コンテンツにスキップ

「利用者:ポーチュラカ/sandbox」の版間の差分

削除された内容 追加された内容
ページの白紙化
en:Wonder Woman 18:23, 4 October 2017‎ UTCから翻訳準備
1行目: 1行目:
{{about|the character known as "Princess Diana of Themyscira" and "Diana Prince"|the 2017 film|Wonder Woman (2017 film)|other characters given this name, as well as other uses}}
{{Use mdy dates|date=December 2013}}
{{Infobox comics character
<!--Wikipedia:WikiProject Comics-->
| character_name = Wonder Woman
| image = Wonder Woman.jpg
| caption = Wonder Woman in ''[[Justice (DC Comics)|Justice]]'' #5 (June 2006)<br>Art by [[Doug Braithwaite]] and [[Alex Ross]]
| publisher = [[DC Comics]]
| debut = ''[[All Star Comics]]'' [[All Star Comics 8|#8]] <br>(October 1941)<ref>''All Star Comics'' #8 was cover-dated Dec/Jan 1941/1942, but released in October 1941 (see [http://www.dcindexes.com/features/comic.php?comicid=2249 Mike's Amazing World of Comics]).</ref>
| creators = {{plainlist|
*[[William Moulton Marston]]<ref name="NYT-20141023">{{cite news |last=Garner |first=Dwight |title=Books – Her Past Unchained 'The Secret History of Wonder Woman,' by Jill Lepore |url=https://www.nytimes.com/2014/10/24/books/the-secret-history-of-wonder-woman-by-jill-lepore.html |date=October 23, 2014 |newspaper=[[The New York Times]] |accessdate=October 23, 2014 }}</ref>
*[[H. G. Peter|Harry G. Peter]] <small>(uncredited)</small>
}}
| alter_ego = Princess Diana of Themyscira <!-- Do not enter a middle name. Also, there is no past or current, dead or alive in fiction from a real world perspective; the infobox should cover the Wonder Woman known to the public consciousness and not a current comic book storyline. -->
| alliances = {{plainlist|
*[[Justice League]]
<!--These are from one particular Green Lantern storyline and do not really define the character:
*[[Star Sapphires]]
*[[Black Lantern Corps]]
*[[White Lantern Corps]] -->
}}
| homeworld = [[Themyscira (DC Comics)|Themyscira]]
| species = {{plainlist|
*[[Amazons (DC Comics)|Amazonian]] <br><small>([[Demigod]], 2011–present)</small>
}}
| partners = {{plainlist|
<!--Try to keep this list short. No need to fill with Wonder Woman supporting characters and Justice League colleagues-->
*[[Steve Trevor]]
*[[Batman]]
*[[Superman]]
*[[Wonder Girl]]
*[[Supergirl]]
<!--Try to keep this list short. No need to fill with Wonder Woman supporting characters and Justice League colleagues:
*[[Green Lantern]]
*[[The Flash]]
*[[Aquaman]]
*[[Hawkgirl]]
*[[Cyborg (comics)|Cyborg]]-->
}}
| aliases = [[Diana Prince]]
|powers =
<!--Must be a defining trait: only technology or powers Wonder Woman regularly used are listed here-->
<!--Terminology should mirror "List of superhuman features and abilities in fiction"-->
*Superhuman strength, speed, durability, and longevity
*Flight
*Skilled hand-to-hand combatant
*Utilizes [[Lasso of Truth]], indestructible bracelets, boomerang tiara, sword, and shield
| cat = super
| subcat = DC Comics
| hero = y
| sortkey = Wonder Woman
}}

'''Wonder Woman''' is a fictional [[superhero]] appearing in [[American comic book]]s published by [[DC Comics]].<ref name="NYT-20141023" /> The character is a founding member of the [[Justice League]], [[god]]dess, and [[Ambassador-at-Large]] of the [[Amazons (DC Comics)|Amazonian people]]. The character first appeared in ''[[All Star Comics]]'' [[All Star Comics 8|#8]] in October 1941 and first cover-dated on ''[[Sensation Comics]]'' #1, January 1942. In her homeland, the island nation of [[Themyscira (DC Comics)|Themyscira]], her official title is ''Princess Diana of Themyscira, Daughter of Hippolyta''. When blending into the society of "[[Earth|Man's World]]", she adopts her [[secret identity|civilian identity]] ''[[Diana Prince]]''. The character is also referred to by such epithets as the "Amazing Amazon", the "Spirit of Truth", "Themyscira's Champion", and the "Goddess of Love and War".

Wonder Woman was created by the American [[psychologist]] and [[writer]] [[William Moulton Marston]] ([[pen name]]: Charles Moulton),<ref name="NYT-20141023" /> and [[artist]] [[Harry G. Peter]]. [[Olive Byrne|Olive Byrne]], Marston's lover, and his wife, [[Elizabeth Holloway Marston|Elizabeth]],<ref name=Lepore/> are credited as being his inspiration for the character's appearance.<ref name="NYT-20141023"/><ref>{{Cite book|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=H3yST26ZUJUC|title=Darger's Resources|last=Moon|first=Michael|date=March 12, 2012|publisher=Duke University Press|isbn=0822351560|language=en}}</ref><ref>{{cite news|author=Catherine Bennett |url=https://www.theguardian.com/books/2014/dec/28/secret-history-wonder-woman-jill-lepore-observer-review |title=The Secret History of Wonder Woman review – is this what a feminist looks like? &#124; Books |newspaper=[[The Guardian]] |date= |accessdate=December 14, 2016}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.theatlantic.com/magazine/archive/2014/11/wonder-womans-kinky-feminist-roots/380788/ |title=Wonder Woman's Kinky Feminist Roots |publisher=[[The Atlantic]] |date= |accessdate=December 14, 2016}}</ref><ref>{{cite news|last=Caplan |first=Rebecca |url=http://www.newyorker.com/magazine/2014/09/22/last-amazon |title=Wonder Woman's Secret Past |newspaper=[[The New Yorker]] |date= |accessdate=December 14, 2016}}</ref> Marston drew a great deal of inspiration from early [[feminists]], and especially from birth control pioneer [[Margaret Sanger]]; in particular, her piece "Woman and the New Race". The character first appeared in ''[[All Star Comics]]'' [[All Star Comics 8|#8]] in October 1941 and first cover-dated on ''[[Sensation Comics]]'' #1, January 1942. The ''Wonder Woman'' title has been published by DC Comics almost continuously except for a brief hiatus in 1986.<ref name="Hendrix2007">{{Cite news | last=Hendrix | first=Grady | title=Out for Justice | newspaper=[[The New York Sun]] | date=December 11, 2007}}</ref>

Wonder Woman's origin story relates that she was [[Creation of man from clay|sculpted from clay]] by her mother [[Hippolyta (DC Comics)|Queen Hippolyta]] and given life by [[Aphrodite]], along with superhuman powers as gifts by the [[Greek pantheon|Greek gods]]. However, in recent years artists updated her profile: she has been depicted as the daughter of [[Zeus]], and jointly raised by her mother Hippolyta and her aunts Antiope and Menalippe. In the 1980s artist [[George Perez]] gave her a muscular look and emphasized her Amazonian heritage. In 2010 artist [[Jim Lee]] redesigned Diana's costume to include pants, though this design was later abandoned. She inherits Ares's divine abilities, becoming the personified "God of War".<ref>{{cite web|last=Beedle |first=Tim |url=http://www.dccomics.com/blog/2013/12/26/ten-moments-that-mattered-wonder-woman-becomes-war |title=Ten Moments that Mattered: Wonder Woman Becomes War &#124; DC |website=Dccomics.com |date=2013-12-25 |accessdate=December 14, 2016}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|last=Rogers |first=Vaneta |url=http://www.newsarama.com/18787-wonder-woman-kills-who-is-the-new-god-of-what-azzarello-explains-spoilers.html |title=WONDER WOMAN Kills…Who? Is the New GOD of What? AZZARELLO Explains (Spoilers) |website=Newsarama.com |date=August 28, 2013 |accessdate=December 14, 2016}}</ref>

Wonder Woman's Amazonian training helped to develop a wide range of extraordinary skills in tactics, hunting, and combat. She possesses an arsenal of advanced technology, including the [[Lasso of Truth]], a pair of [[Wonder Woman's bracelets|indestructible bracelets]], a [[tiara]] which serves as a projectile, and, in older stories, a range of devices based on Amazon technology. Wonder Woman's character was created during [[World War II]]; the character in the story was initially depicted fighting [[Axis powers|Axis military forces]] as well as an assortment of colorful [[supervillain]]s, although over time her stories came to place greater emphasis on characters, deities, and monsters from Greek mythology. Many stories depicted Wonder Woman rescuing herself from [[Bondage (BDSM)|bondage]], which defeated the "[[damsels in distress]]" trope that was common in comics during the 1940s.<ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=u9JdT00mYIc |title=Wonder Women! The Untold Story of American Superheroines – She Rescues Herself |publisher=[[YouTube]] |date=June 25, 2015 |accessdate=December 14, 2016}}</ref> In the decades since her debut, Wonder Woman has gained a cast of enemies bent on eliminating the Amazon, including classic villains such as [[Ares (DC Comics)|Ares]], [[Cheetah (comics)|Cheetah]], [[Doctor Poison]], [[Circe (comics)|Circe]], [[Doctor Psycho]], and [[Giganta]], along with more recent adversaries such as [[Veronica Cale]] and the [[First Born (comics)|First Born]]. Wonder Woman has also regularly appeared in comic books featuring the superhero teams [[Justice Society of America|Justice Society]] (from 1941) and [[Justice League]] (from 1960).<ref name="schoollibraryjournal.com">{{cite web |last=Crawford |first=Philip |title=The Legacy of Wonder Woman |url=http://www.schoollibraryjournal.com/article/CA6417196.html |date= |publisher=School Library Journal |accessdate=March 1, 2007 }}</ref>

Notable depictions of the character in other media include [[Gloria Steinem]] placing the character on the cover of the second edition of [[Ms. (magazine)|''Ms.'' magazine]] in 1971; the 1975–1979 [[Wonder Woman (TV series)|''Wonder Woman'' TV series]] starring [[Lynda Carter]]; as well as [[Animation|animated]] series such as the ''[[Super Friends]]'' and ''[[Justice League (TV series)|Justice League]]''. Since Carter's television series, studios struggled to introduce a new live-action Wonder Woman to audiences, although the character continued to feature in a variety of toys and merchandise, as well as animated adaptations of DC properties, including a [[Wonder Woman (2009 film)|direct-to-DVD animated feature]] starring [[Keri Russell]]. Attempts to return Wonder Woman to television have included [[Wonder Woman (2011 TV pilot)|a television pilot]] for [[NBC]] in 2011, closely followed by another stalled production for [[The CW]].<ref name="Vulture 2012-09">{{cite news|last=Adalian|first=Josef|title=The CW Is Developing a Wonder Woman Origins Series|url=http://www.vulture.com/2012/09/cw-is-developing-wonder-woman-origins-series.html|accessdate=September 16, 2012 |date=September 6, 2012}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|url=http://deadline.com/2013/07/cw-eyes-flash-series-with-arrows-greg-berlanti-andrew-kreisberg-david-nutter|title=CW Eyes 'Flash' Series With 'Arrow's Greg Berlanti, Andrew Kreisberg & David Nutter|last=Andreeva|first=Nellie|work=Deadline Hollywood|date=July 30, 2013|accessdate=July 30, 2013}}</ref> [[Gal Gadot]] portrays Wonder Woman in the [[DC Extended Universe]], starting with the 2016 film ''[[Batman v Superman: Dawn of Justice]],'' marking the character's first appearance in a feature film in its 75-year history.<ref>{{cite news|url=http://variety.com/2013/film/news/gal-gadot-wonder-woman-batman-vs-superman-1200918310/ |title=Gal Gadot to Play Wonder Woman in 'Batman vs. Superman'|last=Kroll|first=Justin|magazine=[[Variety (newspaper)|Variety]]|date=December 4, 2013 |accessdate=December 4, 2013}}</ref> Gadot also starred in the character's first solo live-action film [[Wonder Woman (2017 film)|''Wonder Woman'']], which was released on June 2, 2017.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.hollywoodreporter.com/heat-vision/warner-bros-pushes-jungle-book-881353|title=Warner Bros. Pushes 'Jungle Book' to 2018, 'Wonder Woman' Gets New Date|last=Ford|first=Rebecca|publisher=''[[The Hollywood Reporter]]''|date=April 6, 2016|accessdate=April 18, 2016}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|last=Maglio |first=Tony |url=http://www.thewrap.com/women-blacks-gays-warner-bros-catapults-dc-ahead-of-marvel-in-superhero-diversity-race/ |title=Women, Blacks, Gays: Warner Bros. Catapults DC Ahead of Marvel in Superhero Diversity Race |website=Thewrap.com |date= |accessdate=2016-12-14}}</ref>

On October 21, 2016, the [[United Nations]] sparked controversy by naming Wonder Woman a "UN Honorary Ambassador for the Empowerment of Women and Girls" in a ceremony attended by [[Under-Secretary-General of the United Nations|Under-Secretary-General for Communications and Public Information]] [[Cristina Gallach]] and by actors Lynda Carter and Gal Gadot.<ref name="cbr.com">{{cite web |url=http://www.cbr.com/united-nations-to-name-wonder-woman-honorary-ambassador/ |title=UNITED NATIONS TO NAME WONDER WOMAN HONORARY AMBASSADOR |last1=Cave |first1=Rob |last2= |first2= |date=October 10, 2016 |website=Comic Book Resources |publisher= |access-date=October 21, 2016 |quote=}}</ref><ref name="autogenerated1">{{cite news |url=http://www.cnn.com/2016/10/21/health/wonder-woman-un-ambassador-trnd/ |title=Wonder Woman named UN ambassador in controversial move |last1=Alexander |first1=Erik |last2= |first2= |date=October 21, 2016 |website=CNN.com |publisher=CNN |access-date=October 21, 2016 |quote=}}</ref> Two months later, she was dropped from her role as a UN Ambassador following a petition.<ref name="UN role dropped"/>

{{TOC limit|3}}

==Publication history==
{{Main article|Publication history of Wonder Woman}}
<!--This section is meant to be short for a reason. The main article is where all the details go.-->

===Creation===
Marston combined his, Elizabeth's and Olive's feminist ideals to create a superhero character that young girls and boys could look up to.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.businessinsider.com/wonder-woman-teaser-professor-m-2017-6|title=What that mysterious teaser before 'Wonder Woman' was about|publisher=}}</ref>

In an October 25, 1940, interview with the ''Family Circle'' magazine, [[William Moulton Marston]] discussed the unfulfilled potential of the comic book medium.<ref>{{cite web|last=Lyons|first=Charles|title=Suffering Sappho! A Look at the Creator & Creation of Wonder Woman|url=http://www.comicbookresources.com/?page=article&id=7921|publisher=[[Comic Book Resources]]|accessdate=August 23, 2006|quote=In October 1940, the popular women's magazine "Family Circle" published an interview with Marston entitled "Don't Laugh at the Comics," in which the psychologist discussed the unfulfilled potential of the medium.}}</ref> This article caught the attention of comics publisher [[Max Gaines]], who hired Marston as an educational consultant for National Periodicals and [[All-American Publications]], two of the companies that would merge to form [[DC Comics]].<ref>{{cite web|last=Lyons|first=Charles|title=Suffering Sappho! A Look at the Creator & Creation of Wonder Woman|url=http://www.comicbookresources.com/?page=article&id=7921|publisher=Comic Book Resources|accessdate=August 23, 2006|quote=Maxwell Charles Gaines, then publisher of All-American Comics, saw the interview and offered Marston a job as an educational consultant to All-American and sister company DC Comics.}}</ref> At that time, Marston wanted to create his own new superhero; Marston's wife [[Elizabeth Holloway Marston|Elizabeth]] suggested to him that it should be a female:<ref name="Bostonia">{{cite web | last=Lamb | first=Marguerite | date=Fall 2001 | url=http://www.bu.edu/alumni/bostonia/2001/fall/wonderwoman/ | archiveurl=https://web.archive.org/web/20071208045132/http://www.bu.edu/alumni/bostonia/2001/fall/wonderwoman/| archivedate=December 8, 2007 | title=Who Was Wonder Woman? | work=Bostonia }}</ref>

{{Quote|William Moulton Marston, a psychologist already famous for inventing the [[polygraph]], struck upon an idea for a new kind of superhero, one who would triumph not with fists or firepower, but with love. "Fine," said Elizabeth. "But make her a woman."}}

Marston introduced the idea to Gaines. Given the go-ahead, Marston developed ''Wonder Woman'', whom he believed to be a model of that era's unconventional, liberated woman. Marston also drew inspiration from the bracelets worn by [[Olive Byrne]], who lived with the couple in a [[polyamorous]] relationship.<ref>{{Cite book | first=Les | last=Daniels | title=Wonder Woman: The Complete History | publisher=Chronicle Books | date=April 6, 2004 | pages=28–30 | isbn=978-0-8118-4233-4}}</ref> Wonder Woman debuted in [[All Star Comics 8|''All Star Comics'' #8]] ([[cover date]] Dec/Jan 1941/1942, released in October 1941),<ref>{{cite web |url=https://www.dcindexes.com/features/comic.php?comicid=2249 |title=All-Star Comics #8 |author=<!--Not stated--> |date=
|website=dcindexes.com |publisher=Mike's Amazing World |access-date=May 19, 2017 |quote=}}</ref> scripted by Marston.

Marston was the creator of a systolic-blood-pressure-measuring apparatus, which was crucial to the development of the polygraph ([[polygraph|lie detector]]). Marston's experience with polygraphs convinced him that women were more honest than men in certain situations and could work more efficiently.<ref>{{Cite journal | last=Bunn | first=Geoffrey C. | title=The lie detector, ''Wonder Woman'', and liberty: The life and work of William Moulton Marston | journal=History of the Human Sciences | volume=10 | issue=1 | location=[[London]] | publisher=[[Routledge]] | year=1997 | pages=91–119 | doi=10.1177/095269519701000105}}</ref>

Marston designed Wonder Woman to be an allegory for the ideal love leader; the kind of women who (he believed) should run society.

"Wonder Woman is psychological propaganda for the new type of woman who should, I believe, rule the world", Marston wrote.<ref name="Hendrix2007"/>

In a 1943 issue of ''[[The American Scholar (magazine)|The American Scholar]]'', Marston wrote:<ref>{{cite web|last=Tartakovsky|first=Margarita|title=A Psychologist and A Superhero|url=http://psychcentral.com/blog/archives/2011/05/17/a-psychologist-and-a-superhero/|publisher=Psych Central}}</ref>

{{Quote|Not even girls want to be girls so long as our feminine archetype lacks force, strength, and power. Not wanting to be girls, they don't want to be tender, submissive, peace-loving as good women are. Women's strong qualities have become despised because of their weakness. The obvious remedy is to create a feminine character with all the strength of Superman plus all the allure of a good and beautiful woman.}}

Marston went on record by describing [[Dominance and submission|bondage and submission]] as a "respectable and noble practice". Marston wrote in a weakness for Wonder Woman, which was attached to a fictional stipulation that he dubbed "Aphrodite's Law", that made the chaining of her "Bracelets of Submission" together by a man take away her Amazonian super strength.<ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=00P1kyWGG9k&t=3m |title=Top 10 Wonder Woman Facts |publisher=[[YouTube]] |date=28 November 2015 |accessdate=December 14, 2016 |author=WatchMojo.com |quote=Marston even wrote in a weakness for Wonder Woman that made chaining her bracelets together take away her super strength.}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.cracked.com/article_19434_the-6-most-ridiculous-superhero-weaknesses.html |title=The 6 Most Ridiculous Superhero Weaknesses |website=Cracked.com |date=22 September 2011 |accessdate=December 14, 2016 |first1=J.F. |last=Sargent |first2=Jesse |last2=Clark |quote=all of Wonder Woman's amazing powers were rendered completely useless if her hands were bound by a man}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|url=http://comicvine.gamespot.com/wonder-womans-bracelets/4055-51517/ |title=Wonder Woman's Bracelets (Object) |website=[[Comicvine.gamespot.com]] |accessdate=December 14, 2016 |quote=In the golden age if Diana's bracelets (or those of any Amazon) were bound by a man it made her lose all her powers.}}</ref> However, not everything about his creation was explicitly explained in any one source, which caused confusion among writers and fans for many years.

===Golden Age===
{{main|Golden Age of Comic Books}}
Initially, Wonder Woman was an Amazon champion who wins the right to return [[Steve Trevor]]{{spaced ndash}}a [[United States]] intelligence officer whose plane had crashed on the Amazons' isolated island homeland{{spaced ndash}}to "Man's World" and to fight crime and the evil of the [[Nazism|Nazis]].<ref>''All Star Comics'' #8 (October 1941)</ref>

During this period, Wonder Woman joined the [[Justice Society of America]] as the team's secretary.<ref>{{cite web|last=Hanley|first=Tim|title=Wonder Woman: Secretary Of The Justice Society Of America|url=http://thanley.wordpress.com/2012/06/25/wonder-woman-secretary-of-the-justice-society-of-america/|publisher=Straitened Circumstances|accessdate=June 25, 2012}}</ref><ref>''All Star Comics'' #12 (August/September 1942)</ref>

===Silver Age===
{{main|Silver Age of Comic Books}}
During the [[Silver Age of Comic Books|Silver Age]], under writer [[Robert Kanigher]], Wonder Woman's origin was revamped,<ref>''Wonder Woman'' (vol. 1) #98 (May 1958)</ref> along with other characters'. The new origin story increased the character's [[wikt:Hellenism|Hellenic]] and mythological roots: receiving the blessing of each deity in her crib, Diana is destined to become "beautiful as [[Aphrodite]], wise as [[Athena]], as strong as [[Hercules]], and as swift as [[Hermes]]."<ref name="Wonder Woman (vol. 1) #105">''Wonder Woman'' (vol. 1) #105 (April 1959)</ref>

At the end of the 1960s, under the guidance of [[Mike Sekowsky]], Wonder Woman surrendered her powers in order to remain in Man's World rather than accompany her fellow Amazons to another dimension. Wonder Woman begins using the alias [[Diana Prince]] and opens a [[Mod (subculture)|mod]] boutique. She acquires a Chinese mentor named [[I Ching (comics)|I Ching]], who teaches Diana [[martial arts]] and weapons skills. Using her fighting skill instead of her powers, Diana engaged in adventures that encompassed a variety of genres, from espionage to mythology.<ref>''Wonder Woman'' #179 (1968)</ref><ref name="Reed">{{cite web|last=Reed|first=Bill|title=365 Reasons to Love Comics|url=http://goodcomics.comicbookresources.com/2007/03/05/365-reasons-to-love-comics-64/|publisher=Comic Book Resources|accessdate=March 5, 2007}}</ref> This phase of her story was directly influenced by the British spy thriller ''[[The Avengers (TV series)|The Avengers]]'' and [[Diana Rigg]]'s portrayal of [[Emma Peel]].<ref>"We were all in love with Diana Rigg and that show she was on." Mike Sekowsky, quoted in Les Daniels, ''Wonder Woman: The Complete History'' (Chronicle, 2004), p. 129.</ref>

===Bronze Age===
{{main|Bronze Age of Comic Books}}
In the early 1970s the character returned to her superhero roots in the ''[[Justice League|Justice League of America]]'' and to the [[World War II]] era in her own title.<ref>''Wonder Woman'' Vol 1 #204</ref> This however, was ultimately due to the popularity of the TV series at the time also having Wonder Woman set in WW2 era, and was shifted back to the 1970s era once the TV show did the same.

