illustrated by Paco Medina, with a backup series titledHistory of the Black Panthers, written byEvan Narcisse and illustrated by Natacha Bustos.[104] In August 2022, Marvel announced the one-shotBlack Panther: Unconquered, written byBryan Edward Hill and illustrated by Alberto Foche.[105]

In January 2023, a newBlack Panther series was announced, written byEve Ewing and illustrated by Chris Allen.[106]

According to the ComicHub system at local comic book shops selling American comics,Black Panther (2023) #1 was the 11th best-selling comic book in June 2023.[107][108]

Hannah Rose ofComic Book Resources wrote, "Black Panther #1 is a subtle and humane study of a changing character and shifting fictional landscape. Although a slow burn in turns of action, and offers questions with no easy answers, this issue is worth checking out precisely for those reasons."[109]

Bryan Edward Hill writesUltimate Black Panther with art by Stefano Caselli, which takes place in an alternate continuity from the mainstream Marvel universe. The comic is about Black Panther defending the continent of Africa from the deitiesKhonshu and Ra. Hill said "I was invigorated by this opportunity because in addition to my immense respect forJonathan Hickman's detailed storytelling, the idea of shepherding this bold new take on Black Panther in this event gives me a platform to do the kind of broad, epic, storytelling I've always wanted to do in comics. My influences range from the history of Black Panther comics, to Ryan Coogler's incredible work with the recent films, toFrank Herbert's world-building capacity ofDune."[110]

Characterization

[edit]

Fictional character biography

[edit]

T'Challa is born inWakanda to T'Chaka, the Black Panther, and Queen N'Yami. N'Yami dies in childbirth, and T'Chaka's second wife,Ramonda, gives birth to Shuri. Ramonda vanishes shortly after. T'Challa defeats his uncle during a ritual event; this earns him the right to ingest a powerful ancestral heart-shaped herb. The herb gives him superhuman strength and speed, and he inherits the title of Black Panther.[111] However, in T'Challa's boyhoodKlaw invades Wakanda and murders T'Chaka during an attempt to seize Wakanda's valuable natural resource,vibranium. T'Challa and the Wakandans drive Klaw from the country and wound him.[112] As an adolescent, T'Challa goes on a walkabout manhood ritual and meets a young orphan in Cairo, Ororo Munroe (who will later become known asStorm).[113] He is sent abroad and graduates from Oxford University. He travels the world and returns to claim his throne in Wakanda.[12]

Klaw returns to Wakanda to resume his attempt to steal the vibranium;[112] this time, he is equipped with strange new weapons based on sound. T'Challa invites the Fantastic Four to Wakanda, then attacks and attempts to neutralize them individually. He does this to test himself as preparation to battle Klaw.[114] The Fantastic Four and T'Challa learn mutual respect for one another and team up to defeat Klaw together.[115] T'Challa later leaves Wakanda and joins the Avengers, onCaptain America's recommendation.[116] T'Challa later reveals that he joined the team in order to spy on them and determine their possible effects on Wakanda's national interest.[117] He lives in New York City and works as an inner-city school teacher under the secret identity "Luke Charles".[118] He meets and establishes a relationshipMonica Lynn, a soul singer, who accompanies him on his return to Wakanda.[26] However, upon his return, T'Challa finds thatErik Killmonger, a Wakandan who was exiled to the U.S. because his father assisted Klaw,[119] is prepared to usurp his title.[120] T'Challa eventually defeats Killmonger in a battle atop a waterfall.[121] Along with Lynne, T'Challa then leaves Wakanda again to investigate the murder of Lynne's sister. He determines that theKu Klux Klan are to blame, and defeats them in combat as well.[122] In later adventures, he reunites with his stepmother Ramonda and confrontsapartheid inSouth Africa.[123] He enters into conflict with a rival monarch,Namor of Atlantis.[35] He also works together with a staffer of theUnited States Department of State,Everett K. Ross,[124] and a team of female bodyguards called theDora Milaje.[125] He leaves Monica Lynn, re-connects with Storm, and deals with a renegade Dora Milaje namedNakia who feels jilted by him and seeks revenge.[126] Erik Killmonger returns and destabilizes the economy of Wakanda in a renewed effort to conquer it. Killmonger defeats T'Challa and becomes a new Black Panther, but he is poisoned by the heart-shaped herb during his ascension ceremony. Killmonger is rendered comatose and T'Challa returns to his position.[127]

