StMU Research Scholars

Featuring Scholarly Research, Writing, and Media at St. Mary's University

Winner of the Fall 2018 StMU History Media Award for

Best Article in the Category of “Gender Studies”

When conjuring an image of Wonder Woman, what is most prevalent? A beauty badass dispensing justice? A curvaceous sex symbol daring men to misbehave? Lose all the preconceived and media-induced notions of this Amazonian warrior, and the genesis of her tale will enthrall. The Wonder Woman character has been a superhero icon for seven decades, and has undergone numerous transformations and evolving backstories, and has been remolded to shape current times. At one juncture, she was even forced into compliance with newly imposed federal regulations. But who exactly was the original 1940’s Amazonian princess?

William Moulton Marston created America’s first female superhero, someone motivated by love rather than by personal tragedy. He used his original comics to send a message, through various themes and methods, of physical bondage. William Marston utilized bondage as a metaphor to represented the grip a male-dominated society held on women. Marston referred to the comic as brilliant “psychological feminist propaganda,” and with it, found a creative vehicle to spread his ideology to the masses.1 William Marston introduced mainstream America to physical bondage elements to accurately depict early twentieth-century gender disparities in three variations.

Creative Minds of Wonder Woman | Courtesy of Wikipedia Commons

Bondage is the physical restraint of another person to enforce subjugation. This was demonstrated when men restrained Wonder Woman, when Wonder Woman restrained men, and in the rare occasions when Amazonian women restrained each other. Using these three illustrations, the comic demonstrated how women were only rendered helpless in life when bound down by men. Comparatively, when Wonder Woman bound the antagonistic evildoer, she did so to establish understanding of authority and to influence reformed behavior. Lastly, the bondage used between Amazonian women built trust, love, and mutual respect.2

William Moulton Marston’s outward image was as far from the traditional comic writers of his day as professionally possible. The Wonder Woman creator was not a mother’s basement-dwelling socially-inept young pulp writer or struggling artist. Marston was a three-time Harvard graduate and renowned Psychologist. He was an established professional, who was known as a lawyer, professor, researcher, and published author by the time he began writing the Wonder Woman comic at age forty-six.3 When it came to William Marston’s personal life, the abnormalities persisted. He lived in a polyamorous romantic relationship, sharing a household with two women. His wife Elizabeth Holloway was a successful lawyer, and his acknowledged lover, Olive Byrne, was a fellow psychologist. The three lived together as one family unit starting in the late 1920’s until William Marston’s death in 1947. Each woman gave birth to two of Marston’s children. They all came to a logistical arrangement that suited everyone. Elizabeth Holloway and William Marston continued their respective careers, while Olive Byrne stayed home and raised all four children. The two women continued to cohabitate until Olive’s death in 1985; Elizabeth died in 1993.4

Marston channeled his admiration for these two strong-willed women and drew creative inspiration from his unorthodox family. William Marston’s personal life reflected his convictions, and he quite adamantly believed that women were naturally far superior to men. Marston had deep-running personal ties to the American twentieth-century suffrage movement. His wife, Elizabeth Holloway, was denied acceptance to Harvard Law School, solely based on her gender. William Marston was also the de facto nephew-in-law of Margaret Sanger, infamous birth control advocate and women’s rights activist.5

The Marston Family | Courtesy of Wikipedia Commons

To fully understand what Marston wanted to convey through his comic, it is imperative to understand the full scope of the man himself within both personal and professional realms. While he held particular views on non-monogamy and sexuality as a whole, the messages and ideals of the original Wonder Woman were utterly non-sexual. Instead, more profound meanings to the comic trail from his unique research into human behavior. He produced the DISC Theory, which stands for Dominance, Influence, Submission, and Compliance. These interlinked characteristics are the prevalent and intended themes throughout the original Wonder Woman comics.6

In 1928, he published Emotions of Normal People. In this book, Marston detailed his fascinating observations within the social interactions of personal behaviors. He concluded that harsh dominance leads to forced compliance, while gentle influence leads to willing submission. These insights are still incorporated as a template for personality assessments ninety years later.7

