#Jessica_Jones
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superfandomcorp · 3 years ago
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Miss Jones and Mr. Murdock
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iffltd · 7 years ago
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Ms. Rachael  Tyalor
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blazilik · 8 years ago
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thespectre · 7 years ago
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The Defenders
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confusedsmoulder · 5 years ago
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Character bio: Jessica Jones
Name: Jessica Jones
Pronouns: She/Her
Age: 24
Alias (if applicable):
Species: Superhuman
About: Private Investigator. Alcoholic. Short-tempered. Word to describe Jessica Jones, but they miss the point that deep down in all the self-loathing and hate for the world, is a woman who cares to help. There's a lot Jessica Jones doesn't share about her life, but if you mentioned Kilgrave than prepare to be knocked on your ass. (For a much much more detailed background use this https://marvelcinematicuniverse.fandom.com/wiki/Jessica_Jones)
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our flag means death, but what does his mean?
by jessica_jones
Blackbeard wasn't the only one interested in the Gentlemen pirate, he only got to him first.
Stede returns to Blackbeard, only to be taken by the dread pirate Westley.
Words: 2822, Chapters: 1/10, Language: English
Fandoms: Our Flag Means Death (TV)
Rating: Mature
Warnings: Rape/Non-Con
Categories: M/M
Characters: Stede Bonnet, Blackbeard | Edward Teach
Relationships: Blackbeard | Edward Teach/Stede Bonnet, Stede Bonnet & Original Male Character(s)
Additional Tags: Bottom Stede Bonnet, stede bonnet - Freeform, Blackbeard | Edward Teach Loves Stede Bonnet, Stede Bonnet Needs a Hug, Stede Bonnet Loves Blackbeard | Edward Teach, Hurt/Comfort, Non-Consensual Oral Sex, Roughness, Rape/Non-con Elements, Angst with a Happy Ending, take heed of warnings, Kidnapped, obsessed
source https://archiveofourown.org/works/39492249
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jokerasylum91 · 7 years ago
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he’s baaaaaaaack..... somehow
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irgendwasmittext · 6 years ago
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Superhelden - männlich gleich stark, weiblich gleich verkopft?
Vorab: An wen denkt ihr zuerst, wenn ihr das Wort „Superheld“ lest? Und welche Eigenschaften verbindet ihr mit dieser Person?
Mein erster Gedanke sah ungefähr so aus:
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Extraordinäre Stärke, Verbiegen von Metall, Unverletzlichkeit – viele bringen mit dem Heldentum und diesen Eigenschaften wohl Superman in Verbindung. Er ist als erster Superheld der Comicgeschichte wohl der Superheld schlechthin. Seit seiner Erfindung und der Veröffentlichung des ersten Comics in den 1930ern, in denen er – nicht, wie ursprünglich konzipiert, ein glatzköpfiger Schurke, der die Welt an sich reißen wollte – als uns gut bekannter Unterwäsche über normaler Kleidung tragender Good Guy auftrat, blühte die Superheldenkultur nur so auf. Walt Disney, Marvel und DC veröffentlichen Comics, Filme und Merch von Superhelden – immer darauf bedacht, die Helden als mächtig, stark und überlegen darzustellen und dem Leser eine kleine Flucht aus der Realität zu gönnen. Laut Trabant dienen gerade Helden wie Superman dazu, den Menschen mit der Ungerechtigkeit und durch den Kapitalismus bedingten Entfremdung zu versöhnen (vgl. Trabant 1971, S. 260). Gut, ein weinerlicher Held wäre vermutlich auf dem Markt weder gut angekommen noch hätte er eine Vorbildfunktion erlangen können.
Im Rahmen dieses Blog-Eintrags möchte ich mir gerne ansehen, welche Eigenschaften Helden denn haben, ob es vielleicht spezifisch weibliche und spezifisch männliche Eigenschaften gibt und wie man diese im Unterricht aufgreifen könnte. Schließlich tauchen gerade vor dem Hintergrund der neuen Marvel-Filme immer mehr weibliche Helden auf den Kinoleinwänden auf. 
Wie zuletzt erst in „Black Panther“ bzw. den Avengers-Reihen von Marvel zu sehen ist, können sowohl Frauen als auch Männer Helden sein. Nehmen wir als Beispiel Shuri aus Wakanda. Sie ist die sechzehnjährige Schwester von T‘Challa, der der Black Panther und König von Wakanda ist. In ihrer Heimat verfügt Shuri über ein riesiges Labor, in dem Sie medizinische Instrumente, Kampfutensilien und allerlei andere Gerätschaften entwirft und baut. Von den Machern des MCU, des Marvel Cinematic Universe, wird sie sogar als schlauester Charakter bezeichnet. Und das, obwohl es da auch noch Tony Stark gibt – der sich seine körperliche Übermacht gegen Gegner übrigens über seine selbst konstruierten Anzüge schafft, also eigentlich auch mehr mit dem Kopf als mit den Muskeln arbeitet. Wohingegen Jessica Jones eher untypische Züge für eine weibliche Heldin zeigt: Alkohol, Schlägereien und wenig Emotionalität. Trotz allem tauchen Frauen in Comics und Superheldenfilmen deutlich weniger auf. 
