Harley and Ivy: Unraveling their Dynamics in Batman Series

1049 Words3 Pages

When examining the many complicated relationships between the characters in the multiple batman universes, the relationship between Harley Quin and Poison Ivy in “Batman: The Animated Series,” specifically in the episode titled “Harley and Ivy,” is the one I found most fascinating. The personal backstories that they both have as individuals is already fascinating, but as their stories intertwine, things get even more intriguing. The two female villains officially meet for the first time in this episode, they join forces and become the “queens of crime,” while also opening the show, and TV industry, up to the queer audience. I would argue that in this episode they even go as far as addressing the urgent need for positive representation and acceptance …show more content…

She is so insistent that perhaps she also wants her to see that Harley can live outside of the male sphere entirely (at least in her romantic life) and simply stick with her and become permanent partners in both crime and love. By using these subtle details the writers seem to be really catering to the queer audience. In that case, Ivy would perhaps be a lesbian, and Harley a bisexual. When looking at the time period in which the show was made we can also see that the subject of gender equality and queer acceptance was being brought to the forefront of social and political activism. Following the AIDS epidemic of the 1980s, the 90s was a time where activist organizations like Queer Nation, The Lesbian Avengers, and gay and straight alliances started being formed in high schools across the nation. I would argue that the writers and animators of the show, specifically this episode, were responding to the social and political climate of the nation during that time. Creating characters that appear queer, whether it’s “canon” or not, supports the queer community and opens TV up to the possibility complex and exciting world of queer relationships. I think the creators were trying to do this when they wrote this episode and created the partnership between Poison Ivy and Harley …show more content…

They are not only trying to feed a queer audience that is starving for more characters that reflect them and their lifestyles- they are also addressing the need to break apart sexism and move towards gender equality. And these two subjects, sexuality and sexism, undoubtedly share a good deal of intersectionality. You cannot discuss one issue without having to consider the other, for example, the specific scene that I am focusing on shows both Ivy and Harley together in very casual comfortable clothing. They exchange looks and work together to stop Batman for interfering with them in on their home turf. Subsequently, the two women talk to Batman saying that they will never be defeated by a man. Ivy also mention being trapped in female domestic slavery (to men). This suggests that she not only wants to fight sexism but also typical gender norms and the idea that women must be attached to men.
With all of that being said, I believe the more prevalent urgency of the situations was that the show was made after and partially during the AIDS crisis. At that time it was too risky to create a suggestive queer relationship between two men, (considering that the AIDS crisis mainly demonized gay men). However, the need for any positive representation of gayness was apparent. The relationship between Harley and Ivy, in this episode, and the rest of the series, suggests that the creators wanted

Open Document