Black Cat (Felicia Hardy) vs. Woman of Babylon

Abishai1000

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Black Cat (Felicia Hardy) is an intriguing anti-heroine and rival of the webbed wonder Spider-Man (Marvel Comics).

Black Cat is a modern populism graffiti symbol of pedestrianism consciousness, and various representations of her image reflect a new age interest in gender dialogue. Black Cat is wily, resourceful, cunning, and unpredictable.

The Biblical woman/harlot of Babylon is a mysterious woman prophesied to appear at the end of days and ride atop a powerful and ominous dragon and give thrones and authority to the AntiChrist, the adversary of humanity.

Can we and should we draw pedestrian parallels between Black Cat (Marvel Comics) and the harlot of Babylon (Christianity)?

Comics are very popular now, and graphic comic book characters such as Spawn (Image Comics) and Deadpool (Marvel Comics) have drawn enough social interest to be adapted into high-profile Hollywood (USA) films.

Comics speak to an interest in vigilantism dialogue that arise from new age urbanization traffic related paranoia (i.e., crime syndicates, heroism fantasies, violence glorification in the media, etc.). Therefore, how can we use gender-rich comic book female avatars such as Black Cat (Marvel Comics) to talk about the anti-democratic aspects of the Christian harlot of Babylon?

In other words, have comics reached reasonable levels of philosophical esteem?




:evil:



Black Cat (Comics)



Harlot of Babylon (Wikipedia)



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