With a new decade arriving, DC president [[Jenette Kahn]] ordered a revamp in Wonder Woman's appearance. Artist [[Milton Glaser]], who also designed the "bullet" logo adopted by DC in 1977, created a stylized "WW" emblem that evoked and replaced the eagle in her bodice, and debuted in 1982.<ref>{{cite book|title=American Comic Book Chronicles: The 1980s|author=Keith Dallas, Jason Sacks, Jim Beard, Dave Dykema, Paul Brian McCoy|publisher=TwoMorrows Publishing|year=2013|ISBN=1605490466|pp=47–8}}</ref> The emblem in turn was incorporated by studio letterer [[Todd Klein]] onto the monthly title's logo, which lasted for a year and a half before being replaced by a version from Glaser's studio.<ref>{{cite web|url=https://kleinletters.com/Blog/logo-study-wonder-woman-part-3/|title=Logo Study: WONDER WOMAN part 3|author=[[Todd Klein|Klein, Todd]]|publisher=Klein Letters|date=January 18, 2008|accessdate=April 21, 2017}}</ref> With sales of the title continuing to decline in 1985 (despite an unpublished revamp that was solicited), the series was canceled and ended in issue #329 (February 1986) written by Gerry Conway, depicting Steve Trevor's marriage to Wonder Woman.

The Crisis on Infinite Earths cross-over of 1986 was designed and written with the purpose of streamlining most of DC's characters into one more-focused continuity and reinventing them for a new era, thus Wonder Woman and Steve Trevor were declared to come from the Earth-Two dimension, and along with all of their exploits, were erased from history, so that a new Wonder Woman character, story and timeline could take priority.

===Modern Age===
{{main|Modern Age of Comic Books}}
Following the 1985 ''[[Crisis on Infinite Earths]]'' series, [[George Pérez]], [[Len Wein]], and [[Greg Potter]] rewrote the character's origin story, depicting Wonder Woman as an emissary and ambassador from [[Themyscira (DC Comics)|Themyscira]] to Patriarch's World, charged with the mission of bringing peace to the outside world. Pérez incorporated a variety of deities and concepts from Greek mythology in Wonder Woman's stories and origin. His rendition of the character acted as the foundation for the modern Wonder Woman stories, as he expanded upon the widely accepted origin of Diana being birthed out of clay. The relaunch was a critical and commercial success.<ref>{{cite journal |author= [[Andy Mangels|Mangels, Andy]]|date= January 1, 1989|title= Triple Threat The George Pérez Interview|journal= Amazing Heroes|issue= 156|page= 30|publisher= [[Fantagraphics Books]]|quote = ''Wonder Woman's'' sales are some of the best the Amazing Amazon has ever experienced, and the book is a critical and popular success with its weaving of Greek mythology into a feminist and humanistic atmosphere.}}</ref>

In August 2010 (issue #600), [[J. Michael Straczynski]] took over the series' writing duties and introduced Wonder Woman to an alternate timeline created by the Gods in which Paradise Island had been destroyed and the Amazons scattered around the world.<ref name="Who destroyed Paradise Island">{{cite web| url=http://dcu.blog.dccomics.com/2010/04/15/who-destroyed-paradise-island/ |title= Who destroyed Paradise Island? |publisher= DC Comics|date= April 15, 2010|accessdate= May 23, 2012 |archiveurl= https://www.webcitation.org/67t6ZHTeN?url=http://www.dccomics.com/blog/2010/04/15/who-destroyed-paradise-island|archivedate= May 24, 2012|deadurl=}}</ref> In this timeline, Diana is an orphan raised in New York. The entire world has forgotten Wonder Woman's existence and the main story of this run was of Diana trying to restore reality even though she does not properly remember it herself. A trio of Death Goddesses called [[List of Wonder Woman enemies|The Morrigan]] acted as the main enemy of Wonder Woman.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.newsarama.com/comics/jms-talks-wonder-woman-100629.html |title= JMS Talks ''Wonder Woman's'' New Look and New Direction |first= Vaneta|last= Rogers|publisher=Newsarama|date= June 29, 2010 |accessdate= May 23, 2012 |archiveurl= https://www.webcitation.org/67t75Mih3?url=http://www.newsarama.com/comics/jms-talks-wonder-woman-100629.html |archivedate= May 24, 2012|deadurl=}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|first= Richard|last= George |url=http://comics.ign.com/articles/110/1102826p2.html |title= Wonder Woman's New Era|publisher= IGN|date= July 7, 2010|accessdate= May 23, 2012|archiveurl= https://www.webcitation.org/67t99HyMP?url=http://comics.ign.com/articles/110/1102826p2.html|archivedate= May 24, 2012|deadurl= }}</ref> In this run, Wonder Woman wears a [[Wonder Woman#Outfit|new costume]] designed by Jim Lee.<ref>{{cite news|url=https://www.nytimes.com/2010/06/30/books/30wonder.html |newspaper=[[The New York Times]]|last=Gustines |first=George Gene |authorlink=George Gustines |title=Makeover for Wonder Woman at 69 |date=June 29, 2010 |archiveurl=https://www.webcitation.org/67t9tT8Aw?url=http://www.nytimes.com/2010/06/30/books/30wonder.html?_r=2 |archivedate=May 24, 2012 |deadurl=yes |accessdate=May 23, 2012 |df= }}</ref> Straczynski determined the plot and continued writing duties until Wonder Woman #605; writer [[Phil Hester (comics)|Phil Hester]] then continued his run, which ultimately concluded in ''Wonder Woman'' #614.<ref>{{cite web|last = Ching|first = Albert|url=http://www.newsarama.com/comics/jms-earth-one-sequel-101110.html |title= JMS Leaving ''Superman'' and ''Wonder Woman'' for ''Earth One'' Sequel |website=Newsarama.com|date= November 10, 2010| archiveurl= https://www.webcitation.org/67tAnOCPx?url=http://www.newsarama.com/comics/jms-earth-one-sequel-101110.html|archivedate= May 24, 2012|deadurl= |accessdate= May 23, 2012 }}</ref>

[[File:Wonder Woman Trinity Vol 2 4.png|thumb|upright|left|Wonder Woman's revised look on the cover of ''Trinity'' vol. 2, #4 (February 2017). Art by Stanley Lau.]]
In 2011, DC Comics [[The New 52|relaunched]] its entire line of publications to attract a new generation of readers, and thus released volume 4 of the ''Wonder Woman'' comic book title. [[Brian Azzarello]] and [[Cliff Chiang]] were assigned on writing and art duties respectively and revamped the character's history considerably. In this new continuity, Wonder Woman wears a costume similar to her original ''Marston''-costume, utilizes a sword and shield, and has a completely new origin. No longer a clay figure brought to life by the magic of the gods, she is, instead, a [[demi-goddess]] and the natural-born daughter of [[Hippolyta (DC Comics)|Hippolyta]] and [[Zeus (DC Comics)|Zeus]]. Azzarello and Chiang's revamp of the character was critically acclaimed, but highly divisive among long time fans of the character.<ref>{{cite web| first= Joey| last=Esposito|title=The Best of DC Comics in 2011|url=http://www.ign.com/articles/2011/12/14/the-best-of-dc-comics-in-2011-2|publisher=IGN|accessdate=December 14, 2011}}</ref><ref>{{cite web| last= Renaud| first= Jeffrey|title=Azzarello Lowers the Boom(Tube) on Wonder Woman|url=http://www.comicbookresources.com/?page=article&id=40597| publisher= Comic Book Resources|accessdate=August 22, 2012}}</ref><ref>{{cite web| last= Garcia|first=Joe|title=The Best & Worst of DC Comics' New 52, One Year Later| url=http://fronttowardsgamer.com/2012/09/05/the-best-worst-of-dc-comics-new-52-one-year-later/|publisher=Front Towards Gamer|accessdate=September 5, 2012|quote=Despite being one part of the Justice League's "Holy Trinity", Wonder Woman never seems to get the recognition that she deserves. While she might not be invincible, her strength is second only to Superman and she's arguably a better fighter. Her solo outings, however, were rarely very interesting. The New 52 put an end to that injustice, with Brian Azzarello and Cliff Chiang spearheading one of the best books DC is putting out. Azzarello currently has Wonder Woman tearing through the ranks of Greek mythology, and Chiang's art manages to be intense despite his use of softer lines. If you're not reading Wonder Woman, go rectify that.}}</ref><ref>{{cite news|last=Hughes|first=Mark|title=Top Ten Best Comics In DC's 'New 52' – UPDATED|url=https://www.forbes.com/sites/markhughes/2011/09/29/top-ten-best-comics-in-dcs-new-52/2/|publisher=Forbes|accessdate=September 29, 2011|date=September 29, 2011}}</ref>

In a side story as part of "Harley's Little Black Book" Wonder Woman meets Harley Quinn in London and has a brief team up with her in which we find that Harley has been a huge fan of Wonder Woman for years and has a bit of a crush on her. After the fight with the villain the two retire to a local bar where Harley suggests they join an English super team and then steals her magic lasso, but just to wrap it around herself so they and some of the other patrons can play truth or dare. They are last seen with Wonder Woman carrying Harley out of the bar asleep, though an additional piece of art shows Harley tied up and planting kisses on Wonder Woman.

In 2016, DC Comics once again relaunched all of its publications as part of the "[[DC Rebirth]]" continuity reboot, which has a new bi-monthly ''Wonder Woman'' series from writer [[Greg Rucka]]. The new series does not use a regular storyline that exists between each issue; instead two separate storylines share the book, with an installment of one story published every other issue, and those of the other storyline published in between those. This practice began with the storyline "The Lies" for the odd numbered issues, and "Year One" for the even numbered issues. The new storyline as presented in these issues effectively retcons the events from the previous New 52 series. "The Lies"<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.dccomics.com/blog/2017/03/03/wonder-woman-the-story-keeps-changing|title=Wonder Woman: The Story Keeps Changing|date=March 3, 2017|publisher=}}</ref> storyline reveals that a number of events from the previous ''Wonder Woman'' series in which Diana was made the Queen of the Amazons and the God of War, was in fact all an illusion created by a mysterious villain, and she had never once been back to Themyscira ever since she left, nor is she capable of returning there. The "Year One" story is presented as an all-new origin story for Diana,<ref>{{cite web|url=http://screenrant.com/wonder-woman-rebirth-origin/|title=Wonder Woman: Rebirth Begins Diana's REAL Origin Story|date=June 9, 2016|publisher=}}</ref> which reveals how she received her powers from the Olympian Gods,<ref>{{cite web|url=http://screenrant.com/wonder-woman-rebirth-superpowers/|title=Wonder Woman: Rebirth Reveals How Diana Got Her Powers|date=September 16, 2016|publisher=}}</ref> which was intended to bring her back to her classical DC roots. Wonder Woman appears in DC Rebirth with a revised look, which includes a red cape and light armor fittings. Along with her lasso and bracelets, she now regularly utilizes her sword and shield. ''Wonder Woman: Rebirth'' artist Liam Sharp described the new armor as a utilitarian piece which allows her to move more freely.<ref>{{cite web|author=Christian Holub |url=http://ew.com/books/2017/03/03/dc-rebirth-wonder-woman |title=DC Rebirth: How Wonder Woman went back to her roots |magazine=[[Entertainment Weekly]]|date=March 3, 2017}}</ref>

==Characterization==
During Marston's run, Diana Prince was the name of an army nurse whom Wonder Woman met. The nurse wanted to meet her fiancé, who was transferred to South America, but was unable to arrange for money to do so. As Wonder Woman needed a secret identity to look after Steve (who was admitted to the same army hospital in which Diana Prince worked), and because both of them looked alike, Wonder Woman gave the nurse money to go to her fiancé in exchange for the nurse's credentials and took Diana Prince as her alias.<ref name="Gutierrez"/> She started to work as an army nurse and later as an Air Force secretary.<ref name="Gutierrez"/><ref>{{cite web|last=Cronin|first=Brian|title=Love Ya but You're Strange – That Time the Husband of Wonder Woman's Exact Double Chained Her to a Table|url=http://goodcomics.comicbookresources.com/2012/07/12/i-love-ya-but-youre-strange-that-time-the-husband-of-wonder-womans-exact-double-chained-her-to-a-table/|publisher=Comic Book Resources|accessdate=July 12, 2012}}</ref>

The identity of Diana Prince was especially prominent in a series published in the early 1970s, in which she fought crime only under the Prince alias and without her mystic powers. To support herself, she ran a mod clothing boutique.<ref name="Hanley"/><ref name="Diana's Memory Album"/>

The Diana Prince alias also played an important role after the events of Infinite Crisis. Wonder Woman was broadcast worldwide killing a villain named [[Maxwell Lord]], as he was mind controlling Superman into killing Batman. When Wonder Woman caught him in her lasso, demanding to know how to stop Superman, Maxwell revealed that the only way to stop him was to kill Lord, so as a last resort Diana snapped his neck.<ref name=WW219 /><ref name="Goldstein">{{cite web|last=Goldstein|first=Hilary|title=Defending Wonder Woman|url=http://www.ign.com/articles/2005/08/01/defending-wonder-woman|publisher=IGN|accessdate=August 1, 2005}}</ref> To recover from the trauma of killing another person, the Amazon went into a self-imposed exile for one year.<ref>''Infinite Crisis'' #7</ref> On her return to public life, Diana realized that her life as a full-time celebrity superhero and ambassador had kept her removed from humanity. Because of this she assumed the persona of Diana Prince and became an agent at the Department of Metahuman Affairs. During a later battle with the witch [[Circe (comics)|Circe]], a spell was placed on Diana leaving her powerless when not in the guise of Wonder Woman.<ref>{{Cite comic| writer =Allan Heinberg| penciller =Terry Dodson| inker =Rachel Dodson| story = Who Is Wonder Woman Part 5| title = Wonder Woman Annual| volume = 3| issue = 1
| date = November 2007| publisher = DC Comics}}</ref>

In the current New 52 universe, Diana does not have a secret identity as stated in an interview by series writer Brian Azzarello.<ref>{{cite web|last=Azzarello|first=Brian|title=No, she (Wonder Woman) doesn't (have a secret identity|url=http://m.ign.com/articles/2011/09/21/the-new-52-interviews-wonder-woman|publisher=IGN|accessdate=September 21, 2011}}</ref> However, when she and Superman began dating, for her civilian identity she uses the Diana Prince alias whenever she is around Clark Kent; such as when she introduced herself to [[Lois Lane]] at Lois's housewarming party under that name.<ref>''Superman'' (Volume 3) #19</ref>

===Personality===

Princess Diana commands respect both as Wonder Woman and Diana Prince; her epithetical title – The Amazon Princess – illustrates the [[dichotomy]] of her character. She is a powerful, strong-willed character who does not back down from a fight or a challenge. Yet, she is a diplomat who strongly "[[The pen is mightier than the sword|favors the pen]]", and a lover of peace who would never seek to fight or escalate a conflict. She's simultaneously both the most fierce and most nurturing member of the [[Justice League]]; and her political connections as a United Nations Honorary Ambassador and the ambassador of a warrior nation makes her an invaluable addition to the team. With her powerful abilities, centuries of training and experienced at handling threats that range from petty crime to threats that are of a magical or supernatural nature, Diana is capable of competing with nearly any hero or villain.

Many writers have depicted Diana in different personalities and tone; between both of her diametric extremes; that of a worldy warrior, a highly compassionate and calm ambassador, and sometimes also as a naive and innocent person, depending on the writer. What has remained constant, and is a mainstay of the character, is her nurturing humanity: her overwhelming belief in love, empathy, compassion, and having a strong conscience.<ref>[https://howlingpixel.com/wiki/Wonder_Woman]</ref> This trait had been the reason for her induction into the Star Sapphires.<ref>''Blackest Night'' #6 (2010)</ref><ref>{{cite web|title=Welcome to the Star Sapphires|url=http://www.wonderali.com/2010/01/welcome-to-the-star-sapphires-2/|publisher=WonderAli|accessdate=January 11, 2010|author=WonderAli}}</ref>

Writer [[Gail Simone]] was applauded for her portrayal of Wonder Woman during her run on the series, with comic book reviewer Dan Phillips of [[IGN]] noting that "she's molded Diana into a very relatable and sympathetic character."<ref>{{cite web|last=Phillips|first=Dan|title=Wonder Woman #16 review|url=http://www.ign.com/articles/2008/01/24/wonder-woman-16-review|publisher=IGN|accessdate=October 1, 2012}}</ref>

Actress [[Gal Gadot]] described Wonder Woman as "an idealist. Experienced, super-confident. Open and sincere even in the midst of a gruesome, bloody conflict. Having many strengths and powers, but at the end of the day she's a woman with a lot of [[emotional intelligence]]".<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.ew.com/article/2016/03/07/gal-gadot-wonder-woman-batman-v-superman|title=Gal Gadot: Wonder Woman 'not there because of a love story' in Batman v Superman |work=Entertainment Weekly's EW.com}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.digitalspy.com/movies/wonder-woman/news/a789888/wonder-woman-gal-gadot-movie-has-moments-humour/|title=Wonder Woman star Gal Gadot says that her solo movie has 'moments of humour'|last=Russell|first=Scarlett|website=[[Digital Spy]]|date=April 8, 2016|accessdate=April 8, 2016}}</ref>

In the Golden Age, Wonder Woman adhered to an Amazon code of helping any in need, even [[misogynist]]ic people, and never accepting a reward for saving someone;<ref>{{cite comic| writer=Charles Moulton| artist= Harry G. Peter|title=Wonder Woman |issue=38 | page=5 | publisher= All American Comics| date=1949}}</ref> while conversely, the modern version of the character has been shown to perform lethal and fatal actions when left with no other alternative, exemplified in the killing of Maxwell Lord in order to save Superman's life.<ref name= WW219 /><ref name="Goldstein"/>

The New 52 version of the character has been portrayed to be a younger, more headstrong, loving, fierce and willful person.{{citation needed|date=March 2015}} Brian Azzarello stated in a video interview with DC Comics that they're building a very "confident", "impulsive" and "good-hearted" character in her. He referred to her trait of feeling compassion as both her strength and weakness.<ref>{{cite video |people= Azzarello, Brian |year= 2012 |title= NYCC 2012; Wonder Woman 101|url=http://www.dccomics.com/videos/nycc-2012-wonder-woman-101 |medium= |trans_title= |publisher=DC Comics|location=New York Comic Con |accessdate= |time= |id= |isbn= |oclc= |quote= Wonder Woman's greatest strength is her compassion; her greatest weakness is her compassion |ref= }}</ref>

A distinctive trait of her characterization is a group of signature mythological exclamations, such as "Great Aphrodite!" (historically the very first one), "Great Hera!",<ref>{{cite web| last1= Cronin| first1= Brian| title=When We First Met – When Did Wonder Woman First Fly Her Invisible Jet?|url=http://goodcomics.comicbookresources.com/2012/06/17/when-we-first-met-when-did-wonder-woman-first-fly-her-invisible-jet/|publisher=Comic Book Resources|accessdate=26 November 2014|quote=In ''Wonder Woman'' #6, she says "Great Hera," which soon became one of her top phrases…}}</ref> "Merciful Minerva!", and "Suffering Sappho!', some of which were contributed by [[Elizabeth Holloway Marston]].<ref name="kpollitt">{{cite news|last= Pollitt| first= Katha| url= https://www.theatlantic.com/magazine/archive/2014/11/wonder-womans-kinky-feminist-roots/380788/ | title= Wonder Woman's Kinky Feminist Roots| work= Atlantic Monthly| date= October 14, 2014}}</ref><ref name=Lepore>[[Jill Lepore|Lepore, Jill]], ''The Secret History of Wonder Woman'', New York: Alfred A. Knopf, 2014. {{ISBN|9780385354042}}</ref>

===Others===
{{Main article|Alternative versions of Wonder Woman}}
[[File:Hippolyta (DC Comics) as WW - from WW v2 i130.png|upright|thumb|[[Hippolyta (DC Comics)|Hippolyta]] as Wonder Woman in ''Wonder Woman'' vol. 2, #130 (February 1998). Art by [[John Byrne (comics)|John Byrne]] and [[Patricia Mulvihill]].]]
Diana, after her death, was granted divinity as the Goddess of Truth by her gods for such faithful devotion.<ref>''Wonder Woman'' (vol. 2) #127 (November 1997)</ref> During her brief time as a god of [[Mount Olympus|Olympus]], Diana was replaced in the role of Wonder Woman by her mother, [[Hippolyta (DC Comics)|Queen Hippolyta]].<ref>''Wonder Woman'' (vol. 2) #128 (December 1997)</ref> Unlike Diana receiving the title of Wonder Woman in honor, Hippolyta's role as Wonder Woman was meant to be a punishment for her betrayal in Artemis' death as well as for unintentionally killing her own daughter.<ref>''Wonder Woman'' (vol. 2) #129 (January 1998)</ref> However, Hippolyta eventually grew to enjoy the freedom and adventure the title came with. Whereas Diana used the Lasso of Truth as her primary weapon, Hippolyta favored a broad sword.