Generally, society expected men to be educated and employed, and expected women to be at home and raise children. Marston believed that women should not only govern themselves across all social planes, but he took it further and insisted that women were far superior to men and would rule the world within a hundred years. The women’s suffrage movements of the early twentieth century strongly impacted Marston. These women utilized images of women held in bondage chains to represent the lack of control they shared because of men’s oppressive restrictions. The injustice of men’s laws against the rule of a woman’s own body—and even mind—crushed a woman’s potential of being seen as a social equal. Marston purposefully carried these images and themes into his comics to spread his message to the masses.8

Original Sketch with Artist Notes | Courtesy of Smithsonian

The most common physical bondage scenarios in his comics illustrated various male adversaries restraining Wonder Woman in some fashion; sometimes she would be chained to a laboratory table, or sometimes she would even be caged and dangling from the ceiling in order to drain her very soul. If a villain was able to steal Wonder Woman’s golden lasso, she was full-body bound with it, rendering her helpless and immobile, and all of her superpowers were null and void. To win the day, Wonder Woman called upon her fellow female friends, or single-handedly outsmarted the villain. Her actions were a direct correlation for the need of real women in the world not to settle nor accept social confines, but to rally together and overcome any masculine induced hardship. Independence was attainable only if women would fight for it. When men take what power belongs rightfully to women, women become helpless. Women must take control back from men and rise above the limits set for them.9

Arguably, Wonder Woman would not be a very capable superhero if she was incapable of catching the bad guy. The illustrated beauty in her methods was William Marston’s creative genius. Evildoers were helpless to resist Wonder Woman’s every command when he was bound by her golden lasso. She influenced their behavior, using love. She never harmed a villain more than necessary to subdue him, and it is important to point out that Wonder Woman never killed a foe, whether intentionally or circumstantially, as other superheroes sometimes did in the course of dispensing justice. Moreover, Wonder Woman uniquely spent time attempting to reason with her adversaries, imploring gentle logic to realize the error of their ways. Violence was not the only answer to correcting wrongs, and she always allowed her foes to be apprehended by police or military forces. William Marston was drawing parallels to his psychological research. He provided a female heroine who utilized influence to posture submission.10

The least commonly depicted physical bondage scenario is perhaps the most profound. In original Wonder Woman comics, The Pleasure Island, native Amazonian women would bind each other in various competitions and displays of admiration and respect. Wonder Woman would allow her companions to bind her with the most robust chains possible, both sides knowing she could effortlessly escape the restraints. Bondage games were played to strengthen the emotional bond they shared, which would establish and build trust between the women. Wonder Woman boasted that the strongest binds on the island could never hold her down and encouraged friends to try their hardest.11 William Marston was expressing how women should take their confines and rally those chains as a shared burden, unite together to fight against the social injustice. These bondage implementations were indicative of women’s untapped potential power.12

Queen Hippolyte Speaks to Female Readers | Courtesy of Wonder Woman #23

There are comic critics whose opposing views only recognize that William Marston tried to incorporate positive messages for women. Bradford Wright, author of Comic Book Nation, concluded that “there was a lot in these stories to suggest that Wonder Woman was not so much a pitch to ambitious girls as an object for male sexual fantasies and fetishes.”13 This opposition is marginalized by a distinction of the characters speaking directly to young women within the comic panels, sending strong messages of independence and highlighting the importance of education and self-reliance. Richard Reynolds, contributor in The Superhero Reader, calls William Marston’s feminist pretensions disingenuous and argues that the comic was actually “developed as a frank appeal to male fantasies of sexual domination.”14 This short-sighted over-generalization is negated by the depth to which Marston developed his female character. If the goal were male sexual ideology, Marston would not have gone to extreme lengths in character development. He would have left Wonder Woman as a shallow hero only serving to further a male character’s story growth. Instead, Wonder Woman seeks out justice, not personal admiration, fame, nor even general male acceptance.