Hier übrigens ein Blick in Shuris Labor: 
youtube
Amanda Shendruk, Journalistin für pudding.cool, hat zu den genderspezifischen Fähigkeiten von Superhelden Wunderbares herausgefunden. Sie hat über 34.400 Comic-Charaktere untersucht und dabei Folgendes herausgefunden:
Männer verfügen über physische Fähigkeiten wie Stärke oder Ausdauer, während Frauen eher flink und geschickt sind. Empathie, Intellekt und Telepathie werden mehr bei Frauen als bei Männern gefunden.
Grundsätzlich weisen männliche Helden eher physische Kräfte auf, während weibliche Helden ganz klar in Sachen „Geisteskraft“ vorne liegen. Empathie, Telepathie, Kontrolle von Emotionen sind Frauenbereich. 
Während 30 Prozent der untersuchten männlichen Charaktere „man“ in ihrem Namen haben, weisen 13 Prozent der weiblichen Helden die Verniedlichung „girl“ in ihrem Namen auf.
(vgl. Shendruk 2017)
Ein super Gegenbeispiel bietet übrigens Jessica Jones, die relativ viele der männlichen Merkmale aufweist. Stärke, Schnelligkeit, großes Gerechtigkeitsgefühl und ein relativ kühles Gefühlsleben. Wer mehr über Jessica Jones erfahren will, findet hier Informationen: https://de.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jessica_Jones
Meine Idee ist es, mit einer abgewandelten Form der Eingangsfrage zu beginnen und die SuS zu fragen, welche Eigenschaften für sie ein Superheld hat. Um das Ganze für die SuS etwas anregender zu erstellen, können die Ergebnisse via answergarden.ch stattfinden – oder man lässt die SuS an die Tafel kommen, je nach Präferenz.
Ich erwarte in etwa Antworten wie: Stärke, Unsterblichkeit, Schnelligkeit, bekämpft das Böse, versteckt sich hinter einer Maske, … Anschließend könnte eine „Textarbeit“ stattfinden: die SuS können entweder online nach Superheldenbildern suchen oder sich an mitgebrachten Comics bedienen und als Ergänzung in verschiedenen Wikis recherchieren. Hier bieten sich unter anderem die Wikipedia-Kategoriensuche unter https://de.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kategorie:Superheld oder das Marvel-Wiki unter https://marvel-charaktere.fandom.com/de/wiki/Marvel_Charaktere_Wiki an.
Die konkrete Aufgabe dabei ist: herausfinden, wie Superhelden dargestellt werden und welche ihre Fähigkeiten sind. Die SuS können sich in verschiedenen Gruppen jeweils auf verschiedene Helden konzentrieren. Zu Beginn der (Doppel-)Stunde sollen die SuS Ihre Ergebnisse vorstellen und es soll in einer gemeinsamen Diskussion herausgefunden, was letztendlich einen Superhelden ausmacht und ob die SuS die Auffassungen der Comic-Darstellungen teilen.
Meinungen? Kritik? Antworten auf die ersten Fragen? Ich freue mich auf eure Kommentare 😊
 Literatur und Quellen:
Wüllner, Daniel (2013):  Achtung, Geschlechtergrenze! https://www.tagesspiegel.de/kultur/comics/comicforschung-achtung-geschlechtergrenze/8019304.html (zuletzt angesehen: 17.06.2019)
Shendruk, Amanda (2017): Analyzing the Gender Representation of 34,476 Comic Book Characters. https://pudding.cool/2017/07/comics/  (zuletzt angesehen: 17.06.2019)
Trabant, Jürgen (1971): Superman – Das Image eines Comic-Helden. In: Ehmer, Hermann K. (Hrsg.): Visuelle Kommunikation. Beiträge zur Kritik der Bewußtseinsindustrie. Köln, S. 251–276.
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superfandomcorp · 3 years ago
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Karen: your friend Jessica is here.
Matt: She's not my friend, I'm her lawyer.
Jessica: You're not my lawyer.I come for my scarf.