John Byrne, the writer that introduced the concept of Hippolyta as the first Wonder Woman, has explained his intentions in a post in his message board:
<blockquote>
I thought George's one "mistake" in rebooting Wonder Woman was making her only 25 years old when she left Paradise Island. I preferred the idea of a Diana who was thousands of years old (as, if I recall correctly, she was in the TV series). From that angle, I would have liked to have seen Diana having been Wonder Woman in WW2, and be returning to our world in the reboot.
</blockquote>
<blockquote>
Not having that option, I took the next best course, and had Hippolyta fill that role.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.byrnerobotics.com/forum/forum_posts.asp?TID=17792 |title=Wonder Woman revisited |publisher=Byrne Robotics |date= |accessdate=January 16, 2011}}</ref></blockquote>

As Wonder Woman, Queen Hippolyta immediately got involved in a time travel mission back to the 1940s with [[Jay Garrick]].<ref>''Wonder Woman'' (vol. 2) #130-133 (February–May 1998)</ref> After this mission, she elected to join the [[Justice Society of America]] and remained in that era for eight years, where her teammates nicknamed her "Polly". During that time she had a relationship with [[Wildcat (comics)|Ted Grant]].<ref>''Wonder Woman'' (vol. 2) #185 (November 2002)</ref> Hippolyta also made visits into the past to see her godchild [[Fury (DC Comics)|Lyta]], daughter of Hippolyta's protege Helena, the Golden Age Fury.{{Issue|date=February 2008}} These visits happened yearly from young Lyta's perspective and also accounted for Hippolyta's participation in the JSA/JLA team ups. When she returned from the past, Hippolyta took Diana's place in the [[Justice League|JLA]] as well.<ref>''JLA'' #18-23 (May–October 1998)</ref><ref>''JLA'' #30 (June 1999)</ref>

[[Artemis of Bana-Mighdall]] briefly served as Wonder Woman during Hippolyta's trials for a new Wonder Woman. [[Orana (DC comics)|Orana]], a character similar to Artemis, defeated Diana in a new contest and became Wonder Woman in pre-''Crisis on Infinite Earths'' continuity. Orana was killed during her first mission. Others who have donned the Wonder Woman persona include [[Nubia (comics)|Nubia]], [[Wonder Girl (Cassie Sandsmark)|Cassandra Sandsmark]], and [[Donna Troy]].

==Abilities ==
===Powers and skills===
[[File:WonderWoman1970s.jpg|thumb|right|upright|Wonder Woman without special powers fighting crime as Diana Prince. Cover of ''Wonder Woman'' #189 (July 1970). Art by [[Mike Sekowsky]].]]

Diana is depicted as a masterful athlete, acrobat, fighter and strategist, trained and experienced in many ancient and modern forms of armed and unarmed combat, including exclusive Amazonian martial arts. In some versions, her mother trained her, as Wonder Girl, for a future career as Wonder Woman. From the beginning, she is portrayed as highly skilled in using her Amazon bracelets to stop bullets and in wielding her golden lasso.<ref>''[[Ambush Bug: Year None]]'' #4 (December 2008)</ref> Batman once called her the "best melee fighter in the world".<ref>''Justice League of America'' (vol. 2) #13 (Nov. 2007)</ref> The modern version of the character is known to use lethal force when she deems it necessary.<ref name=WW219>''Wonder Woman'' (vol. 2) #219 (September 2005)</ref> In the New 52 continuity, her superior combat skills are the result of her Amazon training, as well as receiving further training from Ares, the God of War, himself, since as early as her childhood.<ref name="Azzarello2"/> The Golden Age Wonder Woman also had knowledge in psychology, as did her Amazon sisters.

====Pre-Crisis====
The [[Golden Age of Comic Books|Golden Age]] [[Wonder Woman (Earth-Two)|Wonder Woman]] had strength that was comparable to the Golden Age Superman. Wonder Woman was capable of bench pressing 15,000 pounds even before she had received her bracelets, and later hoisted a 50,000 pound boulder above her head to inspire Amazons facing the test.<ref>{{cite comic| writer=Charles Moulton| artist= Harry G. Peter |title= Wonder Woman |issue= 13 | pages=3–5 | publisher= All American Comics| date=1945}}</ref> Even when her super strength was temporarily nullified, she still had enough mortal strength of an Amazon to break down a prison door to save Steve Trevor.<ref>''Sensation Comics'' #6 (June 1942)</ref> In one of her earliest appearances, she is shown running easily at {{convert|60|mph|abbr=on}}, and later jumps from a building{{clarify|date=May 2017}} and lands on [[Ball (foot)|the balls of her feet]].<ref>{{cite comic| writer=Charles Moulton | artist= [[Harry G. Peter]] |title= Sensation Comics|issue= 1 | pages=5–7 | publisher= All American Comics| date=1942}}</ref>

She was able to heal faster than a normal human being due to her birthright consumption of water from Paradise Island's Fountain of Eternal Youth.

Her strength would be removed in accordance with "Aphrodite's Law" if she allowed her bracelets to be bound or chained by a male.<ref>{{cite web | url=http://www.superdickery.com/more-crap-about-aphrodites-law/ | title=Panel featuring Aphrodite's Law | work=[[SuperDickery.com]] |author=Mike |date=31 January 2015 | accessdate=September 3, 2008 |quote=when an Amazon girl permits a man to chain her bracelets of submission together she becomes weak as other women in a man-ruled world}}</ref>

She also had an array of mental and psychic abilities, as corresponding to Marston's interest in parapsychology and metaphysics. Such an array included ESP, astral projection, telepathy (with or without the [[Mental Radio]]), mental control over the electricity in her body, the Amazonian ability to turn brain energy into muscle power, etc.<ref>{{cite comic| writer= Charles Moulton| artist= Harry G. Peter |title= Sensation Comics|issue= 46 | page=6 | publisher= J.R. Publishing Co| date=1945}}</ref> Wonder Woman first became immune to electric shocks after having her spirit stripped from her atoms by [[Dr. Psycho]]'s Electro Atomizer; it was also discovered that she was unable to send a mental radio message without her body.<ref>{{cite comic| writer=Charles Moulton| artist= Harry G. Peter| title= Wonder Woman |issue= 5 | pages=14–15 | publisher= J.R. Publishing Co| date=1943}}</ref>

''Wonder Woman'' (vol. 1) #105 revealed that Diana was formed from clay by the Queen of the Amazons, given life and power by four of the [[Greek mythology|Greek]] and [[Roman mythology|Roman]] [[god]]s (otherwise known as the [[Greek pantheon|Olympian deities]]) as gifts, corresponding to her renowned epithet: "Beautiful as [[Aphrodite]], wise as [[Athena]], swifter than [[Hermes]], and stronger than [[Hercules]]", making her the strongest of the Amazons.<ref name="Wonder Woman (vol. 1) #105"/> Wonder Woman's Amazon training gave her limited [[telepathy]], profound scientific knowledge,<ref name="Wonder Woman (vol. 1) #105"/> and the ability to speak every language{{spaced ndash}}even [[caveman]]<ref name="Wonder Woman (vol. 1) #105"/> and Martian languages.<ref name="Wonder Woman (vol. 1) #115">''Wonder Woman'' (vol. 1) #115 (July 1960)</ref>

Between 1966 and 1967, new powers were added, such as super breath.<ref>{{Cite book | first=Michael L. | last=Fleisher | title=The Encyclopedia of Comic Book Heroes, Volume 2: Wonder Woman | publisher=[[Macmillan Publishers]] | date=September 1976 | isbn=978-0-02-080080-4}}</ref>

In the [[Silver Age of Comic Books|Silver]] and [[Bronze Age of Comic Books|Bronze]] ages of comics, Wonder Woman was able to further increase her strength. In times of great need, removing her bracelets would temporarily augment her power tenfold, but cause her to go [[Berserker|berserk]] in the process.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.amazonarchives.com/ww166.htm |title=Amazon Archives |publisher=Amazon Archives |date= |accessdate=December 14, 2016}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.amazonarchives.com/ww229.htm |title=Amazon Archives |publisher=Amazon Archives |date= |accessdate=December 14, 2016}}</ref>

These powers received changes after the events of [[Crisis on Infinite Earths]].

====Post-Crisis====
In the Post-Crisis universe, Wonder Woman receives her super powers as a blessing from [[Greek pantheon|Olympian deities]] just like the Silver Age version before, but with changes to some of her powers:<ref>''Wonder Woman'' (vol. 2) #1 (February 1987)</ref>

* [[Demeter]], the goddess of agriculture and fertility, blessed Diana with strength drawn from the Earth spirit [[Gaia (mythology)|Gaea]], making her one of the physically strongest heroes in the DC Universe and the strongest female hero in the [[DC Universe]]. This strength has allowed her to usually overwhelm [[Superman]] and [[Supergirl]], easily using strength alone to overpower such characters. However, now Diana is the daughter of Zeus, king of the Greek Gods, so it is unclear as to how much of her power and strength is a direct result of her divine heritage.<ref>{{cite news|url = http://entertainment.time.com/2013/12/04/and-the-new-wonder-woman-is/|title = And the New Wonder Woman Is…|work=[[Time (magazine)|Time]] |date=December 4, 2013}}</ref> Her connection to the earth allows her to heal at an accelerated rate so long as she is in contact with the planet. However, as mentioned earlier, now that she is a demigoddess, it has been suggested that she heals extremely quickly also due to her divine heritage. In rare cases where she has been gravely injured, Diana showed the ability to physically merge with the earth, causing whatever injuries or poisons to be expelled from her body; such an act is considered sacred, and can only be used in extreme cases.<ref name="The DC Comics Encyclopedia">{{Cite book | editor-last=Dougall | editor-first=Alastair | title=The DC Comics Encyclopedia | publisher=[[Dorling Kindersley]] | year=2008 | isbn=978-0-7566-4119-1 | oclc=213309017}}</ref>
* [[Athena|Pallas Athena]], the goddess of wisdom and war, granted Diana great wisdom, intelligence, and military prowess. Athena's gift has enabled Diana to master over a dozen languages (including those of alien origin), multiple complex crafts, sciences and philosophies, as well as leadership, military strategy, and armed and unarmed combat. More recently, Athena bound her own eyesight to Diana's, granting her increased empathy.<ref>{{Cite book | last=Johns | first=Geoff | author-link=Geoff Johns | title=Wonder Woman: Land of the Dead | date=February 2006 | isbn=978-1-4177-5102-0}}</ref>
* [[Artemis]], goddess of the hunt, animals, and the Moon, graced Diana with the Eyes of the Hunter and unity with beasts, meaning Diana can communicate with all animals, including dinosaurs. The Eyes of the Hunter ability gives Diana a full range of enhanced senses, including telescopic vision and super hearing.
* [[Hestia]], goddess of hearth and home, granted Diana sisterhood with fire. This power has been shown to control the "Fires of Truth", which Diana wields through her lasso, making anyone bound by it unable to lie.<ref name="Beatty2003" /> This ability also grants her resistance to both normal and supernatural fire.
* [[Hermes]], the messenger god of speed, granted Diana superhuman speed and the ability to fly.<ref name="Beatty2003">{{Cite book | last=Beatty | first=Scott | title=Wonder Woman: The Ultimate Guide to the Amazon Princess | publisher=Dorling Kindersley | date=November 2003 | isbn=978-0-7894-9616-4}}</ref> She is capable of flying at speeds approaching half the speed of light.<ref name="The DC Comics Encyclopedia"/> She can react quickly enough to deflect bullets, lasers, and other projectiles with her virtually impenetrable bracelets. After the 2011 relaunch of the character, Wonder Woman does not naturally possess the power of flight. She gains it once she is hit by a feather thrown by Hermes.<ref name="Wonder Woman 2012">''Wonder Woman'' (vol. 4) #12 (Sept. 2012)</ref><ref name="thanley.wordpress.com">{{cite web|last=Hanley|first=Tim|title=Wonder Woman #12 Review OR I Really Didn't See That Coming At All!!|url=http://thanley.wordpress.com/2012/08/16/wonder-woman-12-review-or-i-really-didnt-see-that-coming-at-all/|publisher=Straitened Circumstances|accessdate=August 16, 2012}}</ref>{{Better source|reason=Wordpress is not 100% legible|date=February 2014}}
* [[Aphrodite]], goddess of love, bestowed Diana with stunning beauty, as well as a kind heart.

While not completely invulnerable, she is highly resistant to great amounts of concussive force and extreme temperatures and matches [[Superman]]<ref>{{Cite web |last=Nyalapogula |first=Lohith |title=10 DC Superheroes That Can Defeat Superman |url=https://moviepilot.com/posts/3359129 |publisher=Movie Pilot}}</ref> in this regard, although edged weapons or projectiles applied with sufficient force are able to pierce her skin.<ref name="The DC Comics Encyclopedia"/><ref>Jimenez, Phil et al. [https://books.google.com/books?id=81F5RWxOdaAC&dq=wonder+woman&q=warp+core#v=onepage&q=gunfire&f=false ''The Essential Wonder Woman Encyclopedia'']. Published by Random House Digital, Inc. 2010, pp. 271, 116, 244 & 165.</ref> Due to her divine origins, Diana can resist many forms of magical manipulation.

She is able to [[Astral projection|astrally project]] herself into various lands of myth. Her physical body reacts to whatever happens to her on the mythical astral plane, leaving her body cut, bruised, or sometimes strengthened once her mind and body are reunited. She can apparently leave the planet through meditation, and did this once to rescue Artemis while she was in hell.<ref>''Wonder Woman'' (vol. 2) #56, 75, 77, 97 (July 1991&nbsp;– May 1995); ''Wonder Woman Special'' #1 (May 1992); ''[[Artemis of Bana-Mighdall#Requiem|Artemis: Requiem]]'' #1 (June 1996)</ref>

====''The New 52'' and ''Rebirth''====
After the [[The New 52|2011 relaunch]], Diana gained new powers. As the biological daughter of Hippolyta and Zeus, she has inherited some of her father's powers, which are held in check by the wearing her magic bracelets. She uses these powers in battle against the goddess Artemis and quickly renders her unconscious with ease with a series of carefully positioned counterattacks. While using her godly strength, her outfit and accoutrements lit up and her eyes glowed like her father's.<ref name="thanley.wordpress.com"/><ref name="Wonder Woman"/>{{Better source|reason=Wordpress is not 100% legible|date=February 2014}}

After becoming the God of War in the pages of ''Wonder Woman'', Diana inherits Ares's divine abilities. Diana has not exhibited her full powers as War, but is seen in ''Superman/Wonder Woman'' #5 to slip easily into telepathic rapport with a soldier, explaining "I am War. I know all soldiers, and they know me."

During the Rebirth retcon, the "Year One" storyline explains that while put in a cell after coming to Man's World, Diana was visited by the Greek gods in animal form, and each gave her powers that would reveal themselves when she needed them to. She first displays strength when she accidentally rips the bars off her cell door when visited by Steve Trevor, Etta Candy, and Barbara Ann Minerva. Later on a trip to the mall, she discovers super speed, great durability, and the power of flight while fighting off a terrorist attack.

===Technology===
Diana has an arsenal of powerful god-forged gear at her disposal, but her signature equipment are her indestructible bracelets and the [[Lasso of Truth]].

====Personal armor====
Wonder Woman's outfit has varied over time, although almost all of her outfit incarnations have retained some form of breastplate, tiara, bracelets, and her signature five-pointed star symbols.

;Golden Age
Wonder Woman's outfit design was originally rooted in American symbolism and iconography, which included her signature star symbols, a golden eagle on her chest, crimson red bustier, white belt, and a dark blue star spangled skirt/culotte.

She also had a pair of red glowing magnetic earrings which allowed her to receive messages from Queen Desira of the planet Venus.

;Pre-Crisis
At the time of her debut, Wonder Woman sported a red top with a golden eagle emblem, a white belt, blue star-spangled [[culottes]], and red and golden go-go boots. She originally wore a skirt; however according to Elizabeth Martson, "It was too hard to draw and would have been over her head most of the time."<ref name="Wonder Woman">{{Cite book| last1=Steinem | first1=Gloria| last2=Chesler| first2=Phyllis | last3=Feitler | first3=Bea | title= Wonder Woman | chapter=Origins preface | publisher= Holt, Rinehart and Winston | date=1972 | isbn = 0-03-005376-5}}</ref> This outfit was entirely based on the American flag, because Wonder Woman was purely an American icon as she debuted during World War II.<ref name=Cronin26963>{{cite web|last=Cronin|first=Brian|title=Wonder Woman Throughout The Years|url=http://www.comicbookresources.com/?page=article&id=26963|website=ComicBookResources.com| accessdate= September 17, 2012}}</ref> Later in 1942, Wonder Woman's outfit received a slight change{{spaced ndash}}the culottes were converted entirely into skin-tight shorts and she wore sandals.<ref name=Cronin26963/> While earlier most of her back was exposed, during the imposition of the [[Comics Code Authority]] in the mid-1950s, Wonder Woman's outfit was rectified to make her back substantially covered, in order to comply with the Authority's rule of minimum exposure.<ref name=Cronin26963/> During [[Mike Sekowsky]]'s run in the late 1960s, Diana surrendered her powers and started using her own skill to fight crime. She wore a series of jumpsuits as her attire, most popular of these was a white one.<ref name=Cronin26963/>

After Sekowsky's run ended in the early 1970s, Diana's roots were reverted to her old mythological ones and she wore a more modernized version of her original outfit, a predecessor to her "bathing suit" outfit.<ref name=Cronin26963/> Later, in 1976, her glowing white belt was turned into a yellow one.<ref name=Cronin26963/> For Series 3, artist Terry Dodson redrew her outfit as a strapless swimsuit.<ref>{{cite web| url= http://carolastrickland.com/comics/wwcentral/costume_indices/wwcost12.html| publisher= | website= carolastrickland.com| title= Wonder Woman Costume| first= | last= | date= | access-date= }}</ref>

;Post-Crisis
After [[Crisis On Infinite Earths]], [[George Pérez]] rebooted the character in 1987. She wore an outfit similar to her 1970s one, but now with a larger glowing golden belt.<ref name=Cronin26963/> This outfit continued until [[William Messner-Loebs]]' run, which had Diana pass on the role of Wonder Woman to [[Artemis of Bana-Mighdall|Artemis]].<ref name=Cronin26963/> No longer Wonder Woman, Diana sported a new black biker-girl outfit designed by artist [[Mike Deodato Jr]].<ref name=Cronin26963/> After [[John Byrne (comics)|John Byrne]] took over writing and art duties, he redesigned the Wonder Woman outfit (Diana was reinstated as Wonder Woman at the end of Loebs' run) and joined the emblem and belt together.<ref name=Cronin26963/>

Her outfit did not receive any prominent change until after the 2005–2006"[[Infinite Crisis]]" storyline. Similar to her chest-plate, her glowing belt was also shaped into a "W".<ref name=Cronin26963/> This outfit continued until issue #600{{spaced ndash}}[[J. Michael Straczynski]]'s run of Wonder Woman's altered timeline changed her outfit drastically. Her outfit was redesigned by [[Jim Lee]] and included a redesigned emblem, a golden and red top, black pants, and a later discontinued blue-black jacket.<ref name=Cronin26963/>

It was later [[retcon]]ned by Gail Simone that Wonder Woman's outfit design had Amazonian roots. During a flashback in Vol. 3, Hippolyta is shown issuing orders to have a garment created for Diana, taking inspiration from the skies on the night Diana was born; a red [[harvest moon|hunter's moon]] and a field of stars against deep blue, and the eagle breastplate being a symbol of [[Athena]]'s avian representations.{{issue|date=September 2017}}

;The New 52
Another major outfit change for Wonder Woman came about as part of DC Comics' 2011 relaunch of its entire line of publications, [[The New 52]]. The character's original one-piece outfit was restored, although the color combination of red and blue was changed to dark red and blue-black. Her chest-plate, belt and tiara were also changed from gold to a platinum or sterling silver color. Along with her sword, she now also utilizes a shield. She wears many accessories such as arm and neck jewelery styled as the "WW" motif. Her outfit is no longer made of fabric, as it now resembles a type of light, flexible body armor. Her boots are now a very dark blue rather than red. The design previously included black trousers, but they were removed and the one-piece look was restored during the time of publication.<ref>{{cite web|last=Polo|first=Susana|title=DC Inexplicably, Quietly Changes Wonder Woman's outfit... Again|url=http://www.themarysue.com/wonder-woman-1-cover-change/|publisher=The Mary Sue|accessdate=July 13, 2011}}</ref>

After the events of the 2015 storyline "[[Convergence (comics)|Convergence]]", Diana gets a new armored suit with the classic armor and tiara returning.{{issue|date=September 2017}}

[[File:Wonder Woman (DC Rebirth).jpg|thumb|upright|Wonder Woman as she appears on the cover of ''Wonder Woman: Rebirth'' #1 (2016). Art by Stanley Lau.]]
;DC Rebirth
Wonder Woman's outfit is redesigned to resemble the one worn in ''[[Batman v Superman: Dawn of Justice]]'': it is a red bustier with a gold eagle, a blue growing leather skirt with gold edges with two stars, and knee-high red boots with gold knee guards and accents. Her tiara once again becomes gold with a red star. She occasionally wears a red cape with a gold clasp and edges.{{issue|date=September 2017}}

;Wonder Woman (2017 film)
{{main|Wonder Woman (2017 film)}}
Her tiara's signature star symbol is now an eight pointed starburst. According to designer [[Lindy Hemming]] and director [[Patty Jenkins]], every design decision made for [[Themyscira (DC Comics)|Themyscira]] came down to the same question: "How would I want to live that's badass?"<ref name="themarysue.com">{{cite web|url=http://www.themarysue.com/wonder-woman-themyscira-image/ |title=New Wonder Woman Image; Patty Jenkins On Costumes |publisher=The Mary Sue |date=2016-03-24 |accessdate=2016-12-14}}</ref> "To me, they shouldn't be dressed in armor like men. It should be different. It should be authentic and real […] and ''appealing'' to women." When asked about the decision to give the Amazons [[High-heeled footwear|heeled sandals]], Jenkins explained that they also have flats for fighting, adding "It's total [[wish-fulfillment]] […] I, as a woman, want Wonder Woman to be sexy, hot as hell, fight badass, and look great at the same time […] the same way men want Superman to have ridiculously huge pecs and an impractically big body. That makes them feel like the hero they want to be. And my hero, in my head, has really long legs."<ref name="ew.com">{{cite web|last=Sperling |first=Nicole |url=http://www.ew.com/article/2016/03/24/wonder-woman-first-look-gal-gadot-robin-wright-connie-nielsen |title=Wonder Woman: Gal Gadot, Robin Wright, Connie Nielsen first look |website=EW.com |date=2016-03-23 |accessdate= 2016-12-14}}</ref> This corresponds to the original intent by William Moulton Marston, who wanted his character to be alluringly feminine.