Later, T'Challa finds he has a brain aneurysm and succumbs to instability and hallucinations.[128] After his mental state almost causes tribal warfare, the Panther hands power to his council and hides in New York City.[129] While recovering, he trains a police officer, Kasper Cole, to be the new Black Panther. T'Challa eventually recovers, Cole becomes White Tiger, and T'Challa returns to Wakanda.[130]

Klaw again attempts to invade Wakanda and to cause a war with Wakanda's neighbor, Niganda.[131] The U.S. government sends an army ofDeathloks, cyborg warriors, to occupy Wakanda and fight Klaw. It becomes evident that Klaw's invasion is actually a ruse to advanceU.S. Imperialism. Klaw holds T'Challa's mother hostage, but he refuses to negotiate. Black Panther and the Wakandans successfully defeat the Deathloks and Klaw.[132]

T'Challa marries Storm.[57] They tour the world.[130] Black Panther and Storm side withCaptain America againstIron Man in the civil war among superheroes sparked by the superhero registration initiative.[64] They then temporarily join theFantastic Four.[133] Killmonger again tries to conquer Wakanda, but he is killed byMonica Rambeau.[65] Storm and Black Panther then repel another invasion, from the alienSkrulls.[53]

Storm returns to theX-Men and Black Panther returns to Wakanda. T'Challa suffers a brutal attack after meeting withDoctor Doom andNamor.[134] His sisterShuri is trained as the next Black Panther.[135] T'Challa is temporarily in a coma; the supervillainMorlun tries to devour his body. Shuri rescues her brother from Morlun, and is officially inaugurated as a new Black Panther while T'Challa recovers.[71] T'Challa and Shuri team up to fight Doctor Doom, along with the Fantastic Four, the X-Men, andDeadpool. T'Challa remains wounded, so he is mystically charged by a Wakandan healer. Now returned to power, T'Challa leads a Dora Milaje army.[136] However, because Doom is on the verge of taking control of Wakanda's vibranium, T'Challa takes the desperate measure of de-powering all of it.[71] Now stripped of his power, T'Challa leaves Wakanda, while Shuri searches the world for new vibranium.[74] Matt Murdock (the superheroDaredevil) asks T'Challa to replace him as guardian of Hell's Kitchen, while Murdock takes a leave of absence.[137] T'Challa takes on a new secret identity in New York, presenting himself as "Mr. Okonkwo", an immigrant fromDemocratic Republic of the Congo and a manager of a restaurant. Simultaneously, he takes on Daredevil's job as a crime-fighter.[74]

Upon his return to Wakanda, T'Challa serves as a second to his sister, Shuri, who remains the kingdom's active ruler. T'Challa calls on the Fantastic Four to help him with conflict with Necropolis, a tomb below Wakanda. T'Challa meets Bast, the Panther god, who shows him prophecies of future disasters and restores all of his Black Panther powers so that he will be able to face these challenges. He also gains all the collective memories of previous Black Panthers. Shortly after, the Avengers come into conflict with the X-Men.[77] Empowered by the Phoenix, Namor destroys Wakanda with a massive tidal wave. Returning to help, Storm is stunned when the Panther informs her that their marriage has been annulled because of her connection to her fellow mutant, Namor.[137]