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waha-no-baka · 6 years ago
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La saison 3 de Jessica Jones prévue pour cet été ! Malgré les différentes annulations pour les séries Marvel chez Netflix, nous pourrons voir les nouvelles aventures de Jessica cet été ! Qu’en pensez vous ? Source : Tags : #SÉRIE_TV #JESSICA_JONES #ANNONCE Lien vers la fiche : http://bit.ly/2GcEcPi http://bit.ly/2HVBuPR
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finishinglinepress · 6 years ago
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FINISHING LINE PRESS CHAPBOOK OF THE DAY:
Bitterroot by Jessica Jones
$14.99, paper
https://www.finishinglinepress.com/product/bitterroot-by-jessica-jones-nwvs-143/
Jessica Jones has been teaching Art and English in K-12 and college settings for over 15 years. Her poetry and essays have appeared in Journal of the Assembly for Expanded Perspectives on Learning (2014), the Ohio Journal of Language Arts (2014), Poems Across the Big Sky II: An Anthology of Montana Poets (Many Voices Press, 2016), Bright Bones (Open Country Press, 2018) and NCTE’s English Journal (2018). She also presents at regional and national conferences and has served as Writer in Residence for Calcutta Mercy Hospital in India, and with the Cuyahoga Valley National Park in Ohio. She is currently full-time faculty at Kent State University at Stark, where she teaches poetry, creative writing, and composition courses that focus on diversity and social justice. She can be reached at [email protected] and at https://naea.digication.com/jessica_jones.
Bitterroot is a collection of poems written by a young teacher who is herself still learning. The best teachers are the ones who don’t offer easy answers for hard questions, and Jessica Jones’ poems raise a galaxy of hard questions. Bitterroot asks the reader to consider the complexities of Native and non-Native co-inhabitation in northwest Montana, valleys and vistas of triumph and hardship. In “Hauling Wood,” a neighbor loans the teacher his ex-wife’s snow pants and boots, which causes the teacher to feel “small and important at the same time.” In reading these verses, I feel small and important, and you will too. The spirit of Bitterroot is this: Let’s learn together and never stop. And let’s be grateful to those who teach us, everyone, everywhere.
–Lowell Jaeger, Poet Laureate of Montana, Founder, Many Voices Press
Drawing from years of teaching on the Flathead Indian Reservation, Jessica Jones offers us powerful poems of witness and advocacy informed by her loving participation in the lives of her students. She weaves her present-day teaching with historical records of government policies and mistreatment of Native peoples, making her homeroom a site of truth and reconciliation, a place where she is alternately teacher, ally, or “once again the student.” “Ask—We urge from the chalkboard— keep asking—Whose voice is missing? Who flutters on the margin of the page, the schoolyard, the city limits waiting—to interject?” Bitterroot is a stunning collection of essential poems, each one “a small act, this affirmation of life.”
–David Hassler, Director, Wick Poetry Center, 2006 Ohio Poet of the Year
Bitterroot captures the enchanting intricacies of loving a particular place. Jones speaks to tender moments of living and life with rare wisdom and insight. I felt secreted away, young again, in a classroom with a passionate teacher who sees all the world has to offer.
–Debra Magpie Earling, Professor of Fiction & Native Studies, University of Montana, 2007 Guggenheim Fellow
RESERVE YOUR COPY TODAY
PREORDER SHIPS MARCH 15, 2019
https://www.finishinglinepress.com/product/bitterroot-by-jessica-jones-nwvs-143/
#poetry
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mysteryofthings · 8 years ago
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dbarajas03-blog · 6 years ago
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JESSICA JONES
Overcoming her difficult past, Jessica Jones works as one of the finest Private Investigators in New York City. Her firm, Alias Investigations, was born out of her unmatched street smarts and her personal drive for justice. Jessica is a skilled detective and investigative journalist. She an incredibly talented PI and her powers just add onto a really amazing character.
Powers and Abilities
After coming into contact with experimental chemicals and spending some time in a coma, Jessica emerged with superhuman abilities. She possesses superhuman strength, as well as flight, and can block mind control. She shows the capacity to lift a two-ton police car with little effort. Her strength allows her to lift up a giant-sized Goliath by the nostrils and toss him a short distance, break Atlas' nose, and render her fellow superheroine Jessica Drew unconscious with a single punch to the face. She later withstood being punched by a human on Mutant-Growth Hormone and sustained only mild bruising and a bloody nose and was able to recover in moments after being shocked by Jessica Drew's venom blasts. Despite this resistance to harm, Jessica sustained severe injuries, including a damaged spine and neck, a detached retina, and a broken nose after being attacked by both the Vision and Iron Man. Jessica is also able to fly, and while she was able to fly quite well during her early years as a heroine, she has admitted that her flying ability degenerated while she was no longer an active hero. She has since displayed improved flying ability after joining the New Avengers. After her ordeal at the hands of the Purple Man (Killgrave), Jessica was given a degree of psionic protection by Jean Grey of the X-Men. This psionic protection was sufficient to protect Jessica against a second attack by the Purple Man, though she had to "trigger" this resistance on her own. This instance was in the Netflix series show “Jessica Jones” when Jessica learned, as time progressed, to deal with Kilgrave's mind control, by making her willpower stronger and able to block out his power.