In alliance with DISC theory and William Marston’s message, Ben Saunders, author of Do the Gods Wear Capes, interpreted that “men must learn from women the virtues of love and of submission. When they do, and when they rule, the millennium will arrive.”15

Since William Marston’s death in 1947, the image and icon of Wonder Woman have been continually distorted from the original intended meaning. Wonder Woman has been reduced to a modern model of sexual prowess and numerous references to sexual bondage themes that never originally existed. Marston spent six years sending the world a message, one that has now been adapted and remolded until the original intent is long lost. The original golden lasso would compel a captive to obey any command. Later versions downgraded the weapon into a “lasso of truth,” which only prevented the captive from lying to Wonder Woman. In the twilight years of his life, William Marston wanted to impart a specific message to all his readers about female superiority. The only hope for mankind was female. The original Wonder Woman comics were his way to posture young readers for this crucial gender revolution.16 William Marston’s works were his way of representing feminine strength in fiction and art to a society that would not admit that such a thing existed in real life.

  1. Jill Lepore, The Secret History of Wonder Woman (New York: Vintage,2015), front page.
  2. Noah Berlatsky, Wonder Woman: Bondage and Feminism in the Marston/Peter Comics, 1941-1948 (New Brunswick, NJ: Rutgers University Press, 2017), 50-51.
  3. Tim Hanley, Wonder Woman Unbound: The Curious History of the World’s Most Famous Heroine (Chicago: Chicago Review Press, 2014), 8-12.
  4. Noah Berlatsky, Wonder Woman: Bondage and Feminism in the Marston/Peter Comics, 1941-1948 (New Brunswick, NJ: Rutgers University Press, 2017), 9-11.
  5. Nick Joyce, Wonder Woman: A Psychologist’s Creation (American Psychology Association, 2008), 20.
  6. Noah Berlatsky, Wonder Woman: Bondage and Feminism in the Marston/Peter Comics, 1941-1948 (New Brunswick, NJ: Rutgers University Press, 2017), 8.
  7. William Moulton Marston, Emotions of Normal People (Kegan Paul Trench and Company, Limited, 1928), 405.
  8. Jill Lepore, The Secret History of Wonder Woman (New York: Vintage, 2015), 1.
  9. Tim Hanley, Wonder Woman Unbound: The Curious History of the World’s Most Famous Heroine (Chicago: Chicago Review Press, 2014), 53.
  10. Tim Hanley, Wonder Woman Unbound: The Curious History of the World’s Most Famous Heroine (Chicago: Chicago Review Press, 2014), 21-22.
  11. Noah Berlatsky, Wonder Woman: Bondage and Feminism in the Marston/Peter Comics, 1941-1948 (New Brunswick, NJ: Rutgers University Press, 2017), .
  12. Tim Hanley, Wonder Woman Unbound: The Curious History of the World’s Most Famous Heroine (Chicago: Chicago Review Press, 2014), 11.
  13. Bradford W. Wright, Comic Book Nation: The Transformation of Youth Culture in America (Baltimore, MD: Johns Hopkins University Press, 2003), 21.
  14. Charles Hatfield et al. eds., The Superhero Reader (Jackson: University Press of Mississippi, 2013), 99-115.
  15. Ben Saunders, Do the Gods Wear Capes?: Spirituality, Fantasy, and Superheroes (London: Bloomsbury Academic, an Imprint of Bloomsbury Publishing Plc, 2016), 65.
  16. Jill Lepore, “The Surprising Origin Story of Wonder Woman,” Smithsonian Magazine, October 2014.

Annissa Noblejas

I am a Communication Studies major with a minor in History. My passion falls with research and I love to share new found knowledge with others. I am a military veteran, mother of four great kids, and coffee connoisseur.

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150 comments

  • Kendall Guajardo

    I loved this article ! The best part was the subtle influence through media and works of art. Marston was able to spread a message to young kids and adults alike without the negative push back from men in opposing the rising status and equality of women. Even when critics deemed the comic inherently sexual made purely for men’s enjoyment and only for their judgement, we all could have missed the most important theme that he was trying to convey; that women can and will be equal if not superior to men in many aspects. This isn’t to say that I blindly agree with certain messages but that the main takeaway is a message of love. Women are strong for all of their willingness to spread kindness and become a symbol of housewives who nurture or even pursuing lawyers. However, I would have liked to see Marston’s logic a bit more on the aspects of a women’s importance and skills. Women are allowed to domineering just as men are allowed to be nurturing. I feel as though he missed some marks in assuming all women are gentle head-turners because perhaps women too can be just like a male superhero, maybe they just aren’t allowed to be just yet.