T'Challa calls on an elite and secret group of superheroes to face a new threat to the universe and all alternative universes.[78] This group, theIlluminati, includesMister Fantastic,Doctor Strange,Iron Man,Black Bolt,Beast, and Namor.[138] T'Challa has discovered incursions from parallel Earths that could lead to the destruction of universes. T'Challa must temporarily put his animosity toward Namor aside, though Black Panther vows to kill Namor when the crisis passes. Wakanda launches a secret attack on Atlantis, Namor's kingdom, just asThanos invades Earth.[79] Namor deceives Thanos and leads him to attack Wakanda. The Avengers defeat Thanos, but Shuri learns about T'Challa's collaboration with Namor in the Illuminati. In response to T'Challa's refusal to disclose the extent of their activities, she expels him from Wakandan leadership. T'Challa is also called upon to destroy a parallel world in order to preserve his own. He is unwilling to do so, and the spirit of his father strips him of the Black Panther powers as a result. Namor then destroys the parallel planet himself and reveals his role in sending Thanos to Wakanda; T'Challa tries to kill him, and the Illuminati expel him from their group.[139] Namor takes over the Necropolis, beneath Wakanda, and T'Challa and Shuri invade this subterranean city. T'Challa ultimately works together with the Illuminati to defeat Namor. T'Challa is able to transport Namor to another world and abandon him there. However, the various universes continue to collide and threaten all of existence. Doctor Doom, however, is able to create a new reality with himself in control. T'Challa and Namor are forced to join forces to eventually defeat Doom and restore the previously existing universe.[140] T'Challa joins a new group called theUltimates in order to fightGalactus.[80]

Shuri appears to have been killed by invaders. T'Challa loses his connection with Bast, and his people begin calling himHaramu-Fal, meaning "the Orphan King". Wakanda is damaged and lacking in resources and connections as a result of the various invasions and wars.[141] Wakanda experiences a national crisis as a result of its economic and political difficulties, loss of life, and the blow to their pride as a historically undefeated nation.[142] A political conflict takes place when two of the Dora Milaje attempt to protect women from rape by foreign chieftains and are punished for doing so by Wakanda authorities. They respond by rejecting Wakandan authority and creating their own outpost. Partly as a result of this conflict, Wakandans generally become skeptical of the monarchy. This natural discontent is exploited by Zenzi, who works together with an American businessman to overthrow T'Challa. At the same time, a university professor named Changamire spreads democratic ideas among Wakandans.[143] An insurgency develops against the Black Panther, and T'Challa consults with various dictators.[144] Black Panther forms a new group called the Crew, including Storm andLuke Cage in order to counter this insurgency. T'Challa recruits Changamire to mediate the conflict.[83]

Shuri is revealed to be comatose rather than dead. Her soul is transported to a new realm of Wakandan memory. She learns about their culture prior to the discovery of vibranium.[90] T'Challa works together withEden Fesi to recover Shuri. She becomes a new being, Aja-Adanna, who can maintain all Wakandan memory. Shuri can then consult T'Challa on the future of the nation.[145] Shuri now has the ability to transform into a flock of black birds, a single large black bird, or a stone.[146] Shuri helps to reconcile T'Challa with the dissident elements of the Dora Milaje. Wakanda embarks on a new path toward a democracy, with monarchy only performing a ceremonial role.[83]

It is revealed that T'Challa had previously sent a team to space to investigate the meteorite that brought vibranium to Wakanda, but that these explorers were pulled back into the past thousands of years. As a result, they founded their own kingdom far off in the cosmos, called the Intergalactic Empire of Wakanda. This empire is eventually led by N'Jadaka. N'Jadaka erases T'Challa's memory and makes him a slave to the empire. T'Challa maintains some trace of his previous experiences, particularly his love for Storm, and this allows him to overcome the mind-wipe and to found a rebel group. His memories are then restored by the god Bast. T'Challa leads an army of Earth's superheroes to defeat N'Jadaka.[147]

Personality and motivations

[edit]