====Invisible plane====
{{main|Invisible plane}}
The Pre-Crisis version of the invisible plane was a necessity because before the ''[[Crisis on Infinite Earths]]'' rewrote Wonder Woman's history – along with the histories of many other heroes – Wonder Woman simply could not fly. She grew increasingly powerful through the [[Silver Age of comic books]] and beyond, acquiring the power to ride wind currents thus allowing her to imitate flight over short distance. This had limitations, however; for example, if there was no wind and the air was completely still she would be trapped on the ground or if dropped from a distance that she would helplessly fall out of control to the ground. Though this meant that she would rely on the invisible plane less frequently, she always had need of it.

The Invisible Plane was a creation of Diana's during her younger years on Paradise Island. She created it to be an improvement on her mother's planes which would be shot down in Man's World. The result of her innovation was an invisible plane that could fly at terrific speeds silently and not be detected by hostile forces, thus avoiding unpleasant conflict. Initially, it was portrayed as being transparent.

The Invisible Plane appeared in the very first comic stories, including ''All-Star Comics'' #8, where it is shown as being able to fly at over {{convert|2000|mph|abbr=on}} and to send out rainbow rays that penetrate the mist around [[Themyscira (DC Comics)|Paradise Island]], as well as landing stealthily and having a built-in radio. Wonder Woman is seen storing the plane at an abandoned farm near Washington, D.C., in the barn; she goes there as Lt. Prince and changes clothes in some of the earliest tales. Though never explicitly stated, the Plane is presumably stored there when not in use for the rest of the Pre-Crisis era. In a story made shortly after, it flies at {{convert|40|mi}} a second.

Shortly thereafter, the telepathic capacities of Wonder Woman's tiara allow her to summon it, often to hover or swoop by the War Department, and she would exit on a rope ladder. She uses the plane to fly into outer space, and frequently transports [[Etta Candy]] and the Holliday Girls, [[Steve Trevor]], or others. During the 1950s, the plane became a jet, and was often shown swooping over Lt. Prince's office; she stripped out of her uniform at super speed and would bound to the plane. Though the Plane was depicted as semi-transparent for the reader's convenience, in-story dialogue indicated that it actually was completely invisible, or at least able to become so as the need arose. (''DC Comics Presents...'' #41)

Wonder Woman continued to use the plane for super-speed, outer space, and multi-dimensional transport up until the un-powered era of Diana Prince. When Wonder Woman resumed super-powered, costumed operations in 1973, she continued to use the jet as before, but did glide on air currents for short distances. At one point, Aphrodite granted the plane the power to fly faster than the speed of light for any interstellar voyages her champion might undertake.<ref>''Wonder Woman'' Vol. 1 #261</ref> Thanks to tinkering by [[gremlin]]s, the Plane even developed intelligence and the power to talk.<ref>''Wonder Woman'' Vol. 1 #312</ref> The Plane proved a good friend, eager to help his "mistress" and her loved ones in any way possible. It got along especially well with Steve Trevor.

====Bracelets of Submission====
{{Main|Wonder Woman's bracelets}}
Diana's bulletproof bracelets were formed from the remnants of [[Athena]]'s legendary shield, the [[Aegis]], to be awarded to her champion. The shield was made from the indestructible hide of the great she-goat, [[Amalthea (mythology)|Amalthea]], who suckled Zeus as an infant. These forearm guards have thus far proven indestructible and able to absorb the impact of incoming attacks, allowing Wonder Woman to deflect [[automatic firearm|automatic weapon]] fire and energy blasts.<ref>{{Cite book | last=Wallace | first=Dan | contribution=Wonder Woman's Magical Weapons | editor-last=Dougall | editor-first=Alastair | title=The DC Comics Encyclopedia | page=93 | publisher=Dorling Kindersley | location=[[New York City|New York]] | year=2008 | isbn=978-0-7566-4119-1 | oclc=213309017}}</ref> Diana can slam the bracelets together to create a wave of concussive force capable of making strong beings like Superman's ears bleed.<ref name=WW219 /> Recently, she gained the ability to channel Zeus's lightning through her bracelets as well. Zeus explained to her that this power had been contained within the bracelets since their creation, because they were once part of the Aegis, and that he had only recently unlocked it for her use.<ref>''Wonder Woman'' (vol. 3) #39 (February 2010)</ref> After the 2011 relaunch of the character, it was revealed that Diana was the daughter of Zeus and [[Hippolyta]]<ref name="Clay"/> and that the bracelets are able to keep the powers she had inherited from Zeus in check.<ref name="Wonder Woman"/> In addition, Hephaestus has modified the bracelets to allow Wonder Woman the sorcerous ability to manifest a sword of grayish metal from each bracelet. Each sword, marked with a red star, takes shape from a flash of lightning, and when Wonder Woman is done with them, the swords disappear, supposedly, back into her bracelets. As such, she has produced other weapons from the bracelets in this way such as a bow that fires explosive arrows, spears and energy bolts among others.<ref>Azzarello, Brian (w), Chiang, Cliff (p), Chiang, Cliff (i). Wonder Woman (vol. 4), #15</ref>

The inspiration to give Diana bracelets came from the pair of bracelets worn by Olive Byrne, creator William Moulton Marston's assistant and lover.<ref name=Lepore/>

====Lasso of Truth====
{{main|Lasso of Truth}}
The ''Lasso of Truth'', or ''Lasso of Hestia'', was forged by [[Hephaestus]] from the golden girdle of Gaea.<ref name="Beatty2003" /> The original form of the Lasso in the Golden Age was called the Magic Lasso Of Aphrodite. It compels all beings who come into contact with it to tell the absolute truth and is virtually indestructible;<ref name="Beatty2003" /> in ''[[Identity Crisis (DC Comics)|Identity Crisis]]'', [[Green Arrow]] mistakenly describes it as "the only lie detector designed by Zeus." The only times it has been broken were when Wonder Woman herself refused to accept the truth revealed by the lasso, such as when she confronted [[Rama Khan]] of Jarhanpur,<ref>''[[JLA (comic book)|JLA]]'' #62 (March 2002)</ref> and by [[Bizarro]] in [[Matt Wagner]]'s non-canonical ''[[Batman/Superman/Wonder Woman: Trinity]]''.<ref>{{Cite book | last=Wagner | first=Matt | authorlink= Matt Wagner | title=Batman/Superman/Wonder Woman: Trinity | publisher=DC Comics | date=July 1, 2005 | isbn=978-1-4012-0187-6}}</ref> During the Golden Age, the original form of the Lasso had the power to force anyone caught to obey any command given them, even overriding the mind control of others; this was effective enough to defeat strong-willed beings like [[Captain Marvel (DC Comics)|Captain Marvel]].<ref>''War of the Gods'' #1 (September 1991)</ref> Diana wields the Lasso with great precision and accuracy and can use it as a whip or noose.

====Other items====
Diana occasionally uses additional weaponry in formal battle, such as ceremonial golden armour with golden wings, [[pteruges]], chestplate, and golden helmet in the shape of an eagle's head. She possesses a magical sword forged by [[Hephaestus]] that is sharp enough to cut the electrons off an atom.<ref name="Beatty2003" />

As early as the 1950s,<ref name="Showcase Presents Wonder Woman 2007">{{Cite book | last=Kanigher | first=Robert | title=Showcase Presents: Wonder Woman, Vol. 1 | publisher=[[DC Comics]] | date=August 22, 2007 | isbn=978-1-4012-1373-2}}</ref> Wonder Woman's tiara has also been used as a razor-edged throwing weapon, returning to her like a boomerang.<ref name="Beatty2003" /> The tiara allows Wonder Woman to be invulnerable from telepathic attacks, as well as allowing her to telepathically contact people such as the Amazons back on Themyscira using the power of the red [[star ruby]] in its center.<ref name=WW219 />

The Golden, Silver, and Bronze Age portrayals of Wonder Woman showed her using a silent and [[invisible plane]] that could be controlled by mental command <ref name="Sensation Comics #1">{{cite comic| writer=Charles Moulton| artist= Harry G. Peter |title= [[Sensation Comics]] #1 | page=10 | publisher= All American Comics| date=1942}}</ref> and fly at speeds up to {{convert|3,000|mph|abbr=on}}.<ref>{{cite comic| writer=Charles Moulton| artist= Harry G. Peter|title= Sensation Comics|issue= 81 | page=5 | publisher= All American Comics| date=1947}}</ref> Its appearance has varied over time; originally it had a [[propeller]], while later it was drawn as a jet aircraft resembling a [[stealth aircraft]].<ref>{{cite web|last=Strickland|first=Carol A.|title=The Invisible Plane/Jet!| url=http://www.carolastrickland.com/comics/wwcentral/misc_indexes/jetindex/jet.html|publisher=Carol A. Strickland}}</ref>

During the golden age Wonder Woman possessed a [[Purple Ray]] capable of healing even a fatal gunshot wound to the brain.<ref>{{cite comic| writer=Charles Moulton| artist= Harry G. Peter|title= Sensation Comics| issue= 50 | page=3 | publisher= All American Comics| date=1942}}</ref> She also possessed a [[Mental Radio]] that could let her receive messages from those in need.<ref name="Sensation Comics #1"/>

As a recent temporary inductee into the [[Star Sapphire (comics)|Star Sapphires]], Wonder Woman gained access to the violet power ring of love. This ring allowed her to alter her costume at will, create solid-light energy constructs, and reveal a person's true love to them. She was able to combine the energy with her lasso to enhance its ability.

==Fictional character biography==

===20th century===

====Origin====
In her debut in ''All Star Comics'' #8, Diana was a member of a tribe of women called the [[Amazons (DC Comics)|Amazons]], native to [[Themyscira (DC Comics)|Paradise Island]]{{spaced ndash}}a secluded island set in the middle of a vast ocean. [[Steve Trevor|Captain Steve Trevor]]'s plane crashes on the island and he is found alive but unconscious by Diana and fellow Amazon, and friend, Mala. Diana has him nursed back to health and falls in love with him. A competition is held amongst all the Amazons by Diana's mother, the Queen of the Amazons [[Hippolyta (DC Comics)|Hippolyta]], in order to determine who is the most worthy of all the women; Hippolyta charges the winner with the responsibility of delivering Captain Steve Trevor back to Man's World and to fight for justice. Hippolyta forbids Diana from entering the competition, but she takes part nonetheless, wearing a mask to conceal her identity. She wins the competition and reveals herself, surprising Hippolyta, who ultimately accepts, and must give in to, Diana's wish to go to Man's World. She then is awarded a special uniform made by her mother for her new role as Wonder Woman and safely returns Steve Trevor back to his home country.<ref>{{Cite comic| writer =[[William Moulton Marston|Charles Moulton]]| artist =[[Harry G. Peter]] | story = Introducing Wonder Woman| title = All Star Comics| volume = 1| issue = 8| date = January 1942| publisher = DC Comics}}</ref><ref>{{cite web| url= http://community-2.webtv.net/eddie138/WonderWomanAHistory/| archiveurl= https://archive.is/20130222113934/http://community-2.webtv.net/eddie138/WonderWomanAHistory/| title= Wonder Woman: A History| website= webtv.net| author= Eddie138| publisher= | date= | archive-date= February 22, 2013| access-date= }}</ref>

====Golden Age====
{{main|Golden Age of Comic Books}}
Coming to America for the first time, Wonder Woman comes upon a wailing army nurse. Inquiring about her state, she finds that the nurse wanted to leave for South America with her fiancé but was unable due to shortage of money. As both of them looked identical and Wonder Woman needed a job and a valid identity to look after Steve (who was admitted in the same army hospital), she gives her the money she had earned earlier to help her go to her fiancé in exchange for her credentials. The nurse reveals her name as Diana Prince, and thus, Wonder Woman's secret identity was created, and she began working as a nurse in the army.<ref name="Gutierrez">{{cite web|last=Gutierrez|first=Jon|title=The 6 Worst Jobs Wonder Woman Ever Had|url=http://www.toplessrobot.com/2011/03/the_6_worst_jobs_wonder_woman_ever_had.php|publisher=Topless Robot|accessdate=March 30, 2011}}</ref><ref>{{cite comic| writer=Charles Moulton| artist= Harry G. Peter|title= [[Sensation Comics]]|issue=1 | page=8 | publisher= [[All American Comics]]| date=1942}}</ref>

Wonder Woman then took part in a variety of adventures, mostly side by side with Trevor. Her most common foes during this period would be [[Nazi forces]] led by a German baroness named [[Paula von Gunther]], occasionally evil deities/demigods such as [[Ares (comics)|Mars]] and the [[Duke of Deception]], and then colorful villains like [[Hypnota]], [[Doctor Psycho]], and [[Cheetah (comics)|the Cheetah]].<ref>{{cite web|last=Cronin|first=Brian|title=When We First Met – Wonder Woman's Golden Age Rogues| url=http://goodcomics.comicbookresources.com/2012/10/28/when-we-first-met-wonder-womans-golden-age-rogues/| publisher= Comic Book Resources| accessdate= October 28, 2012}}</ref>

====Silver Age====
{{main|Silver Age of Comic Books}}
In the Silver Age, Wonder Woman's history received several changes. Her earlier origin, which had significant ties to [[World War II]], was changed and her powers were shown to be the product of the [[Greek mythology|gods']] blessings, corresponding to her epithet, "beautiful as Aphrodite, wise as Athena, stronger than Hercules, and swifter than Hermes".<ref name="Wonder Woman (vol. 1) #105"/><ref>{{cite web|title=The complicated origin of Wonder Woman| url=http://marionetteblog.blogspot.in/2005/09/complicated-origin-of-wonder-woman.html|publisher=Dance of the Puppets| accessdate=September 28, 2005|author=MARIONETTE}}</ref> The concepts of Wonder Girl and Wonder Tot were also introduced during this period.<ref>{{cite web|last=Hanley| first= Tim| title= A Book Look: Kanigher's Giant Birds| url= https://thanley.wordpress.com/2011/01/10/a-book-look-kanigher%E2%80%99s-giant-birds/| publisher= Straitened Circumstances| accessdate= January 10, 2011}}</ref>

''Wonder Woman'' (vol. 1) #179 (Nov. 1968) showed Wonder Woman giving up her powers and returning her costume and title to her mother in order to continue staying in Man's World. The reason behind this was that all the Amazons were shifting to another dimension, but Diana was unable to accompany them as she needed to stay behind to help Steve, who had been wrongly convicted.<ref>{{cite comic| writer=Denny O'Neil| penciller=Mike Sekowsky| inker=Dick Giordano| story=Wonder Woman's Last Battle| title=Wonder Woman| volume=1| issue=179| date=November 1968}}</ref> Thus, she no longer held the title of Wonder Woman and after meeting and training under a blind martial arts mentor [[I Ching (comics)|I-Ching]], Diana resumed crime fighting as the powerless Diana Prince. She ran a mod-boutique as a business and dressed in a series of jumpsuits while fighting crime.<ref name="Reed"/><ref name="Hanley">{{cite web| last= Hanley|first=Tim|title=A Book Look: Ads vs. Audience|url=http://thanley.wordpress.com/2010/11/19/a-book-look-ads-vs-audience/|publisher=Straitened Circumstances|accessdate=November 19, 2010}}</ref><ref name="Diana's Memory Album">{{cite web|title=Diana's Memory Album|url=http://www.dialbforblog.com/archives/494/|publisher=Dial B for Blog}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|title=Wonder what I did on my Christmas vacation?|url=http://twomorrows.com/blog/tnt/wonder-what-i-did-on-my-christmas-vacation/| publisher= TwoMorrows Publishing| accessdate=January 5, 2010|author=Mr. Morrow}}</ref><ref name="Guion">{{cite web|last=Guion|first=Richard|title=Introducing the NEW Wonder Woman| url= http://www.giantsizegeek.com/2011/03/introducing-new-wonder-woman.html|publisher=Giant Size Geek| accessdate= March 21, 2011}}</ref> During this period, [[Samuel R. Delany]] took over scripting duties with issue #202. Delany was initially supposed to write a six-issue story arc, which would culminate in a battle over an abortion clinic, but Delany was removed reportedly due to criticism from [[Gloria Steinem]], who, not knowing the content of the issues Delany was writing, was upset that Wonder Woman had lost her powers and was no longer wearing her traditional costume.<ref>{{cite web|author=Monash Arts Online Presence Team |url=http://www.arts.monash.edu.au/ecps/colloquy/journal/issue024/matsuuchi.pdf |title=Colloquy |publisher= Arts.monash.edu.au |date= |accessdate=February 5, 2014}}</ref>

====Bronze Age====
{{main|Bronze Age of Comic Books}}
In ''Wonder Woman'' Vol 1 #204, Diana's powers and costume were returned to her and she is once again reinstated as Wonder Woman.<ref name="Guion"/> I-Ching is killed by a crazy sniper in the same issue.<ref>{{cite web| last= Cronin| first= Brian|title=Diana Prince – Forgotten Classic| url= http://snarkfree.blogspot.in/2005/04/diana-prince-forgotten-classic.html| publisher= Snark Free Waters| accessdate= April 23, 2005|quote=Sadly, though, in the last issue of the run, I-Ching was murdered and Wonder Woman was given amnesia. When the Amazons returned her memories (and her powers), they left out her memories of her experiences as just plain "Diana Prince."}}</ref> Later, Diana meets her sister [[Nubia (comics)|Nubia]], who is Hippolyta's daughter fashioned out of dark clay (hence Nubia's dark complexion).<ref name="Jones, Jr. article&id=24229">{{cite web|last=Jones, Jr.|first=Robert|title=Wonder of Wonders|url=http://www.comicbookresources.com/?page=article&id=24229| publisher= Comic Book Resources|accessdate=December 31, 2009}}</ref><ref name="Strickland">{{cite web|last=Strickland|first=Carol|title=The Illustrated Nubia Index| url= http://www.carolastrickland.com/comics/wwcentral/misc_indexes/nubia/nubia.html|publisher=Carol A. Strickland}}</ref> Nubia claimed to be the "Wonder Woman of The Floating Island", and she challenges Diana to a duel which ends in a draw.<ref name="Strickland"/> Returning to her home, Nubia would have further adventures involving Diana.<ref name="Jones, Jr. article&id=24229"/>

The last issue of Volume 1 showed Diana and Steve Trevor announce their love for each other and their subsequent marriage.<ref>{{Cite comic | writer =Gerry Conway | artist =Don Heck | story =Of Gods And Men | title = Wonder Woman | volume =1 | issue =329 | date = February 1986 | publisher =DC Comics}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|last=Mozzocco |first=J. Caleb |title=The Many Loves of Wonder Woman: A Brief History Of The Amazing Amazon's Love Life |url=http://www.comicsalliance.com/2012/08/28/the-many-loves-of-wonder-woman-steve-trevor-nemesis-batman-superman-romance/ |publisher=ComicsAlliance |accessdate=August 28, 2012 |deadurl=yes |archiveurl=https://web.archive.org/web/20120830054351/http://www.comicsalliance.com/2012/08/28/the-many-loves-of-wonder-woman-steve-trevor-nemesis-batman-superman-romance/ |archivedate=August 30, 2012 |df=mdy-all }}</ref>

====Modern Age====
{{main|Modern Age of Comic Books}}
[[File:Wonder woman 02.jpg|thumb|right|upright|Cover of ''Wonder Woman'' vol. 2, #1 (Feb. 1987), showing the character's look after the ''[[Crisis on Infinite Earths]]'' continuity reboot. Art by [[George Pérez]].]]

;Crisis on Infinite Earths
The events of ''[[Crisis on Infinite Earths]]'' greatly changed and altered the history of the [[DC Universe]]. Wonder Woman's history and origin were considerably revamped by the event. Wonder Woman was now an emissary and ambassador from [[Themyscira (DC Comics)|Themyscira]] (the new name for Paradise Island) to Patriarch's World, charged with the mission of bringing peace to the outside world. Various deities and concepts from [[Greek mythology]] were blended and incorporated into Wonder Woman's stories and origin. Diana was formed out of clay of the shores of Themyscira by [[Hippolyta (DC Comics)|Hippolyta]], who wished for a child; the clay figure was then brought to life by the Greek deities. The Gods then blessed and granted her unique powers and abilities{{spaced ndash}}beauty from Aphrodite, strength from Demeter, wisdom from Athena, speed and flight from Hermes, Eyes of the Hunter and unity with beasts from Artemis and sisterhood with fire and the ability to discern the truth from Hestia.<ref>{{cite web|last=Colluccio|first=Ali|title=Top 5: Wonder Woman Reboots|url=http://ifanboy.com/articles/top-5-wonder-woman-reboots/|publisher=iFanboy|accessdate=April 10, 2012|quote=After she was "erased" from existence in the final pages of Crisis on Infinite Earths, George Perez, Len Wein and Greg Potter brought the Amazon Princess back to the DC Universe. While the basics of the story remained the same, Wonder Woman;s powers were adjusted to include Beauty from Aphrodite, Strength from Demeter, Wisdom from Athena, Speed and Flight from Hermes, Eyes of the Hunter from Artemis, and Truth from Hestia. This run established Paradise Island as the mythical Amazon capital, Themyscira. Perez's Diana is not only strong and smart, but graceful and kind – the iconic Wonder Woman.}}</ref> Due to the reboot, Diana's operating methods were made distinctive from Superman and Batman's with her willingness to use [[deadly force]] when she judges it necessary. In addition, her previous history and her marriage to Steve Trevor were erased. Trevor was introduced as a man much older than Diana who would later on marry [[Etta Candy]].<ref>{{cite web|last=Mozzocco |first=J. Caleb |title=The Many Loves of Wonder Woman: A Brief History Of The Amazing Amazon's Love Life |url=http://www.comicsalliance.com/2012/08/28/the-many-loves-of-wonder-woman-steve-trevor-nemesis-batman-superman-romance/ |publisher=ComicsAlliance |accessdate=August 28, 2012 |quote=When the next volume of Wonder Woman would start, Trevor was sidelined as Diana's love interest. He still appeared in the series, but as an older man, one who would ultimately marry the post-Crisis version of Wondy's Golden Age sidekick, Etta Candy. |deadurl=yes |archiveurl=https://web.archive.org/web/20120830054351/http://www.comicsalliance.com/2012/08/28/the-many-loves-of-wonder-woman-steve-trevor-nemesis-batman-superman-romance/ |archivedate=August 30, 2012 |df=mdy-all }}</ref>

;War of the Gods
{{Main article|War of the Gods (comics)}}
Starting in ''Wonder Woman'' Vol 2 #51, The Amazons, who had revealed their presence to the world in ''Wonder Woman'' Vol 2 #50, are blamed for a series of murders and for the theft of various artifacts. The Amazons are then taken into custody, Queen [[Hippolyta (DC Comics)|Hippolyta]] is nowhere to be found and Steve Trevor is forced by General Yedziniak to attack Themyscira. These events lead to the "[[War of the Gods (comics)|War of the Gods]]" occurring. The culprit of the murders, thefts and the framing of the Amazons is revealed to be the witch [[Circe (comics)|Circe]], who "kills" Diana by reverting her form back into the clay she was born from. Later, Wonder Woman is brought back to life and together with [[Donna Troy]], battles Circe and ultimately defeats her.<ref>{{Cite comic| writer=George Pérez| penciller=George Pérez| copencillers=Cynthia Martin| inker=Cynthia Martin| story = War of the Gods, Chapter One: Hellfire's Web| title=War of the Gods| volume=1| issue=1| date=September 1991| publisher =DC Comics}}</ref><ref>{{Cite comic| writer=George Pérez| penciller=George Pérez| copencillers=Cynthia Martin| inker=Cynthia Martin| story=The Holy Wars| title =War of the Gods| volume=1| issue=2| date=October 1991| publisher=DC Comics}}</ref><ref>{{Cite comic| writer=George Pérez| penciller=George Pérez| copencillers=Cynthia Martin |inker=Cynthia Martin| story=Casualties of War| title=War of the Gods| volume=1| issue=3| date=November 1991| publisher=DC Comics}}</ref><ref>{{Cite comic| writer=George Pérez| penciller=George Pérez| story=In the Beginning... There Was the End| title=War of the Gods| volume=1| issue=4| date=December 1991| publisher=DC Comics}}</ref> Circe would later return by unknown means.