Bio
In the comic series, Midtown High student Jessica Campbell goes to school with Peter Parker, on whom she has a crush and is present when he is bitten by the irradiated spider which gives him his spider powers. Jessica's father receives tickets for Disney World from his boss Tony Stark. On the way home, their car collides with a military convoy carrying radioactive chemicals. Her family is killed, and she spends several months in a coma. Upon waking, she is placed in an orphanage and adopted by the Jones family. Jessica later discovers that her radiation exposure granted her super strength, limited invulnerability, and flight. Jessica's adoptive parents re-enroll her at Midtown High, where she is ostracized by her classmates, especially Flash Thompson. Peter Parker (who has since become Spider-Man) senses in Jessica a kindred spirit—someone who has also lost her family due to a tragic circumstance. Jessica mistakes his kind attention for pity and lashes out at him. She later witnesses a fight between Spider-Man and the villain Sandman in her school. This inspires her to use her abilities for positive ends. As Jewel, Jones has a fairly uneventful superhero career until she intervenes in a disturbance at a restaurant involving Zebediah Killgrave, the Purple Man. Killgrave uses his power of mind control to place Jones under his command, psychologically torturing her and forcing her to aid his criminal schemes. After Killgrave sends her to kill Daredevil at the Avengers Mansion, Jones is rescued by Carol Danvers, the only Avenger who actually knows her. Jones undergoes psychic therapy with Jean Grey of the X-Men, who places a special mental command in Jones's subconscious to protect her from further mind control. During this time, Jones develops a brief romantic relationship with S.H.I.E.L.D. agent Clay Quartermain. Due to the traumatic violation of her mind by Killgrave and the fact that she was barely noticed missing for eight months, a demoralized and depressed Jones gives up her costumed superhero life. She briefly adopts a darker identity as the Knightess and interrupts a crime meeting between the Owl and a mafioso, through which she meets up with fellow superhero Luke Cage. After defeating the Owl, she and Cage develop a lasting friendship. No longer a superhero, Jones opens a private detective agency. Longtime friend Carol Danvers sets Jones up with Scott Lang (the second Ant-Man), and the two date for several months. She also has an off-and-on affair with Cage. Killgrave, still obsessed with Jones, escapes from high-security incarceration, but with the mental defenses Grey gave her, Jones breaks his control and subsequently beats him to death.[11] Later, Cage and Jones admit their feelings for each other, and after she becomes pregnant with their child, they begin a committed relationship.
Significance
Jessica Jones is an amazing character in the Marvel series in my opinion and has all going for her. She is a very relatable character as she deals with real-life problems such as alcoholism, poor living conditions in the slums of New York, and family issues. These type of problems are very common in real life. So, for a superhero to be dealing with such problems and saving the day makes the superhero very well-respected as an icon. What I mean by that is when a hero deals with things that a regular person would deal with, it makes the person like the hero more. In addition, since her intelligence is very high, she doesn’t even need her powers to be a successful private investigator. Her powers just make her job easier to deal with homicidal maniacs like Kilgrave or other villains. She is practically a hero with or without her powers. Though she points out from time to time that she does not believe she is a superhero, this has to do with her nature as a person. With her troubled past, she grew up dealing with a lot and went to alcohol to numb the pain like some people today dealing with their individual struggles. She believes that she does not fit the hero type qualities, so she is more portrayed as an anti-hero. Even though anti-hero characters are not very popular due to their personality being very dark or too violent, however, Jessica Jones does not really fit this profile. She succumbs to being or acting very blunt or violent but it is usually to protect the ones she cares about. I think Jessica Jones is underrated and was not very popular before being introduced into the Netflix series, because she was seen in the comics as a very normal hero. I think people thought the character with the most powers and coolest looking were the best, but I do believe people are starting to appreciate backstory more and the overall quality of the hero. Which is why Jessica Jones makes a great addition to the Marvel Cinematic Universe and will continue to look awesome.
References:
https://www.marvel.com/characters/jessica-jones
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jessica_Jones
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superfandomcorp · 3 years ago
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Peter: Violence is not the response
Matt: I am the answer to violence.
Jessica: It's the only thing I can answer
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