T'Challa is a shrewd political actor whose main concern is the survival and prosperity of his nation, Wakanda.[148] Tom Brevoort, an editor of Black Panther stories at Marvel, says that Black Panther is unique because of his strategic planning.[127] McGregor's stories establish that he is emotionally intelligent and naturally intuitive, rather than aristocratic.[149] He is extraordinarily skilled in combat, but often applies deception and strategy to achieve his goals. While he often works independently or alongside the Avengers in order to achieve the collective good, he also has the vast resources of Wakanda at his disposal.[127] In Ta-Nahesi Coates's characterization, T'Challa has an adventurous spirit and does not actually enjoy the burden of being king.[150]

Powers, abilities and equipment

[edit]

Black Panther has acute senses as well as extraordinary "speed, strength, reflexes, durability, healing, and stamina." These capacities partly come from his own training and partly from the properties of a Wakandan heart-shaped herb. The relationship between the heart-shaped herb and Wakanda's vibranium resources is unclear.[151]

Black Panther has "peak human" athletic abilities and is one of the most effective fighters in hand-to-hand combat in the Marvel Universe. In his first published appearance, he defeats all of the members of the Fantastic Four single-handedly.[152] For decades after, he was represented as much less formidable, with no distinct powers. Christopher Priest believes this was one of the reasons why the character was under-utilized.[46]

In his contemporary incarnation, he has an armored, bulletproof suit with razor-sharp claws in its finger gauntlets. His mask includes communications equipment, his eye lenses can read ultraviolet and infrared signals, his suit can switch to a camouflage mode, and he has vibranium lacing in his soles to absorb impact. In addition, he has special armor for unusual occasions.[153] Black Panther is unique among superheroes in that he generally has the resources of an entire nation supporting him.[127]

Themes and motifs

[edit]

Racism and Black pride

[edit]

While the early writers of the story were white men, the subsequent authors Priest, Hudlin, and Coates are all Black American men. These writers used the character also to comment on US racism and stereotypes.[154] For example, a cognitive psychologist has argued that Priest's depiction of assumptions made by white characters in his stories are an early media representation ofmicroaggressions. This is particularly evinced in the character of Everett Ross, who is constantly misunderstanding his experiences of Africa and Black people because of his unconscious prejudices.[155] Particularly in the Reginald Hudlin period, Black Panther is positioned as a uniquely Black superhero, representing the best and most powerful aspects of contemporary Black masculinity.[156]Reginald Hudlin, one of the character's most decisive writers, argues that Black Panther is "the African equivalent ofCaptain America. Both represent the best of their nations. Not just physically but as moral paragons."[132]

Colonialism and decolonization

[edit]

The stories also explore imaginary approaches to the circumstances, opportunities, and difficulties of small, resource-rich nations in theGlobal South. Black Panther's character and his fictional kingdom, Wakanda, constitute an early example of what was later calledAfrofuturism. As Scott Bukatman writes, Wakanda is "an African nation never conquered, never colonized, never subservient. Small wonder Wakanda was foundational to the ethos and aesthetic later labeled Afrofuturist."[157] Black Panther's first story also establishes that Wakanda is in possession of a valuable natural resource (vibranium) and that various powers wish to violate Wakanda's sovereignty in order to obtain that resource.[158] While Lee and Kirby disavowed political motivation, historians of popular culture have commented on the coincidence of Black Panther's creation at the same time asThird World revolutionary movements and USBlack Power organizations, such as the Black Panther Party and theStudent Nonviolent Coordinating Committee.[159] Adilifu Nama reads T'Challa as "an idealized composite of third-world Black revolutionaries and theanticolonialist movement of the 1950s that they represented," and compares him toJomo Kenyatta,Patrice Lumumba, andKwame Nkrumah.[160] However, while many third-world revolutionaries believed in some version ofsocialism, Wakanda is portrayed as a monarchy. Moreover, while African independence movements were usually skeptical of US national interests they perceived asimperialist, Black Panther is a friendly ally ofCaptain America and other American superheroes. Martin Lund suggests that the early appearances of Black Panther are partly meant to suggest a clearly anti-communist model of independent African state, to calm Western anxieties about decolonization.[15] Later writers of Black Panther comics such as Ta-Nehisi Coates,Roxane Gay, and Nnedi Okorafor, in the 2010s and '20s, explicitly make the ideal of monarchy problematic and strive to portray a more democratic and inclusive vision ofAfrican nationalism.[161] Coates and Gay also emphasize the agency of women andlesbian characters.[162]