When Hippolyta and the other Amazons were trapped in a demonic dimension, she started receiving visions about the death of Wonder Woman.<ref>{{cite web|title=Superhero Makeovers: Wonder Woman, part two|url=http://screamsheet.wordpress.com/2011/02/10/superhero-makeovers-wonder-woman-part-two/|publisher=The Screamsheet|accessdate=February 10, 2011|quote=Hippolyta received a vision where Wonder Woman died.}}</ref> Fearing her daughter's death, Hippolyta created a false claim that Diana was not worthy of continuing her role as Wonder Woman, and arranged for a contest to determine who would be the new Wonder Woman, thus protecting Diana from her supposed fate.<ref>{{cite web|title=Superhero Makeovers: Wonder Woman, part two|url=http://screamsheet.wordpress.com/2011/02/10/superhero-makeovers-wonder-woman-part-two/|publisher=The Screamsheet|accessdate=February 10, 2011|quote=Desperate to save her daughter, she claimed that Diana had failed in her role as an ambassador to Man's World and called for a do-over on the contest that had determined Diana fit to carry the Wonder Woman mantle in the first place.}}</ref> The participants of the final round were Diana and [[Artemis of Bana-Mighdall|Artemis]], and with the help of some mystic manipulation by Hippolyta, Artemis won the contest.<ref>{{cite web|title=Superhero Makeovers: Wonder Woman, part two|url=http://screamsheet.wordpress.com/2011/02/10/superhero-makeovers-wonder-woman-part-two/|publisher=The Screamsheet|accessdate=February 10, 2011|quote=Due to Hippolyta secretly meddling so her daughter would lose the contest, Diana lost to one of the Bana named Artemis, who became the new Wonder Woman.}}</ref> Thus, Diana was forced to hand over her title and costume to Artemis, who became the new Wonder Woman and Diana started fighting crime in an alternate costume.<ref>{{cite web|title=Superhero Makeovers: Wonder Woman, part two|url=http://screamsheet.wordpress.com/2011/02/10/superhero-makeovers-wonder-woman-part-two/|publisher=The Screamsheet|accessdate=February 10, 2011|quote=Meanwhile, Diana herself wore the costume equivalent of black lingerie and a jacket and continued to fight crime.}}</ref> Artemis later died in battle with the [[White Magician]]{{spaced ndash}}thus, Hippolyta's vision of a dying Wonder Woman did come true, albeit not of Diana as Wonder Woman.<ref>{{cite web|title=Superhero Makeovers: Wonder Woman, part two|url=http://screamsheet.wordpress.com/2011/02/10/superhero-makeovers-wonder-woman-part-two/|publisher=The Screamsheet|accessdate=February 10, 2011|quote= Artemis was killed off, resulting in the death of Wonder Woman that Hippolyta had foreseen, and Diana returned as Wonder Woman.}}</ref> Diana once again became Wonder Woman, a request made by Artemis in her last seconds. Artemis would later return as [[Artemis of Bana-Mighdall#Requiem|Requiem]]. Prior to Artemis' death, Hippolyta would admit to her daughter about her own part in Artemis' death, which strained their relationship as Diana was unable to forgive her mother for sending another Amazon to her death knowingly for the sake of saving her own daughter.

The demon [[Neron (DC comics)|Neron]] engaged Diana in battle and managed to kill her.<ref name=HippolytaWW /> [[Olympian Gods (DC Comics)|The Olympian Gods]] granted Diana divinity and the role of the Goddess of Truth who started to reside in Olympus; her mother Hippolyta then assumed the role of Wonder Woman and wore her own different incarnation of the costume.<ref name=HippolytaWW /> In Wonder Woman Vol 2 #136, Diana was banished from Olympus due to interfering in earthly matters (as Diana was unable to simply watch over people's misery on earth).<ref name=HippolytaWW /> She immediately returned to her duties as Wonder Woman, but ran into conflicts with her mother over her true place and role as Hippolyta seemed accustomed to her life in America.<ref name=HippolytaWW /> Their fight remained unsolved, as Hippolyta tragically died during an intergalactic [[Our Worlds at War|war]].<ref name=HippolytaWW /> Themyscira was destroyed during the war, but was restored and reformed as a collection of floating islands.<ref name="HippolytaWW">{{cite web|title=Wonder Woman & Hippolyta – As All Great Heroes Do...|url=http://www.cosmicteams.com/profiles/wonderwoman.html|publisher=Cosmic Teams}}</ref> Circe later resurrected Hippolyta in Wonder Woman Vol 3 #8.<ref>{{cite comic| writer=Jodi Picoult| penciller=Terry Dodson| inker=Rachel Dodson| story=Love and Murder, Part 3| title=Wonder Woman| volume=3| issue=8| date=June 2007| publisher=DC Comics}}</ref>

;The OMAC Project
{{Main article|Infinite Crisis|The OMAC Project}}
One of the events that led to ''Infinite Crisis'' was of Wonder Woman killing the villain [[Maxwell Lord]] in ''Wonder Woman'' (vol. 2) #219.<ref name=infinitecrisisguideign>{{cite web| last= Goldstein| first= Hilary| title= Infinite Crisis Guide| url=http://www.ign.com/articles/2005/03/23/infinite-crisis-guide?page=2| publisher= IGN| accessdate= March 23, 2005}}</ref> Maxwell Lord was mind-controlling [[Superman]], who as a result was near to killing [[Batman]]. Wonder Woman tried to stop Superman, Lord (who was unable to mind control her) made Superman see her as his enemy [[Doomsday (comics)|Doomsday]] trying to kill [[Lois Lane]]. Superman then attacked Wonder Woman, and a vicious battle ensued. Buying herself time by slicing Superman's throat with her tiara, Wonder Woman caught Lord in her Lasso of Truth and demanded to know how to stop his control over Superman. As the lasso forced the wearer to speak only the truth, Lord told her that the only way to stop him was to kill him. Left with no choice, Wonder Woman snapped Lord's neck and ended his control over Superman.<ref name=infinitecrisisguideign /> Unknown to her, the entire scene was broadcast live around every channel in the world by [[Brother Eye]]. The viewers were not aware of the entire situation, and saw only Wonder Woman murdering a Justice League associate. Wonder Woman's actions put her at odds with Batman and Superman, as they saw Wonder Woman as a cold-blooded killer, despite the fact that she saved their lives.<ref>{{cite web|last=Goldstein|first=Hilary|title=Defending Wonder Woman – Why the Amazonian princess should be spared punishment from DC's heroes |url= http://www.ign.com/articles/2005/08/01/defending-wonder-woman|publisher=IGN|accessdate=August 1, 2005}}</ref>

;One Year Later
{{Main article|One Year Later|Who is Wonder Woman?}}
At the end of ''Infinite Crisis'', Wonder Woman temporarily retires from her costumed identity. Diana, once again using the alias Diana Prince, joins the Department of [[Metahuman]] Affairs. [[Donna Troy]] becomes the new Wonder Woman and is captured by Diana's enemies. Diana then goes on a mission to rescue her sister, battling Circe and [[Hercules (DC Comics)|Hercules]]. Diana defeats the villains, freeing Donna and takes up the role of Wonder Woman again. Circe places a spell on Diana, which renders Diana into a normal, powerless human being when in the role of Diana Prince; her powers come to her only when she is in the role of Wonder Woman.<ref>{{cite comic| writer=Allan Heinberg| penciller=Terry Dodson| inker=Rachel Dodson| story=Who is Wonder Woman?: Part One| title=Wonder Woman| volume=3| issue=1| date=August 2006| publisher=DC Comics}}</ref><ref>{{cite comic| writer=Allan Heinberg| penciller=Terry Dodson| inker=Rachel Dodson| story=Who is Wonder Woman?: Part Two| title=Wonder Woman| volume=3| issue=2| date=September 2006| publisher=DC Comics}}</ref><ref>{{cite comic| writer=Allan Heinberg| penciller=Terry Dodson| inker=Rachel Dodson| story=Who is Wonder Woman?: Part Three| title=Wonder Woman| volume=3| issue=3| date=October 2006| publisher=DC Comics}}</ref><ref>{{cite comic| writer=Allan Heinberg| penciller=Terry Dodson| inker=Rachel Dodson| story=Who is Wonder Woman?: Part Four| title=Wonder Woman| volume=3| issue=4| date=February 2007| publisher=DC Comics}}</ref><ref>{{cite comic| writer=Allan Heinberg| penciller=Terry Dodson| inker=Rachel Dodson| story=Who is Wonder Woman?: Part Five| title=Wonder Woman Annual| volume=3| issue=1| date=November 2007| publisher=DC Comics}}</ref>

;The Circle
{{Main article|The Circle (DC Comics)}}
The storyline [[The Circle (DC Comics)|"The Circle"]] was focused on the revelation of a failed assassination attempt on Diana when she was a baby, by four rogue Amazons.<ref>{{cite comic| writer=Gail Simone| penciller=Terry Dodson| inker=[[Rachel Dodson]]| story=The Circle Part One of Four: What You Do Not Know Yet| title=Wonder Woman| volume=3| issue=14| date=January 2008| publisher=DC Comics}}</ref> These Amazons{{spaced ndash}}Myrto, Charis, Philomela and Alkyone, collectively referred to as [[List of Wonder Woman enemies#The Circle|The Circle]]{{spaced ndash}}were Hippolyta's personal guards and were extremely loyal and devoted to her.<ref>{{cite comic| writer=Gail Simone| penciller=Terry Dodson| inker=Rachel Dodson| story=The Circle Part Two of Four: Dead Heat| title=Wonder Woman| volume=3| issue=15| date=February 2008| publisher=DC Comics}}</ref> However, when Hippolyta decided to raise a daughter, The Circle was horrified and considered the baby ill-fate, one who would ruin their entire race.<ref>{{cite comic| writer=Gail Simone| penciller=Terry Dodson| inker=Rachel Dodson| story=The Circle Part Three of Four: The Wellspring of all Vengeance| title=Wonder Woman| volume=3| issue=16| date=March 2008| publisher=DC Comics}}</ref> Thus, after Diana was sculpted out of clay and brought to life, The Circle decided to assassinate the baby. Their attempt was foiled however, and the four Amazons were imprisoned.<ref name="GailSimoneTerry">{{cite comic| writer=[[Gail Simone]]| penciller=[[Terry Dodson]]| inker=[[Rachel Dodson]]| story=The Circle Conclusion: A Time Of Reckoning| title=Wonder Woman| volume=3| issue=17| date=April 2008| publisher=DC Comics}}</ref> After years, the Circle escaped their prisons with the help of [[Captain Nazi]], and decided to accomplish their previously failed mission and kill Diana. Diana defeated Myrto, Charis, Philomela and then approached Alkyone, who runs off and succumbs to her death by falling into the ocean. The other three Amazons return to their prisons.<ref name="GailSimoneTerry" /><ref>{{cite web|title=Wonder Woman: The Circle|url=http://tradetalks.blogspot.in/2009/05/wonder-woman-circle.html|publisher=Trade Talks|accessdate=May 29, 2009|author=Raou}}</ref>

Issue #600 introduced Wonder Woman to an alternate time-line created by the Gods in which Themyscira had been destroyed and the Amazons scattered around the world.<ref name="Who destroyed Paradise Island"/> In this timeline, Diana is an orphan raised in New York who is learning to cope with her powers. The entire world has forgotten Wonder Woman's existence and the main story of this run was of Diana trying to restore reality even though she does not properly remember it herself.<ref>{{cite web|last=George|first=Richard|title=Wonder Woman's New Era|url=http://www.ign.com/articles/2010/06/30/wonder-womans-new-era?|publisher=IGN|accessdate=June 29, 2010}}</ref> Diana has no memories of her prior adventures as Wonder Woman, recollecting her memories in bits and pieces and receiving different abilities and resources (such as the power of flight and her lasso) during the progression of her adventure. A trio of Death Goddesses called The Morrigan acted as Wonder Woman's main enemies.<ref>{{cite web|title=SS/OM: All New Wonder Woman Review Part 3: The Morrigan|url=http://thatguywiththeglasses.com/blogs/latest/entry/ssom-all-new-wonder-woman-review-part-3-the-morrigan|publisher=That Guy With the Glasses|accessdate=October 17, 2011}}</ref> Diana ultimately defeats the evil goddesses and returns everything back to normal.<ref>{{cite comic| writer=[[Phil Hester (comics)|Phil Hester]]| penciller =[[Don Kramer]]| copencillers =[[Lee Garbett]]| story=The Odyssey Part Fourteen: The Return| title=Wonder Woman| volume=1| issue=614| date=October 2011| publisher=DC Comics}}</ref>

===21st century===

====The New 52====
{{main|The New 52}}
In September 2011, DC Comics relaunched its entire publication line, dubbing the event [[the New 52]]. Among the major changes to the character, Wonder Woman now appears wearing a new costume similar to her older one, and has a completely new origin. In this new timeline, Wonder Woman is no longer a clay figure brought to life by the magic of the gods. Rather, she is the [[demigod]]dess daughter of Queen Hippolyta and Zeus: King of the Greek Gods. Her original origin is revealed as a cover story to explain Diana's birth as a means to protect her from Hera's wrath. Currently, Diana has taken on the role and title as the new "God of War".<ref>{{cite web|last=Ching| first=Albert| title=WONDER WOMAN Gets a NEW 52 Origin, Parent in November| url=http://www.newsarama.com/comics/wonder-woman-new-origin-111010.html| publisher=Newsarama| accessdate=October 10, 2011}}</ref><ref>{{cite news| last=Gregorian| first=Dareh| title=Zeus your daddy, Diana!| url=http://www.nypost.com/p/news/national/zeus_your_daddy_diana_ppW48O4ICruECUubnH5G1H| publisher=New York Post| accessdate=October 10, 2011}}</ref>

The Greek messenger god, Hermes, entrusts Wonder Woman with the protection of [[Zola (DC Comics)|Zola]], a young woman, who is pregnant with Zeus's child, from Hera, seething with jealousy and determined to kill the child.<ref>{{cite comic| writer= Azzarello, Brian| penciller= Chiang, Cliff| inker= Chiang, Cliff| story= The Visitation| title= Wonder Woman| volume= 4| issue= 1| date= November 2011}}</ref><ref>{{cite comic| writer= Azzarello, Brian| artist= [[Cliff Chiang|Chiang, Cliff]]| story= Home| title= Wonder Woman| volume= 4| issue= 2| date= December 2011}}</ref><ref>{{cite comic| writer= Azzarello, Brian| penciller= Chiang, Cliff| inker= Chiang, Cliff| story= Blood| title= Wonder Woman| volume= 4| issue= 4| date= February 2012}}</ref><ref>{{cite comic| writer= Azzarello, Brian| penciller= [[Tony Akins|Akins, Tony]]| inker= Akins, Tony| story= Lourdes| title= Wonder Woman| volume= 4| issue= 5| date= March 2012}}</ref><ref>{{cite comic| writer= Azzarello, Brian| penciller= Akins, Tony| inker= Akins, Tony; [[Dan Green (artist)|Green, Dan]]| story= Thrones| title= Wonder Woman| volume= 4| issue= 6| date= April 2012}}</ref> With the appearance of a bizarre, new, chalk-white enemy, the goddess Strife (a reimagined version of Eris, the goddess of discord who had battled Wonder Woman in post-Crisis continuity), Wonder Woman discovers she, herself, is the natural-born daughter of Hippolyta and Zeus, who, after a violent clash, became lovers.<ref name="Clay">{{cite comic| writer= [[Brian Azzarello|Azzarello, Brian]]| penciller= [[Cliff Chiang|Chiang, Cliff]]| inker= Chiang, Cliff| story= Clay| title= Wonder Woman| volume= 4| issue= 3| date= January 2012}}</ref> Hippolyta revealed Diana's earlier origin story to be a lie, spread amongst the Amazons to protect Diana from the wrath of Hera, who is known for hunting and killing several illegitimate offspring of Zeus.<ref name="Clay"/>

The first of these half-mortal siblings to reveal himself to Wonder Woman was her older half-brother, Lennox Sandsmark, who could transform himself into living, marble-like stone and, before his death, was revealed to be the father of [[Wonder Girl (Cassie Sandsmark)]].<ref>''Teen Titans'' #19 (2013)</ref> His killer, the [[First Born (comics)|First Born]], the eldest progeny of Zeus, would become Wonder Woman's first major super-villain of the New 52.

The story then focuses on Wonder Woman's quest to rescue Zola from Hades, who had abducted her and taken her to Hell at the end of the sixth issue of the series.<ref name="Azzarello">{{cite comic| writer= Azzarello, Brian| penciller= Chiang, Cliff| inker= Chiang, Cliff| story= Il Gangster dell'amore| title= Wonder Woman| volume= 4| issue= 7| date= May 2012}}</ref><ref>{{cite comic| writer= Azzarello, Brian| penciller= Chiang, Cliff| inker= Chiang, Cliff| story= Casting Shadows| title= Wonder Woman| volume= 4| issue= 8| date= June 2012}}</ref><ref>{{cite comic| writer= Azzarello, Brian| penciller= Chiang, Cliff| inker= Chiang, Cliff| story= The Dearly Beloved| title= Wonder Woman| volume= 4| issue= 9| date= July 2012}}</ref><ref>{{cite comic| writer= Azzarello, Brian| penciller= Chiang, Cliff| inker= Chiang, Cliff| story= Vows| title= Wonder Woman| volume= 4| issue= 10| date= August 2012}}</ref> The male children of the Amazons are introduced and Diana learns about the birth of her "brothers"{{spaced ndash}}the Amazons used to infrequently invade ships coming near their island and force themselves on the sailors, before killing them. After nine months, the birth of the resulting female children was highly celebrated and they were inducted into the ranks of the Amazons while the male children were rejected. In order to save the male children from being drowned to death by the Amazons, Hephaestus traded weapons to the Amazons in exchange for them.<ref name="Azzarello"/><ref>{{cite web|last=Lima|first=Sara|title=Is Changing Wonder Woman and the History of the Amazons A Good Idea?|url=http://www.comicvine.com/news/is-changing-wonder-woman-and-the-history-of-the-amazons-a-good-idea/144490/|publisher=ComicVine|accessdate=March 27, 2012}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|last=Hunsaker|first=Andy|title=Wonder Woman #7: Amazon Sex Pirate Spartans|url=http://www.craveonline.com/comics/reviews/185491-wonder-woman-7-amazon-sex-pirate-spartans|publisher=CraveOnline|accessdate=March 26, 2012}}</ref>

After saving Zola from Hades, Wonder Woman tries to protect her further from Apollo, as it is prophesied that one of Zeus' children will be his downfall whom Apollo considers to be Zola's child.<ref>{{cite comic| writer= Azzarello, Brian| penciller= Chiang, Cliff| inker= Chiang, Cliff| story= Son Rise| title= Wonder Woman| volume= 4| issue= 11| date= September 2012}}</ref><ref name="Birth Right">{{cite comic| writer= Azzarello, Brian| penciller= Chiang, Cliff| inker= Chiang, Cliff| story= Birth Right| title= Wonder Woman| volume= 4| issue= 12| date= October 2012}}</ref> Wonder Woman receives the power of flight by one of Hermes' feathers piercing her thigh and Zola's baby is stolen by Hermes at the end and given to Demeter. The issue's last page shows a dark and mysterious man rising from the snow, taking a helmet and disappearing.<ref>{{cite web|last=Rogers|first=Vaneta|title=BRIAN AZZARELLO On Ending WONDER WOMAN #12 With a 'BOOM'|url=http://www.newsarama.com/comics/brian-azzarell-wonder-woman-orion.html|publisher=Newsarama|accessdate=August 17, 2012}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|last=Johnston|first=Rich|title=The End Of Wonder Woman #12 That You Really Might Not Have Expected|url=http://www.bleedingcool.com/2012/08/15/the-end-of-wonder-woman-12-that-you-really-might-not-have-expected/|publisher=Bleeding Cool|accessdate=August 15, 2012}}</ref> This man is later revealed to be Zeus' first son, known only as First Born, who seeks to rule over Olympus and the rest of the world, and take Diana as his bride.{{issue|date=November 2014}}