  • Aracely Beltran

    A very well put together article that was informative and yet so entertaining at the same time. I have read a few comics of Wonder Woman and have watched the movie but never really thought to look into the history. I don’t think many people do but after reading this I sure will. As a woman there are rarely any super hero women therefore when there is one it feels so impowering when there is one. The fact that he was trying to emphasize the bondage that men have to women and vise versa is important. However, I am so glad you also highlighted how powerful us women can be.

  • Madelynn Vasquez

    I also thought Wonder Woman just to be an ordinary character in the comic book series, I mean of course a character with super powers and such but I never thought there to be a hidden meaning behind the creation of this character. The message Marston wanted to convey is undoubtedly amazing and inspiring and although we have evolved in women’s rights and empowerment in recent years, it is always refreshing to see others continue pusingh for the recognition of true and honest power that women hold.

  • Caily Torres

    This article is very well written as it walks you through on how William Moulton Marston created Wonder Woman. There is an overgeneralization that Wonder Woman is a sexual symbol, however, Marston had made her to be strong and motivated by love, while also portraying her struggles of being held back by men through bondage. Marston got this idea to portray Wonder Woman like this because of his two wife’s who had shown him that women are stronger than men but they are held back by the original sexist ideals that women belong at home taking care of the children. Marston went away from the normal tradition of comic books and taught women throughout the world that they are stronger then what is being put in their minds.

  • Ariana Melendez

    I never looked into the history of Wonder Woman’s character, but this article did an amazing job of walking me through it! I admit, before reading this article, I believed the overgeneralization of the character, which I now know is a misconception. It is upsetting that over time society has made Wonder Woman a sexual object that appeals to men, rather than convey Marston’s real message; the power of love and female dominance.

  • Savannah Alcazar

    Your writing is powerful! The message conveyed in this article had me ready to take over the world because of Wonder Woman. I have never been one to be into comics or movies about comics. I think I might have some catching up to do after reading this piece. Of course I knew who Women Woman is, but I had no idea what she represented. I found it intriguing that a man of that time could recognize women as a symbol of strength and power. He was far ahead of his time. I enjoyed the personal life of Martson; it allowed me to understand why he would think so highly of women.

  • Margaret Maguire

    Wonder Woman is super cool. I really enjoyed this article and learning the history behind the comic book and the author. William Moulton Marston, the creator of Wonder Woman, made this comic to spread awareness of how women aren’t represented in the comic book and superhero worlds. I never heard of how Wonder Woman’s powers came from love and how much thought was put into how she takes down bad guys. This was a really interesting and neat article.

  • Amelia Hew

    I never knew the message Marston sent with the image of Wonder Woman. I always thought that Wonder Woman was a hero and an honorable warrior who won’t kill her foes. It’s surprising on how Marston, the creator of Wonder Woman had two wives and stated that he created Wonder Woman with the reference of his strong-willed wives. His message stating that women can be strong, perhaps even stronger than men which is something not as common during the early 20 century.

  • Briana Montes

    Overall very well written article. I was never really into the comic book series nor did I really know anything about Wonder Woman. As a little kid I just knew she was a superhero and never really thought of anything different. It was really interesting to read about how bondage games were played to create emotional bonds and as well as how women had strength. The message of her story is very admirable and inspiring to me. Great article.

  • Vanessa Quetzeri

    I think that Martson’s original message was refreshing for that time period; he was trying to represent women as powerful yet helpless when tied down by men. I find it interesting how he developed these perspectives on women; he had a polyamorous relationship with women he profoundly respected and drew inspiration from. It is quite the unusual situation to draw his conclusions from, but it inspired America’s first female superhero.

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