Challenges and transformation of the human body

[edit]

The series often emphasizes the vulnerability of the human body, or, conversely, a technologically armored heroic body. In Billy Graham's illustrations for Don McGregor's 1970s Black Panther stories, his costume is often destroyed and he is frequently depicted as resisting or overcoming immense exertion or suffering.[163] Todd Steven Burroughs describes McGregor's rendition of the Panther as "a kind of warrior-priest who could endure suffering as well as any Hinduyogi."[164] In contrast, Priest's and Hudlin's runs of Black Panther depict him as extraordinarily powerful, with an armored, bulletproof suit that is rarely damaged. In addition, the later version of the Panther suit includes razor-sharp claws.[165][full citation needed]

Supporting characters

[edit]
Main article:List of Black Panther supporting characters

Allies

[edit]

Black Panther draws from the combat skills of his bodyguards, the Dora Milaje.[166] When facing cosmic threats, he works together with the Avengers,[167] and has a particularly respectful relationship with Captain America.[168] He also works together with the Crew, which includes Luke Cage and Misty Knight. T'Challa also sometimes works together with an agent of theCentral Intelligence Agency, Everett Ross, who is generally hapless.[124]

Other Black Panthers

[edit]

The mantle of the Black Panther is passed down from generation to generation among the rulers of Wakanda. In the diegetic world of the character, there have been thousands of Black Panthers. In the comics, these include a Stone-Age Black Panther named Mosi[169] During World War II, the Panther was named T'Chanda, who first defeatedCaptain America and then allied with him to fight the Nazis.[170]

T'Challa's father is T'Chaka. After having married a woman named N'Yami, believing she cannot have children, he adopts a child with her, Hunter; however, she later becomes pregnant and dies giving birth to her first child, T'Challa; from the relationship with a woman of another tribe T'Chaka then has a second son, Jakarra, and finally remarries with Ramonda, with whom he has his only daughter, Shuri. To protect the kingdom, T'Chaka instituted a policy of strong isolationism. He is killed by Ulysses Klaw after having surprised him when he was trying to illegally extract vibranium in his kingdom.[171]

Erik Killmonger challenges and beats T'Challa in a duel for the throne, overthrowing him as king of Wakanda and taking on the role as the Black Panther. He becomes comatose after attempting to ingest the heart-shaped herb to acquire the Black Panther's powers, as he is not of royal blood.[172]

When T'Challa ends up in a coma because ofDoctor Doom, Shuri becomes his substitute as the Black Panther and queen of Wakanda which, after the rise of her half-brother to "king of the dead" creates, for the first time in history, two avatars of the Panther Goddess.[173]

Romantic interests

[edit]

In the Don McGregor period, T'Challa's romantic partner wasMonica Lynne, an African-American singer.[26] He also had a long-standing relationship with Ororo Munroe, also known as Storm of the X-Men, and they were married for years. Since their divorce, they maintain a close and intimate relationship.[174]

Villains

[edit]

T'Challa has frequently battled Erik Killmonger, his rival for the throne of Wakanda.[172] He is also frequently in conflict with Doctor Doom[175] and Namor.[176]

Cultural impact and legacy

[edit]