A stand-alone #0 issue was released in September which explored Diana's childhood and her tutelage under Ares, the God of War, now known most often as simply 'War'.<ref name="Azzarello2">{{Cite comic| writer = Azzarello, Brian| artist = Chiang, Cliff| story = The Lair of the Minotaur!| title =Wonder Woman| volume =4| issue =0| date = November 2012}}</ref> The issue was narrated in the style of a typical [[Silver Age of Comic Books|Silver Age]] comic book and saw Diana in her childhood years.<ref name="Sava">{{cite web|last=Sava|first=Oliver|title=Wonder Woman #0 goes back to the Silver Age|url=http://www.avclub.com/articles/wonder-woman-0-goes-back-to-the-silver-age,85238/|publisher=The A.V. Club|accessdate=September 21, 2012}}</ref> The main plot of the issue was Diana training under War as he thought of her being an extraordinary girl with immense potential. The issue ultimately concluded with Diana learning and experiencing the importance of mercy, which she first learned when War showed it to her during their sparring. This later translated into her refusal to kill the Minotaur{{spaced ndash}}a task given to her by War; however, this show of mercy makes her a failure in War's eyes, which was actually his fault since he inadvertently "taught" her mercy and affection as his protege.<ref name="Azzarello2"/><ref name="Sava"/><ref>{{cite web|last=Hanley|first=Tim|title=Wonder Woman #0 Review OR Kind Of Cute On The Surface, But Troubling Below|url=http://thanley.wordpress.com/2012/09/20/wonder-woman-0-review-or-kind-of-cute-on-the-surface-but-troubling-below/|publisher=Straitened Circumstances|accessdate=September 20, 2012}}</ref> Later in the series, Wonder Woman is forced to kill War during a conflict with her evil half-brother, Zeus' son First Born, and herself becomes the God of War. After the Amazons are restored, she rules over them both as a warrior queen and God of War, as the ongoing conflict with First Born escalates. At the end of Azzarello's run, as part of a final conflict, Wonder Woman kills First Born, while Zeke is revealed to have be Zeus' plan for resurrection, with Zola revealed to have been a mortal shell for the goddess Athena, who gave birth to Zeus just as he once did to her. Wonder Woman pleads with Athena not to allow the Zola personality, whom she has grown to love as a friend, die with Athena's awakening. Athena leaves the site in animal form, leaving a stunned and confused Zola behind with Wonder Woman.<ref>''Wonder Woman'' #35 (2014)</ref>

Wonder Woman appears as one of the lead characters in the ''[[Justice League]]'' title written by [[Geoff Johns]] and drawn by Jim Lee that was launched in 2011 as part of the New 52.<ref>{{cite comic| writer= Johns, Geoff| penciller= [[Jim Lee|Lee, Jim]]| inker= [[Scott Williams (comics)|Williams, Scott]]| story= Justice League Part Three| title= Justice League| volume= 2| issue= 3| date= January 2012}}</ref> In August 2012, she and Superman shared a kiss in ''Justice League'' Vol 2 #12, which has since developed into a romantic relationship.<ref>{{cite news | url=https://www.usatoday.com/life/comics/story/2012-08-27/Superman-Wonder-Woman-kiss-in-Justice-League-comic-book/57328804/1 | title= Superman and Wonder Woman kiss with powerful consequences | work=[[USA Today]]| accessdate=September 21, 2012 | date=August 27, 2012}}</ref><ref>{{cite web | url=http://today.msnbc.msn.com/id/48765412/ns/today-books/t/superman-wonder-woman-romance-rocks-dc-comics/#.UFybHK6fbDM | title= Superman-Wonder Woman Romance rocks DC Comics | work=MSNBC.com | accessdate=September 21, 2012}}</ref><ref>{{cite web | url=http://www.dccomics.com/blog/2012/08/28/superman-and-wonder-woman-become-the-worlds-newest-power-couple-and-seal-it-with-a | title= Superman-and-Wonder Woman become the world's newest power couple | work=DCcomics.com | accessdate=September 21, 2012}}</ref> DC launched a ''Superman/Wonder Woman'' series that debuted in late 2013, which focuses both the threats they face together, and on their romance as a "[[Power Couple]]".<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.newsarama.com/18138-soule-daniel-superman-wonder-woman-to-mix-epic-with-personal.html/|title=Charles Soule And Tony Daniel Discuss Superman and Wonder Woman Comic|work=Newsarama}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.comicbookresources.com/?page=article&id=46176/|title=Soule and Daniel Join Forces for Superman-Wonder Woman|publisher=Comic Book Resources}}</ref>

After the events of Convergence, Wonder Woman would don a new costume. She would also face Donna Troy, who is now reimagined as a villanous doppellganger created by a vengeful Amazon elder, not only to physically defeat Wonder Woman but also to outmaneuver her in Themyscirian politics.

====Earth 2====
[[The New 52]] version of [[Earth-Two#The New 52|Earth 2]] was introduced in ''Earth 2'' #1 (2012). In that issue, the Earth 2 Wonder Woman is introduced via flashback. She, along with [[Superman]] and [[Batman]], are depicted dying in battle with forces from [[Apokolips]] five years in the past.<ref>{{cite web | url=http://www.newsarama.com/comics/who-is-who-on-earth-2.html| title= Who's Who on EARTH 2| work=Newsarama.com | accessdate=January 9, 2013}}</ref> This Wonder Woman worshiped the deities of Roman mythology as opposed to the Greek; the Roman gods perish as a result of the conflict. An earlier version of the Earth-2 Wonder Woman, prior to the Apokoliptian invasion, is seen in the comic book ''[[Batman/Superman]]'', where she is seen riding a pegasus.

In ''Earth 2'' #8 (2013), Wonder Woman's adult daughter, [[Fury (DC Comics)|Fury]], is introduced. She is loyal to the Apokoliptian [[Steppenwolf (comics)|Steppenwolf]].<ref>{{cite web | url=http://www.bleedingcool.com/2013/01/09/looks-like-earth-2s-wonder-woman-left-a-certain-something-behind-spoilers/| title= Look's Like Earth 2's Wonder Woman Left a Certain Something Behind... (SPOILERS)| work=BleedingCool.com | accessdate=January 9, 2013}}</ref>

====DC Rebirth====
{{main|DC Rebirth}}
In 2016, DC Comics started [[DC Rebirth]], a relaunch of its entire line of comic books.

Following the events of the Darkseid War, Wonder Woman is told by the dying Myrina Black that on the night of Diana's birth, Hippolyta gave birth to a twin child. This child was revealed to be male, known as Jason, and is said to be incredibly powerful. Wonder Woman makes it her mission to find him.<ref>''Justice League'' #50 (2016)</ref> At the same time, she finds the truth behind her origin and history is now cluttered, as she remembers two versions: the pre-[[Flashpoint (comics)|Flashpoint]] one, and the New 52 rendition. She cannot locate [[Themyscira (DC Comics)|Themiscyra]] or her fellow Amazons and the Lasso of Truth does not work for her anymore.

The "Year One" storyline retells Diana's origin growing up on Themyscira. She lives an idyllic life and harbors interest for the outside world, and the first connection to it comes in the form of Steve Trevor, who crashes on the island and is the sole survivor. A contest is held to determine which Amazon is the best candidate to take Steve home, with Diana volunteering despite knowing the cost to leave the island is to never return. Diana wins the contest and departs with Steve. Once arriving in America, Diana is taken into custody by the government to discern her origins. She meets Etta Candy and Barbara Ann Minerva along the way. While incarcerated Diana is visited by the gods in animal form and bestow upon her powers of strength, speed, agility, durability, and flight. She discovers Ares, the god of war, is working to destroy humanity. Accepting her new role in Man's World, Diana, with the help of the gods in animal form, subdues Ares with the lasso. Now called Wonder Woman, Diana becomes one of the world's greatest heroes.

The "Lies" story arc runs parallel and explores Diana's search. No longer able to get into Mount Olympus, Diana tracks down Barbara Ann Minerva, the Cheetah, to get help.<ref>''Wonder Woman: Rebirth'' #1 (2016)</ref><ref>''Wonder Woman'' #1 (2016)</ref> Cheetah agrees to help in exchange for Diana aiding her in killing the god Urzkartaga and end Minerva's curse. The pair battle their way through Urzkartaga's minions, the Bouda, and defeat Andres Cadulo, a worshiper of Urzkartaga that planned to sacrifice Steve Trevor to the plant god. Once reverted to her human form, Minerva agreed to help Wonder Woman find her way back to Paradise Island. During this time Wonder Woman reconnects with Steve. Minerva eventually realizes Paradise Island is an embodiment of emotion instead of a physical place, so Wonder Woman and Steve head out to find the island. They succeed and Wonder Woman is greeted by her mother and sisters, though Steve senses something is wrong. Wonder Woman comes to realize nothing is as she remembers and, upon using the Lasso of Truth, discovers everything she thought she knew was a lie: she never really returned to Themyscira after departing with Steve years earlier. The revelation shatters Diana's mind and she is left nearly insane. Veronica Cale, a businesswoman who has been desiring to find Themyscira and the leader of Godwatch, sends a military group called Poison after her, but Diana's state has left her vulnerable and oblivious to the danger she and Steve are in. Steve wards them off long enough for them to be rescued, and reluctantly places Diana in a mental hospital so she can get help. While there she comes to grasp the reality she thought she knew was false, eventually coming out of her stupor and able to rejoin the others in tracking down Veronica Cale, who is trying to find Themyscira.

==Cultural impact==
{{Main article|Cultural impact of Wonder Woman}}
<!--Please keep these concise; redirect details to "Cultural impact of Wonder Woman"-->

===Critical reception and legacy===
<!--Please keep these concise; redirect details to "Cultural impact of Wonder Woman"-->
As a compassionate warrior with-god-like strength, Wonder Woman preferred peace and love to war and violence, a contradiction that has long made her a symbol of female empowerment, and the center of controversy. The early Wonder Woman stories featured an abundant amount of bondage portrayals, which had critics worried.

Although created to be a positive role model and a strong female character for girls and boys, Wonder Woman has had to deal with the [[misogyny]] that was commonplace in comic book industry for decades. For example, Wonder Woman was a founding member of the [[Justice Society of America]]. This roster included the original Flash and Green Lantern. Wonder Woman was an experienced leader and easily the most powerful of them all; yet was rendered a [[secretary]]. This would also be accompanied with her losing her powers or [[damsel in distress|getting captured]] on most Justice League adventures. During the ’50s and ’60s, comic writers regularly made Wonder Woman love sick over [[Steve Trevor]], a Major in the United States Army. Stories frequently featured Wonder Woman hoping or imagining what it would be like to marry Steve Trevor.

Wonder Woman was named the 20th greatest comic book character by ''[[Empire (magazine)|Empire]]'' magazine.<ref>{{cite web| url=http://www.empireonline.com/50greatestcomiccharacters/default.asp?c=20 | title=The 50 Greatest Comic Book Characters – Wonder Woman | work=[[Empire (magazine)|Empire]]}}</ref> She was ranked sixth in ''[[Comics Buyer's Guide]]'s'' "100 Sexiest Women in Comics" list.<ref>{{cite book| last = Frankenhoff| first = Brent| authorlink = Brent Frankenhoff| title = Comics Buyer's Guide Presents: 100 Sexiest Women in Comics| publisher = [[Krause Publications]] | year = 2011| page = 14| url = | isbn = 1-4402-2988-0}}</ref> In May 2011, Wonder Woman placed fifth on [[IGN]]'s Top 100 Comic Book Heroes of All Time.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.ign.com/top/comic-book-heroes/5 |title=Wonder Woman – #5 Top Comic Book Heroes |publisher=IGN |date= |accessdate=January 19, 2012}}</ref>

Not all reaction to Wonder Woman has been positive. In the controversial ''[[Seduction of the Innocent]]'', psychiatrist [[Fredric Wertham]] claimed Wonder Woman's strength and independence made her a [[lesbian]] in a condemning way.<ref>{{citation|last= Wertham| first= Fredric |year= 1954| title= Seduction of the Innocent| publisher= Rinehart & Company, Inc.|pages= 192, 234–235}}</ref>

<!--Please keep these concise; redirect details to "Cultural impact of Wonder Woman"-->
====Feminist icon====
<!--Please keep these concise; redirect details to "Cultural impact of Wonder Woman"-->
[[Feminist]] icon [[Gloria Steinem]], founder of [[Ms. (magazine)|''Ms.'' magazine]], was responsible for the return of Wonder Woman's original abilities. Offended that the most famous female superhero had been depowered into a boyfriend-obsessed [[damsel in distress]], Steinem placed Wonder Woman (in costume) on the cover of the first issue of ''Ms.'' (1972) – [[Time Warner|Warner Communications]], DC Comics' owner, was an investor – which also contained an appreciative essay about the character.<ref name=autogenerated2>{{cite book|editor1-last=McAvennie|editor1-first= Michael|editor2-last=Dolan|editor2-first=Hannah|chapter= 1970s| title= DC Comics Year By Year A Visual Chronicle| publisher= [[Dorling Kindersley]] |year=2010 |page= 154|quote= "After nearly five years of Diana Prince's non-powered super-heroics, writer-editor Robert Kanigher and artist Don Heck restored Wonder Woman's... well, wonder."|isbn= 978-0-7566-6742-9}}</ref> Wonder Woman's powers and traditional costume were restored in issue #204 (January–February 1973).<ref name=autogenerated2 />

In 1972, just months after the groundbreaking US Supreme Court decision ''[[Roe v. Wade]]'', science fiction author [[Samuel R. Delany]] had planned a story for ''Ms.'' that culminated in a plainsclothes Wonder Woman protecting an [[abortion clinic]]. However, Steinem disapproved of Wonder Woman being out of costume, and the controversial story line never happened.<ref>{{cite journal| url= http://artsonline.monash.edu.au/colloquy/download/colloquy_issue_twenty-four_/matsuuchi.pdf |title= Wonder Woman Wears Pants: ''Wonder Woman'', Feminism and the 1972 'Women's Lib' Issue| first= Ann |last= Matsuuchi| journal= Colloquy: text theory critique| issue= 24 |year=2012|publisher= archived at [[Monash University]]}}</ref>

The original significance of Wonder Woman had the intentions of influencing many women of all ages, displaying the physical and mental strengths, values, and ethical attributes that not only men acquire. "Wonder Woman symbolizes many of the values of the women's culture that feminists are now trying to introduce into the mainstream: strength and self-reliance for women; sisterhood and mutual support among women; peacefulness and esteem for human life; a diminishment both of 'masculine' aggression and of the belief that violence is the only way of solving conflicts," Steinem wrote at the time.<ref>{{Cite news|url=http://www.sbs.com.au/movies/article/2016/10/12/wonder-woman-75-how-superhero-icon-inspired-generation-feminists?cid=inbody:wonder-woman-new-trailer-goes-deeper-into-dianas-backstory|title=Wonder Woman at 75: How the superhero icon inspired a generation of feminists|work=SBS Movies|access-date=April 12, 2017|language=en}}</ref>

The origin of Wonder Woman and the psychological reasoning behind why William Morton Marston created her in the way he did illustrated Marston's educational, ethical, and moral values.<ref>{{Cite book|title=Female Action Heroes : A Guide to Women in Comics, Video Games, Film, and Television.|last=Knight|first=Gladys|publisher=Greenwood, ProQuest Ebrary.|year=2010|isbn=|location=Santa Barbara United States|pages=1}}</ref> “William Marston intended her to be a feminist character, showing young boys the illimitable possibilities of a woman who could be considered just as strong as the famed Superman.” Gladys L. Knight explains the impact and influences that superheroes have on us in society ranging from the 1870s until the present day.

Marc DiPaolo introduces us to Wonder Woman's creator and history and he demonstrates how she is a “WWII veteran, a feminist icon, and a sex symbol” all throughout her “career”. Wonder Woman stars in multiple films and is most commonly known for her red, white and blue one piece, and her tall, sexy assertiveness. What many people don't know is that she is a big part of history in the comic and superhero world because of how her character influences real life people of all ages, sexes, ethnicities, and races. “Marston created the comic book character Wonder Woman to be both strong and sexy, as a means of encouraging woman to emulate her unapologetic assertiveness.”<ref>{{Cite book|title=Wonder Woman as A World War II Veteran, Feminist Icon, and Sex Symbol|last=DiPaola|first=Marc|publisher=McFarland & Company, Inc., Publishers|year=2011|isbn=978-0-7864-4718-3|location=Jefferson, North Carolina, and London|pages=70}}</ref>

Continuing her legacy as an influential feminist icon, in 2015 Wonder Woman became the first superhero to officiate a same-sex wedding in a comic series.<ref>{{Cite news|url=http://equalityarchive.com/issues/wonder-woman/|title=Wonder Woman {{!}} Equality Archive|date=May 9, 2016|work=Equality Archive|access-date=March 7, 2017|language=en-US}}</ref><ref>{{Cite news|url=https://www.theatlantic.com/entertainment/archive/2015/09/wonder-woman-gay-marriage/402799/|title=Suffering Sappho: Wonder Woman Endorses Marriage Equality|last=Groetzinger|first=Kate|work=The Atlantic|access-date=2017-03-07|language=en-US}}</ref>

On October 21, 2016, the [[United Nations]] controversially named Wonder Woman a UN Honorary Ambassador for the Empowerment of Women and Girls in a ceremony attended by [[Under-Secretary-General of the United Nations|Under-Secretary-General for Communications and Public Information]] [[Cristina Gallach]] and by actors Lynda Carter and Gal Gadot.<ref name="cbr.com"/><ref name="autogenerated1"/> The character was dropped from the role two months later after a petition against the appointment stated Wonder Woman was "not culturally...sensitive" and it was "alarming that the United Nations would consider using a character with an overtly sexualized image".<ref name="UN role dropped">{{cite news|title=Wonder Woman dropped from UN role for being too sexy|url=http://www.rte.ie/entertainment/2016/1213/838547-wonder-woman/|publisher=RTE|date=December 13, 2016}}</ref>
<!--Please keep these concise; redirect details to "Cultural impact of Wonder Woman"-->

====Pacifist icon====
<!--Please keep these concise; redirect details to "Cultural impact of Wonder Woman"-->
[[Gloria Steinem]], editor for [[Ms. Magazine]] and a big supporter of Wonder Woman, stated ''"... [Marston] had invented Wonder Woman as a heroine for little girls, and also as a conscious alternative to the violence of comic books for boys."'' Badower described a near-international incident (involving an unnamed Russian general rolling dozens of tanks and munitions through a shady mountain pass) as an outstanding example for standing up to bullies. "She ends up deflecting a bullet back and disarming the general," he says, adding that "she doesn't actually do anything violent in the story. I just think that Wonder Woman is smarter than that."

[[Nick Pumphrey]] stated that Wonder Woman stands as a non-violent beacon of hope and inspiration for women and men. [[Grant Morrison]] stated "I sat down and I thought, 'I don't want to do this warrior woman thing.' I can understand why they're doing it, I get all that, but that's not what [Wonder Woman creator] William Marston wanted, that's not what he wanted at all! His original concept for Wonder Woman was an answer to comics that he thought were filled with images of blood-curdling masculinity, and you see the latest shots of Gal Gadot in the costume, and it's all sword and shield and her snarling at the camera. Marston's Diana was a doctor, a healer, a scientist."<ref>{{cite web|last=Romano |first=Aja |url=http://kernelmag.dailydot.com/issue-sections/features-issue-sections/14592/history-of-wonder-woman/ |title=The pacifist past and war-torn future of Wonder Woman |website=Kernelmag.dailydot.com |date=2015-08-09 |accessdate=December 14, 2016}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|url=https://feminismandreligion.com/2012/03/27/the-legacy-of-original-intentions-the-non-violence-of-wonder-woman-by-nick-pumphrey/ |title=The Legacy of Original Intentions: The Non Violence of Wonder Woman by Nick Pumphrey |website=Feminismandreligion.com |date=March 27, 2012 |accessdate=December 14, 2016}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|url=http://comicvine.gamespot.com/forums/wonder-woman-179/the-true-nature-of-pacificism-627794/ |title=The True Nature of Pacificism - Wonder Woman - Comic Vine |website=Comicvine.gamespot.com |date= |accessdate=December 14, 2016}}</ref>

====LGBT icon====
<!--Please keep these concise; redirect details to "Cultural impact of Wonder Woman"-->
William Marston's earliest works were notorious for containing "sapphic-undertones" subtext. [[Fredric Wertham]]'s ''[[Seduction of the Innocent]]'' referred to her as the "lesbian counterpart to Batman" (whom he also identified as a homosexual). In the decades since, DC Comics attempted to downplay her sexuality, and comic book writers and artists didn't do much more than hint at Wonder Woman's erotic legacy.

[[Grant Morrison]]'s 2016 comic ''[[Wonder Woman: Earth One]]'', which exists parallel to the current DC comics ''Rebirth'' canon, Diana is depicted being kissed on her right cheek by a blonde woman who has put her left arm around Diana.<ref>{{cite web |url=https://i.kinja-img.com/gawker-media/image/upload/s--TCLrkdUI--/c_scale,fl_progressive,q_80,w_800/e2zvaxuicmjwogxcwo9t.png |format=PNG |title=e2zvaxuicmjwogxcwo9t Image |website=I-kinga-img.com |accessdate=December 14, 2016}}</ref>

Wonder Woman feels she need not be "labelled sexually", that she "loves people for who they are" and is "just herself". Coming from a society that was only populated by women, "lesbian" in [the world's] eyes may have been "straight" for them. "Her culture is completely free from the shackles of [[heteronormativity]] in the first place so she wouldn't even have any 'concept' of [[gender roles]] in sex."<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.revelist.com/pop-culture/wonder-woman-is-queer/5002/default/2 |title=Wonder Woman has sex with women. Get over it. |publisher=Revelist |date=September 28, 2016 |accessdate=December 14, 2016}}</ref> Wonder Woman is suggested as being [[queer]]<ref>{{cite web |first=Grame |last=McMillan |url=https://www.wired.com/2016/11/cape-watch-112/ |title=Cape Watch: Wonder Woman Would Like a Girlfriend, Please |publisher=WIRED |date=November 10, 2016 |accessdate=December 14, 2016 |quote=the comic book Wonder Woman was confirmed to be queer last month}}</ref> or [[bisexual]], as she and another Amazon, Io, had reciprocal feelings for each other<ref>{{cite web |url=http://comicvine.gamespot.com/forums/wonder-woman-179/lesbian-interpretation-23264/ |title=Lesbian interpretation? - Wonder Woman |work=[[Comic Vine]] |author=Spastic Man |date=2008 |accessdate=December 14, 2016 |quote=It may be that Wonder Woman may also be bisexual, as she and another Amazon, Io, had reciprocal feelings for each other.}}</ref>

In 2016, ''[[Sensation Comics]]'' featured Wonder Woman officiating a same-sex wedding (''Issue #48'') drawn by Australian illustrator Jason Badower. "My country is all women. To us, it's not 'gay' marriage. It's just marriage", she states to [[Superman]]. Inspired by the [[Obergefell v. Hodges|June Supreme Court ruling]] that established marriage equality in all 50 United States, Badower says DC Comics was "fantastic" about his idea for the issue. In an interview with ''[[The Sydney Morning Herald]]'', he said his editor "Was like 'great, I love it! Let's do it.' It was almost anticlimactic." <ref>{{cite web|last=Browning |first=Bil |url=http://www.advocate.com/arts-entertainment/2015/08/20/wonder-woman-performs-same-sex-wedding-new-comic |title=Wonder Woman Performs Same-Sex Wedding in New Comic |website=Advocate.com |date=August 20, 2015 |accessdate=December 14, 2016}}</ref> "Diana's mother, [[Hippolyta (DC Comics)|the queen]], at the very least authorized or in some cases officiated these weddings," Badower says. "It just seems more like a royal duty Diana would take on, that she would do for people that would appreciate it."<ref name="thedailybeast.com">{{cite web|author=Melissa Leon |url=http://www.thedailybeast.com/articles/2015/08/19/wonder-woman-officiates-her-first-same-sex-wedding-averts-crimea-crisis.html |title=See Wonder Woman Officiate a Gay Wedding and Avert a Crisis in Crimea |publisher=[[The Daily Beast]] |date=August 19, 2015 |accessdate=December 14, 2016}}</ref>

Wonder Woman's advocacy for gay rights was taken a step further in September 2016, when comic book writer [[Greg Rucka]] announced that she is [[Canon (fiction)|canonically]] bisexual, according to her [[Reboot (fiction)|rebooted]] [[DC Rebirth|''Rebirth'']] origin.<ref>{{cite news|last=Lyn |first=Nicole |url=http://www.nydailynews.com/life-style/woman-bisexual-dc-comics-article-1.2813018 |title=Wonder Woman is bisexual - 'obviously' says DC Comics |newspaper=[[New York Daily News]] |date=September 30, 2016 |accessdate=December 14, 2016}}</ref> Rucka stated that in his opinion, she "has to be" queer and has "obviously" had same-sex relationships on an island surrounded by beautiful women.<ref>{{cite web|url=https://newsline.com/comic-book-hero-wonder-woman-bisexual/|title=Comic Book Hero Wonder Woman is Bisexual|date=October 1, 2016|language=en-US|access-date=October 1, 2016}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.comicosity.com/exclusive-interview-greg-rucka-on-queer-narrative-and-wonder-woman/|title=Exclusive Interview: Greg Rucka on Queer Narrative and WONDER WOMAN|date=September 28, 2016|language=en-US|access-date=October 3, 2016}}</ref> This follows the way Wonder Woman was written in the alternate continuity or non-canon ''Earth One'' by [[Grant Morrison]],<ref>{{cite web|last=Yehl |first=Joshua |url=http://www.ign.com/articles/2016/04/06/grant-morrison-on-wonder-woman-earth-ones-birth-race-and-sexuality-changes |title=Grant Morrison on Wonder Woman: Earth One's Birth, Race, and Sexuality Changes |publisher=IGN |date=2016-04-06 |accessdate=2016-12-14}}</ref> and fellow Wonder Woman writer [[Gail Simone]] staunchly supported Rucka's statement.<ref>{{cite web|author=Beth Elderkin |url=https://www.inverse.com/article/21755-gail-simone-wonder-woman-queer |title=Gail Simone, Longtime 'Wonder Woman' Writer, Says Cut Out Queer Fear |publisher=Inverse |date=October 4, 2016 |accessdate=December 14, 2016}}</ref> Surprised at the amount of backlash from her fanbase, Rucka responded to "haters" that consensual sex with women is just as important to Wonder Woman as the Truth is to [[Superman]].<ref>{{cite web|url=http://io9.gizmodo.com/greg-rucka-says-haters-need-to-get-over-it-about-wond-1787537688 |title=Wonder Woman Writer Says Haters Need to 'Get Over It' About Diana's New Canon Bisexuality |website=Io9.gizmodo.com |date= |accessdate=December 14, 2016}}</ref>

Wonder Woman actress [[Gal Gadot]] reacted positively to Diana's rebooted orientation, and agreed her sexuality was impacted by growing up in the women-only Themyscira.<ref>{{cite web|last=Mcgrath |first=Rachel |url=http://www.dailymail.co.uk/tvshowbiz/article-3834756/Gal-Gadot-says-Wonder-Woman-bisexual-loves-people-are.html |title=Gal Gadot says Wonder Woman 'can be bisexual' and 'loves people for who they are' &#124; Daily Mail Online |website=Dailymail.co.uk |date=October 12, 2016 |accessdate=October 14, 2016}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.newser.com/story/231895/wonder-woman-is-officially-bisexual.html |title=DC Comics Writer Outs Wonder Woman |website=Newser.com |date= |accessdate=October 14, 2016}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|author=Caitlin O'Toole |url=http://www.dailymail.co.uk/tvshowbiz/article-3705049/What-not-Gal-Gadot-takes-fight-new-action-packed-Wonder-Woman-trailer-debuts-Comic-Con.html |title=Gal Gadot takes up the fight as Wonder Woman trailer debuts at SDCC 2016 &#124; Daily Mail Online |website=Dailymail.co.uk |date= |accessdate=October 14, 2016}}</ref>
<!--Please keep these concise; redirect details to "Cultural impact of Wonder Woman"-->

==In other media==
[[File:Gal Gadot as Wonder Woman.jpg|thumb|right|180px|[[Gal Gadot]] as Wonder Woman in the [[DC Extended Universe]].]]

{{Main article|Wonder Woman in other media}}
Since her debut in ''[[All Star Comics]]'' #8 (December 1941), [[Diana Prince]]/Wonder Woman has appeared in a number of formats besides comic books. Genres include animated television shows including ''[[Super Friends]]'', direct-to-DVD animated films, video games, the [[1970]]s live-action television show, ''[[Wonder Woman (TV series)|Wonder Woman]]'', the 2014 [[Computer_animation#Films|CGI]] theatrical release, ''[[The Lego Movie]]'' (technically her first silver screen debut), and the live-action [[DC Extended Universe|DCEU]] films, ''[[Batman v Superman: Dawn of Justice]]'' (2016) and ''[[Wonder Woman (2017 film)|Wonder Woman]]'' (2017). In November 2017, she will appear in the DCEU release, ''[[Justice League (film)|Justice League]].''

An upcoming biographical drama titled ''[[Professor Marston & the Wonder Women]]'', about [[Elizabeth Holloway Marston]], her husband [[William Moulton Marston]], [[Olive Byrne]], and the creation of Wonder Woman, is scheduled for release on October&nbsp;27,&nbsp;2017.<ref>{{cite news |last=Holub |first=Christian |date=June 5, 2017 |title=Wonder Woman creator biopic gets mysterious first teaser |url=http://ew.com/movies/2017/06/05/wonder-woman-creator-biopic-teaser/ |work=Entertainment Weekly |access-date=June 20, 2017}}</ref>

==See also==
{{Portal|United States|Comics|Feminism|Gender studies|LGBT|Speculative fiction|Superhero fiction}}
{{cmn|2|
* [[Alternative versions of Wonder Woman]] for ''Elseworlds'' and other characters to bear the title.
* [[Amazons (DC Comics)]]
* [[Counterstereotype]]
* [[Darna]]
* [[Diana Prince]]
* [[Bisexual women]]
* [[List of female action heroes]]
* [[List of feminist comic books]]
* [[List of Wonder Woman characters]]
* [[List of Wonder Woman enemies]]
* [[Orana (comics)]]
* [[Portrayal of women in American comics]]
* [[Women warriors in literature and culture|Woman warrior]]
* [[Wonder Woman in literature]]
}}

{{-}}

==References==
{{Reflist|30em}}

==External links==
* [http://www.dccomics.com/sites/wonderwoman/ Wonder Woman Official website] at DC Comics.com
* [http://dccomics.com/dcu/heroes_and_villains/?hv=origin_stories/wonder_woman&p=1 Origin story of Wonder Woman] at DC Comics.com
* [http://amazonarchives.com/index2.htm AmazonArchives.com]
* [http://www.comicbookresources.com/?page=column&id=36 Wonder of Wonders]
* {{cite news | first=Joshua | last=Glen | url=http://www.boston.com/news/globe/ideas/articles/2004/04/04/wonder_working_power/ | title=Wonder-working Power | work=[[The Boston Globe]] | date=April 4, 2004}}
*[http://www.mediafire.com/file/p2guydaa0wal2n9/Marstonian+WW+PORTAL.pdf/ Jett, Brett]. [http://www.mediafire.com/download/0qcag8bb0x8cjgo/WhoIsWonderWoman+PDF--manuscript.pdf/ "Who Is Wonder Woman?"], " ''(Manuscript)'' (2009): 1-71.
* Jett, Brett. [http://www.mediafire.com/view/38n6bhda988zen7/WhoIsWonderWoman_PDF--bonus.pdf/ "Who Is Wonder Woman?--Bonus PDF"], " ''(PDF)'' (2009): 1-17.
* {{cite news | last=Malcolm | first=Andrew H. | url=https://query.nytimes.com/gst/fullpage.html?res=9E0CE1DF1539F93BA25751C0A964958260&sec=&spon=&pagewanted=print | title=She's Behind the Match For That Man of Steel | work=[[The New York Times]] | date=February 18, 1992}}
* Marston, William Moulton. ''Emotions Of Abnormal People''. London: Kegan Paul, Trench, Trübner & Co, Ltd. 1928. {{ISBN|1406701165}}
* Rosenberg, Robin S. [https://www.psychologytoday.com/blog/the-superheroes/201007/wonder-woman-migr/ "Wonder Woman As Émigré - Why would Wonder Woman leave her idyllic existence on Paradise Island?"], ''(Article)'' (2010).
* Rosenberg, Robin S. "Wonder Woman: Compassionate Warrior for Peace", ''(Article)'' (2013): 1-35.
* Valcour, Francinne. [http://www.worldcat.org/title/manipulating-the-messenger-wonder-woman-an-american-female-icon/oclc/229447837/editions?referer=di&editionsView=true/ "Manipulating The Messenger: Wonder Woman As An American Female Icon"], ''(Dissertation)'' (2006): 1-372.

{{Wonder Woman}}
{{Navboxes
|title = Links to related topics
|list1=</span>
{{Wonder Woman publications}}
{{Wonder Woman in popular media}}
{{Superman}}
{{Justice League}}
{{GoldenAge}}
}}

[[Category:Wonder Woman| ]]
[[Category:1941 comics debuts]]
[[Category:All-American Publications characters]]
[[Category:American superheroes]]
[[Category:Characters created by William Moulton Marston]]
[[Category:Comics about women]]
[[Category:Comics adapted into television series]]
[[Category:Comics characters introduced in 1941]]
[[Category:Comics characters introduced in 1942]]
[[Category:DC Comics adapted into films]]
[[Category:DC Comics Amazons]]
[[Category:DC Comics characters who can move at superhuman speeds]]
[[Category:DC Comics characters who use magic]]
[[Category:DC Comics characters with accelerated healing]]
[[Category:DC Comics characters with superhuman strength]]
[[Category:DC Comics deities]]
[[Category:DC Comics martial artists]]
[[Category:DC Comics television characters]]
[[Category:DC Comics titles]]
[[Category:Female characters in comics]]
[[Category:Feminist comics]]
[[Category:Fictional bisexual females]]
[[Category:Fictional characters with slowed aging]]
[[Category:Fictional demigods]]
[[Category:Fictional diplomats]]
[[Category:Fictional feminists and women's rights activists]]
[[Category:Fictional flexible weapons practitioners]]<!--Lasso of Truth-->
[[Category:Fictional fratricides]]<!--Ares, God of War and half-brother-->
[[Category:Fictional goddesses]]
[[Category:Fictional Greek people]]
[[Category:Fictional National Aeronautics and Space Administration personnel]]
[[Category:Fictional nurses]]
[[Category:Fictional people with acquired American citizenship]]
[[Category:Fictional princesses]]
[[Category:Fictional secret agents and spies]]
[[Category:Fictional secretaries]]
[[Category:Fictional swordsmen]]
[[Category:Fictional United States Air Force personnel]]
[[Category:Fictional United Nations personnel]]
[[Category:Fictional females in the United States Army]]
[[Category:Fictional vigilantes]]
[[Category:Fictional women soldiers and warriors]]
[[Category:Fictional World War I veterans]]
[[Category:Fictional World War II veterans]]
[[Category:Greco-Roman mythology in DC Comics]]
[[Category:LGBT characters in comics]]
[[Category:LGBT superheroes]]
[[Category:Superhero film characters]]
[[Category:United States-themed superheroes]]
[[Category:Wonder Woman characters| ]]
[[Category:Golden Age superheroes]]

2017年10月5日 (木) 00:33時点における版

Wonder Woman
ファイル:Wonder Woman.jpg
Wonder Woman in Justice #5 (June 2006)
Art by Doug Braithwaite and Alex Ross
出版の情報
出版者DC Comics
初登場All Star Comics #8
(October 1941)[1]
クリエイター
作中の情報
本名Princess Diana of Themyscira
種族
出身地Themyscira
所属チーム
パートナー
著名な別名Diana Prince
能力
  • Superhuman strength, speed, durability, and longevity
  • Flight
  • Skilled hand-to-hand combatant
  • Utilizes Lasso of Truth, indestructible bracelets, boomerang tiara, sword, and shield

Wonder Woman is a fictional superhero appearing in American comic books published by DC Comics.[2] The character is a founding member of the Justice League, goddess, and Ambassador-at-Large of the Amazonian people. The character first appeared in All Star Comics #8 in October 1941 and first cover-dated on Sensation Comics #1, January 1942. In her homeland, the island nation of Themyscira, her official title is Princess Diana of Themyscira, Daughter of Hippolyta. When blending into the society of "Man's World", she adopts her civilian identity Diana Prince. The character is also referred to by such epithets as the "Amazing Amazon", the "Spirit of Truth", "Themyscira's Champion", and the "Goddess of Love and War".

Wonder Woman was created by the American psychologist and writer William Moulton Marston (pen name: Charles Moulton),[2] and artist Harry G. Peter. Olive Byrne, Marston's lover, and his wife, Elizabeth,[3] are credited as being his inspiration for the character's appearance.[2][4][5][6][7] Marston drew a great deal of inspiration from early feminists, and especially from birth control pioneer Margaret Sanger; in particular, her piece "Woman and the New Race". The character first appeared in All Star Comics #8 in October 1941 and first cover-dated on Sensation Comics #1, January 1942. The Wonder Woman title has been published by DC Comics almost continuously except for a brief hiatus in 1986.[8]

Wonder Woman's origin story relates that she was sculpted from clay by her mother Queen Hippolyta and given life by Aphrodite, along with superhuman powers as gifts by the Greek gods. However, in recent years artists updated her profile: she has been depicted as the daughter of Zeus, and jointly raised by her mother Hippolyta and her aunts Antiope and Menalippe. In the 1980s artist George Perez gave her a muscular look and emphasized her Amazonian heritage. In 2010 artist Jim Lee redesigned Diana's costume to include pants, though this design was later abandoned. She inherits Ares's divine abilities, becoming the personified "God of War".[9][10]

Wonder Woman's Amazonian training helped to develop a wide range of extraordinary skills in tactics, hunting, and combat. She possesses an arsenal of advanced technology, including the Lasso of Truth, a pair of indestructible bracelets, a tiara which serves as a projectile, and, in older stories, a range of devices based on Amazon technology. Wonder Woman's character was created during World War II; the character in the story was initially depicted fighting Axis military forces as well as an assortment of colorful supervillains, although over time her stories came to place greater emphasis on characters, deities, and monsters from Greek mythology. Many stories depicted Wonder Woman rescuing herself from bondage, which defeated the "damsels in distress" trope that was common in comics during the 1940s.[11] In the decades since her debut, Wonder Woman has gained a cast of enemies bent on eliminating the Amazon, including classic villains such as Ares, Cheetah, Doctor Poison, Circe, Doctor Psycho, and Giganta, along with more recent adversaries such as Veronica Cale and the First Born. Wonder Woman has also regularly appeared in comic books featuring the superhero teams Justice Society (from 1941) and Justice League (from 1960).[12]

Notable depictions of the character in other media include Gloria Steinem placing the character on the cover of the second edition of Ms. magazine in 1971; the 1975–1979 Wonder Woman TV series starring Lynda Carter; as well as animated series such as the Super Friends and Justice League. Since Carter's television series, studios struggled to introduce a new live-action Wonder Woman to audiences, although the character continued to feature in a variety of toys and merchandise, as well as animated adaptations of DC properties, including a direct-to-DVD animated feature starring Keri Russell. Attempts to return Wonder Woman to television have included a television pilot for NBC in 2011, closely followed by another stalled production for The CW.[13][14] Gal Gadot portrays Wonder Woman in the DC Extended Universe, starting with the 2016 film Batman v Superman: Dawn of Justice, marking the character's first appearance in a feature film in its 75-year history.[15] Gadot also starred in the character's first solo live-action film Wonder Woman, which was released on June 2, 2017.[16][17]

On October 21, 2016, the United Nations sparked controversy by naming Wonder Woman a "UN Honorary Ambassador for the Empowerment of Women and Girls" in a ceremony attended by Under-Secretary-General for Communications and Public Information Cristina Gallach and by actors Lynda Carter and Gal Gadot.[18][19] Two months later, she was dropped from her role as a UN Ambassador following a petition.[20]

Publication history

Creation

Marston combined his, Elizabeth's and Olive's feminist ideals to create a superhero character that young girls and boys could look up to.[21]

In an October 25, 1940, interview with the Family Circle magazine, William Moulton Marston discussed the unfulfilled potential of the comic book medium.[22] This article caught the attention of comics publisher Max Gaines, who hired Marston as an educational consultant for National Periodicals and All-American Publications, two of the companies that would merge to form DC Comics.[23] At that time, Marston wanted to create his own new superhero; Marston's wife Elizabeth suggested to him that it should be a female:[24]

William Moulton Marston, a psychologist already famous for inventing the polygraph, struck upon an idea for a new kind of superhero, one who would triumph not with fists or firepower, but with love. "Fine," said Elizabeth. "But make her a woman."

Marston introduced the idea to Gaines. Given the go-ahead, Marston developed Wonder Woman, whom he believed to be a model of that era's unconventional, liberated woman. Marston also drew inspiration from the bracelets worn by Olive Byrne, who lived with the couple in a polyamorous relationship.[25] Wonder Woman debuted in All Star Comics #8 (cover date Dec/Jan 1941/1942, released in October 1941),[26] scripted by Marston.

Marston was the creator of a systolic-blood-pressure-measuring apparatus, which was crucial to the development of the polygraph (lie detector). Marston's experience with polygraphs convinced him that women were more honest than men in certain situations and could work more efficiently.[27]

Marston designed Wonder Woman to be an allegory for the ideal love leader; the kind of women who (he believed) should run society.

"Wonder Woman is psychological propaganda for the new type of woman who should, I believe, rule the world", Marston wrote.[8]

In a 1943 issue of The American Scholar, Marston wrote:[28]

Not even girls want to be girls so long as our feminine archetype lacks force, strength, and power. Not wanting to be girls, they don't want to be tender, submissive, peace-loving as good women are. Women's strong qualities have become despised because of their weakness. The obvious remedy is to create a feminine character with all the strength of Superman plus all the allure of a good and beautiful woman.

Marston went on record by describing bondage and submission as a "respectable and noble practice". Marston wrote in a weakness for Wonder Woman, which was attached to a fictional stipulation that he dubbed "Aphrodite's Law", that made the chaining of her "Bracelets of Submission" together by a man take away her Amazonian super strength.[29][30][31] However, not everything about his creation was explicitly explained in any one source, which caused confusion among writers and fans for many years.

Golden Age

Initially, Wonder Woman was an Amazon champion who wins the right to return Steve Trevor – a United States intelligence officer whose plane had crashed on the Amazons' isolated island homeland – to "Man's World" and to fight crime and the evil of the Nazis.[32]

During this period, Wonder Woman joined the Justice Society of America as the team's secretary.[33][34]

Silver Age

During the Silver Age, under writer Robert Kanigher, Wonder Woman's origin was revamped,[35] along with other characters'. The new origin story increased the character's Hellenic and mythological roots: receiving the blessing of each deity in her crib, Diana is destined to become "beautiful as Aphrodite, wise as Athena, as strong as Hercules, and as swift as Hermes."[36]

At the end of the 1960s, under the guidance of Mike Sekowsky, Wonder Woman surrendered her powers in order to remain in Man's World rather than accompany her fellow Amazons to another dimension. Wonder Woman begins using the alias Diana Prince and opens a mod boutique. She acquires a Chinese mentor named I Ching, who teaches Diana martial arts and weapons skills. Using her fighting skill instead of her powers, Diana engaged in adventures that encompassed a variety of genres, from espionage to mythology.[37][38] This phase of her story was directly influenced by the British spy thriller The Avengers and Diana Rigg's portrayal of Emma Peel.[39]

Bronze Age

In the early 1970s the character returned to her superhero roots in the Justice League of America and to the World War II era in her own title.[40] This however, was ultimately due to the popularity of the TV series at the time also having Wonder Woman set in WW2 era, and was shifted back to the 1970s era once the TV show did the same.

With a new decade arriving, DC president Jenette Kahn ordered a revamp in Wonder Woman's appearance. Artist Milton Glaser, who also designed the "bullet" logo adopted by DC in 1977, created a stylized "WW" emblem that evoked and replaced the eagle in her bodice, and debuted in 1982.[41] The emblem in turn was incorporated by studio letterer Todd Klein onto the monthly title's logo, which lasted for a year and a half before being replaced by a version from Glaser's studio.[42] With sales of the title continuing to decline in 1985 (despite an unpublished revamp that was solicited), the series was canceled and ended in issue #329 (February 1986) written by Gerry Conway, depicting Steve Trevor's marriage to Wonder Woman.

The Crisis on Infinite Earths cross-over of 1986 was designed and written with the purpose of streamlining most of DC's characters into one more-focused continuity and reinventing them for a new era, thus Wonder Woman and Steve Trevor were declared to come from the Earth-Two dimension, and along with all of their exploits, were erased from history, so that a new Wonder Woman character, story and timeline could take priority.