Black Panther became widely popular since the release of the filmBlack Panther in 2018. Many sources have commended the significance of the character, particularly with regard to the representation of Black people. Laura Bradley ofVanity Fair included Black Panther in their "Stan Lee's Most Iconic Characters" list, describing him as the "first superhero of African descent in the comics world."[177] Fred Bluden ofScreen Rant asserts, "As a technological genius, diplomat, statesman, and superhero, Black Panther helped to encourage the creation of other prominent black superheroes who were more than stereotypes. As a character, and a cultural milestone, his importance cannot be overstated."[178]The A.V. Club ranked Black Panther 1st in their "100 Best Marvel Characters" list.[179] Joseph J. Darowski, in the introduction toThe Ages of Black Panther: Essays on the King of Wakanda, argues that "The Black Panther's place in popular culture history is secured even as it is constantly evolving."[180] Darren Franich ofEntertainment Weekly ranked Black Panther 26th in their "Let's Rank Every Avenger Ever" list, writing, "The Black Panther has one of the most interesting backstory/mythologies in comic books."[181]Wizard Magazine ranked Black Panther 79th in their "200 Greatest Comic Book Character of All Time" list.[182]

In 2020, following the death ofChadwick Boseman,Disneyland unveiled a mural at Anaheim's Downtown representing the actor giving the Wakanda salute to a young fan wearing a Black Panther mask.[183] In 2021, awax figure of T'Challa / Black Panther was unveiled atMadame Tussauds London, inspired by the Marvel Cinematic Universe (MCU) incarnation of the character.[184] In 2022,BuyCostumes.com announced that T'Challa's Black Panther costume was the 8th most popular Halloween costume for kids.[185]

In 2022, British-American publisher Penguin Random House published aPenguin Classics edition of the Black Panther comics, as part of a line of Penguin Classics editions of various Marvel comics.[186]

In other media

[edit]
See also:T'Challa (Marvel Cinematic Universe)
Boseman at the 2017San Diego Comic-Con.

In 2018,Marvel Studios released a film adaptation titledBlack Panther, starringChadwick Boseman as T'Challa and directed byRyan Coogler.Black Panther was met with positive reviews from film critics. It became the highest-grossing solo superhero film of all time,[187] thethird-highest-grossing film of the MCU andsuperhero film overall,[188] theninth-highest-grossing film of all time,[189] and the highest-grossing film by an African-American director.[190][191] It is the fifth MCU film and 33rd overall to surpass $1 billion,[192] and thesecond-highest-grossing film of 2018.[193] It made history as the first superhero film to be nominated for theAcademy Award for Best Picture.Chadwick Boseman also portrayed T'Challa / Black Panther in other media set in theMarvel Cinematic Universe.[194][195] T'Challa appears in the live-action filmsCaptain America: Civil War (2016),Black Panther (2018),[194][195]Avengers: Infinity War (2018),[196] andAvengers: Endgame (2019).[197] Boseman voices three alternate timeline versions of T'Challa in season one of theDisney+ animated seriesWhat If...?, which were released posthumously.[198] InBlack Panther: Wakanda Forever (2022), T'Challa's sisterShuri (portrayed byLetitia Wright) takes over the mantle of the Black Panther.

Black Panther's first animated appearance was inFantastic Four, voiced byKeith David.[199] In 2010, he later appeared in aself-titled animated TV series onBlack Entertainment Television, voiced byDjimon Hounsou.[200][201] This series was a literal adaptation ofReginald Hudlin's arc of the comic series.[202] Subsequently, Black Panther appeared as a supporting character inThe Avengers: Earth's Mightiest Heroes, voiced byJames C. Mathis III.[203] Black Panther later appeared inAvengers Assemble,[204] with Mathis reprising the role.[205] The fifth season ofAvengers Assemble is named "Black Panther's Quest", with the narrative focus on Black Panther, Shuri, and Wakanda rather than the Avengers. The season was first announced at San Diego Comic-Con, and Daisy Lightfoot provided the voice for Shuri.[206] For young children, the Black Panther appears inSpidey and His Amazing Friends, voiced byTru Valentino.[207]Eyes of Wakanda, a spin-off animated series about Wakanda's history set in the Marvel Cinematic Universe, was released in 2025.[208]

Black Panther has also featured in several video games, such asMarvel: Ultimate Alliance, voiced byPhil LaMarr.[205]

See also

[edit]

References

[edit]
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