Modern Age

Following the 1985 Crisis on Infinite Earths series, George Pérez, Len Wein, and Greg Potter rewrote the character's origin story, depicting Wonder Woman as an emissary and ambassador from Themyscira to Patriarch's World, charged with the mission of bringing peace to the outside world. Pérez incorporated a variety of deities and concepts from Greek mythology in Wonder Woman's stories and origin. His rendition of the character acted as the foundation for the modern Wonder Woman stories, as he expanded upon the widely accepted origin of Diana being birthed out of clay. The relaunch was a critical and commercial success.[43]

In August 2010 (issue #600), J. Michael Straczynski took over the series' writing duties and introduced Wonder Woman to an alternate timeline created by the Gods in which Paradise Island had been destroyed and the Amazons scattered around the world.[44] In this timeline, Diana is an orphan raised in New York. The entire world has forgotten Wonder Woman's existence and the main story of this run was of Diana trying to restore reality even though she does not properly remember it herself. A trio of Death Goddesses called The Morrigan acted as the main enemy of Wonder Woman.[45][46] In this run, Wonder Woman wears a new costume designed by Jim Lee.[47] Straczynski determined the plot and continued writing duties until Wonder Woman #605; writer Phil Hester then continued his run, which ultimately concluded in Wonder Woman #614.[48]

ファイル:Wonder Woman Trinity Vol 2 4.png
Wonder Woman's revised look on the cover of Trinity vol. 2, #4 (February 2017). Art by Stanley Lau.

In 2011, DC Comics relaunched its entire line of publications to attract a new generation of readers, and thus released volume 4 of the Wonder Woman comic book title. Brian Azzarello and Cliff Chiang were assigned on writing and art duties respectively and revamped the character's history considerably. In this new continuity, Wonder Woman wears a costume similar to her original Marston-costume, utilizes a sword and shield, and has a completely new origin. No longer a clay figure brought to life by the magic of the gods, she is, instead, a demi-goddess and the natural-born daughter of Hippolyta and Zeus. Azzarello and Chiang's revamp of the character was critically acclaimed, but highly divisive among long time fans of the character.[49][50][51][52]

In a side story as part of "Harley's Little Black Book" Wonder Woman meets Harley Quinn in London and has a brief team up with her in which we find that Harley has been a huge fan of Wonder Woman for years and has a bit of a crush on her. After the fight with the villain the two retire to a local bar where Harley suggests they join an English super team and then steals her magic lasso, but just to wrap it around herself so they and some of the other patrons can play truth or dare. They are last seen with Wonder Woman carrying Harley out of the bar asleep, though an additional piece of art shows Harley tied up and planting kisses on Wonder Woman.

In 2016, DC Comics once again relaunched all of its publications as part of the "DC Rebirth" continuity reboot, which has a new bi-monthly Wonder Woman series from writer Greg Rucka. The new series does not use a regular storyline that exists between each issue; instead two separate storylines share the book, with an installment of one story published every other issue, and those of the other storyline published in between those. This practice began with the storyline "The Lies" for the odd numbered issues, and "Year One" for the even numbered issues. The new storyline as presented in these issues effectively retcons the events from the previous New 52 series. "The Lies"[53] storyline reveals that a number of events from the previous Wonder Woman series in which Diana was made the Queen of the Amazons and the God of War, was in fact all an illusion created by a mysterious villain, and she had never once been back to Themyscira ever since she left, nor is she capable of returning there. The "Year One" story is presented as an all-new origin story for Diana,[54] which reveals how she received her powers from the Olympian Gods,[55] which was intended to bring her back to her classical DC roots. Wonder Woman appears in DC Rebirth with a revised look, which includes a red cape and light armor fittings. Along with her lasso and bracelets, she now regularly utilizes her sword and shield. Wonder Woman: Rebirth artist Liam Sharp described the new armor as a utilitarian piece which allows her to move more freely.[56]

Characterization

During Marston's run, Diana Prince was the name of an army nurse whom Wonder Woman met. The nurse wanted to meet her fiancé, who was transferred to South America, but was unable to arrange for money to do so. As Wonder Woman needed a secret identity to look after Steve (who was admitted to the same army hospital in which Diana Prince worked), and because both of them looked alike, Wonder Woman gave the nurse money to go to her fiancé in exchange for the nurse's credentials and took Diana Prince as her alias.[57] She started to work as an army nurse and later as an Air Force secretary.[57][58]

The identity of Diana Prince was especially prominent in a series published in the early 1970s, in which she fought crime only under the Prince alias and without her mystic powers. To support herself, she ran a mod clothing boutique.[59][60]

The Diana Prince alias also played an important role after the events of Infinite Crisis. Wonder Woman was broadcast worldwide killing a villain named Maxwell Lord, as he was mind controlling Superman into killing Batman. When Wonder Woman caught him in her lasso, demanding to know how to stop Superman, Maxwell revealed that the only way to stop him was to kill Lord, so as a last resort Diana snapped his neck.[61][62] To recover from the trauma of killing another person, the Amazon went into a self-imposed exile for one year.[63] On her return to public life, Diana realized that her life as a full-time celebrity superhero and ambassador had kept her removed from humanity. Because of this she assumed the persona of Diana Prince and became an agent at the Department of Metahuman Affairs. During a later battle with the witch Circe, a spell was placed on Diana leaving her powerless when not in the guise of Wonder Woman.[64]

In the current New 52 universe, Diana does not have a secret identity as stated in an interview by series writer Brian Azzarello.[65] However, when she and Superman began dating, for her civilian identity she uses the Diana Prince alias whenever she is around Clark Kent; such as when she introduced herself to Lois Lane at Lois's housewarming party under that name.[66]

Personality

Princess Diana commands respect both as Wonder Woman and Diana Prince; her epithetical title – The Amazon Princess – illustrates the dichotomy of her character. She is a powerful, strong-willed character who does not back down from a fight or a challenge. Yet, she is a diplomat who strongly "favors the pen", and a lover of peace who would never seek to fight or escalate a conflict. She's simultaneously both the most fierce and most nurturing member of the Justice League; and her political connections as a United Nations Honorary Ambassador and the ambassador of a warrior nation makes her an invaluable addition to the team. With her powerful abilities, centuries of training and experienced at handling threats that range from petty crime to threats that are of a magical or supernatural nature, Diana is capable of competing with nearly any hero or villain.

Many writers have depicted Diana in different personalities and tone; between both of her diametric extremes; that of a worldy warrior, a highly compassionate and calm ambassador, and sometimes also as a naive and innocent person, depending on the writer. What has remained constant, and is a mainstay of the character, is her nurturing humanity: her overwhelming belief in love, empathy, compassion, and having a strong conscience.[67] This trait had been the reason for her induction into the Star Sapphires.[68][69]

Writer Gail Simone was applauded for her portrayal of Wonder Woman during her run on the series, with comic book reviewer Dan Phillips of IGN noting that "she's molded Diana into a very relatable and sympathetic character."[70]

Actress Gal Gadot described Wonder Woman as "an idealist. Experienced, super-confident. Open and sincere even in the midst of a gruesome, bloody conflict. Having many strengths and powers, but at the end of the day she's a woman with a lot of emotional intelligence".[71][72]

In the Golden Age, Wonder Woman adhered to an Amazon code of helping any in need, even misogynistic people, and never accepting a reward for saving someone;[73] while conversely, the modern version of the character has been shown to perform lethal and fatal actions when left with no other alternative, exemplified in the killing of Maxwell Lord in order to save Superman's life.[61][62]

The New 52 version of the character has been portrayed to be a younger, more headstrong, loving, fierce and willful person.[要出典] Brian Azzarello stated in a video interview with DC Comics that they're building a very "confident", "impulsive" and "good-hearted" character in her. He referred to her trait of feeling compassion as both her strength and weakness.[74]

A distinctive trait of her characterization is a group of signature mythological exclamations, such as "Great Aphrodite!" (historically the very first one), "Great Hera!",[75] "Merciful Minerva!", and "Suffering Sappho!', some of which were contributed by Elizabeth Holloway Marston.[76][3]

Others

ファイル:Hippolyta (DC Comics) as WW - from WW v2 i130.png
Hippolyta as Wonder Woman in Wonder Woman vol. 2, #130 (February 1998). Art by John Byrne and Patricia Mulvihill.

Diana, after her death, was granted divinity as the Goddess of Truth by her gods for such faithful devotion.[77] During her brief time as a god of Olympus, Diana was replaced in the role of Wonder Woman by her mother, Queen Hippolyta.[78] Unlike Diana receiving the title of Wonder Woman in honor, Hippolyta's role as Wonder Woman was meant to be a punishment for her betrayal in Artemis' death as well as for unintentionally killing her own daughter.[79] However, Hippolyta eventually grew to enjoy the freedom and adventure the title came with. Whereas Diana used the Lasso of Truth as her primary weapon, Hippolyta favored a broad sword.

John Byrne, the writer that introduced the concept of Hippolyta as the first Wonder Woman, has explained his intentions in a post in his message board:

I thought George's one "mistake" in rebooting Wonder Woman was making her only 25 years old when she left Paradise Island. I preferred the idea of a Diana who was thousands of years old (as, if I recall correctly, she was in the TV series). From that angle, I would have liked to have seen Diana having been Wonder Woman in WW2, and be returning to our world in the reboot.

Not having that option, I took the next best course, and had Hippolyta fill that role.[80]

As Wonder Woman, Queen Hippolyta immediately got involved in a time travel mission back to the 1940s with Jay Garrick.[81] After this mission, she elected to join the Justice Society of America and remained in that era for eight years, where her teammates nicknamed her "Polly". During that time she had a relationship with Ted Grant.[82] Hippolyta also made visits into the past to see her godchild Lyta, daughter of Hippolyta's protege Helena, the Golden Age Fury.Template:Issue These visits happened yearly from young Lyta's perspective and also accounted for Hippolyta's participation in the JSA/JLA team ups. When she returned from the past, Hippolyta took Diana's place in the JLA as well.[83][84]

Artemis of Bana-Mighdall briefly served as Wonder Woman during Hippolyta's trials for a new Wonder Woman. Orana, a character similar to Artemis, defeated Diana in a new contest and became Wonder Woman in pre-Crisis on Infinite Earths continuity. Orana was killed during her first mission. Others who have donned the Wonder Woman persona include Nubia, Cassandra Sandsmark, and Donna Troy.

Abilities

Powers and skills

ファイル:WonderWoman1970s.jpg
Wonder Woman without special powers fighting crime as Diana Prince. Cover of Wonder Woman #189 (July 1970). Art by Mike Sekowsky.

Diana is depicted as a masterful athlete, acrobat, fighter and strategist, trained and experienced in many ancient and modern forms of armed and unarmed combat, including exclusive Amazonian martial arts. In some versions, her mother trained her, as Wonder Girl, for a future career as Wonder Woman. From the beginning, she is portrayed as highly skilled in using her Amazon bracelets to stop bullets and in wielding her golden lasso.[85] Batman once called her the "best melee fighter in the world".[86] The modern version of the character is known to use lethal force when she deems it necessary.[61] In the New 52 continuity, her superior combat skills are the result of her Amazon training, as well as receiving further training from Ares, the God of War, himself, since as early as her childhood.[87] The Golden Age Wonder Woman also had knowledge in psychology, as did her Amazon sisters.

Pre-Crisis

The Golden Age Wonder Woman had strength that was comparable to the Golden Age Superman. Wonder Woman was capable of bench pressing 15,000 pounds even before she had received her bracelets, and later hoisted a 50,000 pound boulder above her head to inspire Amazons facing the test.[88] Even when her super strength was temporarily nullified, she still had enough mortal strength of an Amazon to break down a prison door to save Steve Trevor.[89] In one of her earliest appearances, she is shown running easily at 60 mph (97 km/h), and later jumps from a building[要説明] and lands on the balls of her feet.[90]

She was able to heal faster than a normal human being due to her birthright consumption of water from Paradise Island's Fountain of Eternal Youth.

Her strength would be removed in accordance with "Aphrodite's Law" if she allowed her bracelets to be bound or chained by a male.[91]

She also had an array of mental and psychic abilities, as corresponding to Marston's interest in parapsychology and metaphysics. Such an array included ESP, astral projection, telepathy (with or without the Mental Radio), mental control over the electricity in her body, the Amazonian ability to turn brain energy into muscle power, etc.[92] Wonder Woman first became immune to electric shocks after having her spirit stripped from her atoms by Dr. Psycho's Electro Atomizer; it was also discovered that she was unable to send a mental radio message without her body.[93]

Wonder Woman (vol. 1) #105 revealed that Diana was formed from clay by the Queen of the Amazons, given life and power by four of the Greek and Roman gods (otherwise known as the Olympian deities) as gifts, corresponding to her renowned epithet: "Beautiful as Aphrodite, wise as Athena, swifter than Hermes, and stronger than Hercules", making her the strongest of the Amazons.[36] Wonder Woman's Amazon training gave her limited telepathy, profound scientific knowledge,[36] and the ability to speak every language – even caveman[36] and Martian languages.[94]

Between 1966 and 1967, new powers were added, such as super breath.[95]

In the Silver and Bronze ages of comics, Wonder Woman was able to further increase her strength. In times of great need, removing her bracelets would temporarily augment her power tenfold, but cause her to go berserk in the process.[96][97]

These powers received changes after the events of Crisis on Infinite Earths.

Post-Crisis

In the Post-Crisis universe, Wonder Woman receives her super powers as a blessing from Olympian deities just like the Silver Age version before, but with changes to some of her powers:[98]

  • Demeter, the goddess of agriculture and fertility, blessed Diana with strength drawn from the Earth spirit Gaea, making her one of the physically strongest heroes in the DC Universe and the strongest female hero in the DC Universe. This strength has allowed her to usually overwhelm Superman and Supergirl, easily using strength alone to overpower such characters. However, now Diana is the daughter of Zeus, king of the Greek Gods, so it is unclear as to how much of her power and strength is a direct result of her divine heritage.[99] Her connection to the earth allows her to heal at an accelerated rate so long as she is in contact with the planet. However, as mentioned earlier, now that she is a demigoddess, it has been suggested that she heals extremely quickly also due to her divine heritage. In rare cases where she has been gravely injured, Diana showed the ability to physically merge with the earth, causing whatever injuries or poisons to be expelled from her body; such an act is considered sacred, and can only be used in extreme cases.[100]
  • Pallas Athena, the goddess of wisdom and war, granted Diana great wisdom, intelligence, and military prowess. Athena's gift has enabled Diana to master over a dozen languages (including those of alien origin), multiple complex crafts, sciences and philosophies, as well as leadership, military strategy, and armed and unarmed combat. More recently, Athena bound her own eyesight to Diana's, granting her increased empathy.[101]
  • Artemis, goddess of the hunt, animals, and the Moon, graced Diana with the Eyes of the Hunter and unity with beasts, meaning Diana can communicate with all animals, including dinosaurs. The Eyes of the Hunter ability gives Diana a full range of enhanced senses, including telescopic vision and super hearing.
  • Hestia, goddess of hearth and home, granted Diana sisterhood with fire. This power has been shown to control the "Fires of Truth", which Diana wields through her lasso, making anyone bound by it unable to lie.[102] This ability also grants her resistance to both normal and supernatural fire.
  • Hermes, the messenger god of speed, granted Diana superhuman speed and the ability to fly.[102] She is capable of flying at speeds approaching half the speed of light.[100] She can react quickly enough to deflect bullets, lasers, and other projectiles with her virtually impenetrable bracelets. After the 2011 relaunch of the character, Wonder Woman does not naturally possess the power of flight. She gains it once she is hit by a feather thrown by Hermes.[103][104][より良い情報源が必要]
  • Aphrodite, goddess of love, bestowed Diana with stunning beauty, as well as a kind heart.

While not completely invulnerable, she is highly resistant to great amounts of concussive force and extreme temperatures and matches Superman[105] in this regard, although edged weapons or projectiles applied with sufficient force are able to pierce her skin.[100][106] Due to her divine origins, Diana can resist many forms of magical manipulation.

She is able to astrally project herself into various lands of myth. Her physical body reacts to whatever happens to her on the mythical astral plane, leaving her body cut, bruised, or sometimes strengthened once her mind and body are reunited. She can apparently leave the planet through meditation, and did this once to rescue Artemis while she was in hell.[107]

The New 52 and Rebirth

After the 2011 relaunch, Diana gained new powers. As the biological daughter of Hippolyta and Zeus, she has inherited some of her father's powers, which are held in check by the wearing her magic bracelets. She uses these powers in battle against the goddess Artemis and quickly renders her unconscious with ease with a series of carefully positioned counterattacks. While using her godly strength, her outfit and accoutrements lit up and her eyes glowed like her father's.[104][108][より良い情報源が必要]

After becoming the God of War in the pages of Wonder Woman, Diana inherits Ares's divine abilities. Diana has not exhibited her full powers as War, but is seen in Superman/Wonder Woman #5 to slip easily into telepathic rapport with a soldier, explaining "I am War. I know all soldiers, and they know me."

During the Rebirth retcon, the "Year One" storyline explains that while put in a cell after coming to Man's World, Diana was visited by the Greek gods in animal form, and each gave her powers that would reveal themselves when she needed them to. She first displays strength when she accidentally rips the bars off her cell door when visited by Steve Trevor, Etta Candy, and Barbara Ann Minerva. Later on a trip to the mall, she discovers super speed, great durability, and the power of flight while fighting off a terrorist attack.

Technology

Diana has an arsenal of powerful god-forged gear at her disposal, but her signature equipment are her indestructible bracelets and the Lasso of Truth.

Personal armor

Wonder Woman's outfit has varied over time, although almost all of her outfit incarnations have retained some form of breastplate, tiara, bracelets, and her signature five-pointed star symbols.

Golden Age

Wonder Woman's outfit design was originally rooted in American symbolism and iconography, which included her signature star symbols, a golden eagle on her chest, crimson red bustier, white belt, and a dark blue star spangled skirt/culotte.

She also had a pair of red glowing magnetic earrings which allowed her to receive messages from Queen Desira of the planet Venus.

Pre-Crisis

At the time of her debut, Wonder Woman sported a red top with a golden eagle emblem, a white belt, blue star-spangled culottes, and red and golden go-go boots. She originally wore a skirt; however according to Elizabeth Martson, "It was too hard to draw and would have been over her head most of the time."[108] This outfit was entirely based on the American flag, because Wonder Woman was purely an American icon as she debuted during World War II.[109] Later in 1942, Wonder Woman's outfit received a slight change – the culottes were converted entirely into skin-tight shorts and she wore sandals.[109] While earlier most of her back was exposed, during the imposition of the Comics Code Authority in the mid-1950s, Wonder Woman's outfit was rectified to make her back substantially covered, in order to comply with the Authority's rule of minimum exposure.[109] During Mike Sekowsky's run in the late 1960s, Diana surrendered her powers and started using her own skill to fight crime. She wore a series of jumpsuits as her attire, most popular of these was a white one.[109]

After Sekowsky's run ended in the early 1970s, Diana's roots were reverted to her old mythological ones and she wore a more modernized version of her original outfit, a predecessor to her "bathing suit" outfit.[109] Later, in 1976, her glowing white belt was turned into a yellow one.[109] For Series 3, artist Terry Dodson redrew her outfit as a strapless swimsuit.[110]

Post-Crisis

After Crisis On Infinite Earths, George Pérez rebooted the character in 1987. She wore an outfit similar to her 1970s one, but now with a larger glowing golden belt.[109] This outfit continued until William Messner-Loebs' run, which had Diana pass on the role of Wonder Woman to Artemis.[109] No longer Wonder Woman, Diana sported a new black biker-girl outfit designed by artist Mike Deodato Jr.[109] After John Byrne took over writing and art duties, he redesigned the Wonder Woman outfit (Diana was reinstated as Wonder Woman at the end of Loebs' run) and joined the emblem and belt together.[109]

Her outfit did not receive any prominent change until after the 2005–2006"Infinite Crisis" storyline. Similar to her chest-plate, her glowing belt was also shaped into a "W".[109] This outfit continued until issue #600 – J. Michael Straczynski's run of Wonder Woman's altered timeline changed her outfit drastically. Her outfit was redesigned by Jim Lee and included a redesigned emblem, a golden and red top, black pants, and a later discontinued blue-black jacket.[109]

It was later retconned by Gail Simone that Wonder Woman's outfit design had Amazonian roots. During a flashback in Vol. 3, Hippolyta is shown issuing orders to have a garment created for Diana, taking inspiration from the skies on the night Diana was born; a red hunter's moon and a field of stars against deep blue, and the eagle breastplate being a symbol of Athena's avian representations.Template:Issue

The New 52

Another major outfit change for Wonder Woman came about as part of DC Comics' 2011 relaunch of its entire line of publications, The New 52. The character's original one-piece outfit was restored, although the color combination of red and blue was changed to dark red and blue-black. Her chest-plate, belt and tiara were also changed from gold to a platinum or sterling silver color. Along with her sword, she now also utilizes a shield. She wears many accessories such as arm and neck jewelery styled as the "WW" motif. Her outfit is no longer made of fabric, as it now resembles a type of light, flexible body armor. Her boots are now a very dark blue rather than red. The design previously included black trousers, but they were removed and the one-piece look was restored during the time of publication.[111]

After the events of the 2015 storyline "Convergence", Diana gets a new armored suit with the classic armor and tiara returning.Template:Issue

ファイル:Wonder Woman (DC Rebirth).jpg
Wonder Woman as she appears on the cover of Wonder Woman: Rebirth #1 (2016). Art by Stanley Lau.
DC Rebirth

Wonder Woman's outfit is redesigned to resemble the one worn in Batman v Superman: Dawn of Justice: it is a red bustier with a gold eagle, a blue growing leather skirt with gold edges with two stars, and knee-high red boots with gold knee guards and accents. Her tiara once again becomes gold with a red star. She occasionally wears a red cape with a gold clasp and edges.Template:Issue

Wonder Woman (2017 film)

Her tiara's signature star symbol is now an eight pointed starburst. According to designer Lindy Hemming and director Patty Jenkins, every design decision made for Themyscira came down to the same question: "How would I want to live that's badass?"[112] "To me, they shouldn't be dressed in armor like men. It should be different. It should be authentic and real […] and appealing to women." When asked about the decision to give the Amazons heeled sandals, Jenkins explained that they also have flats for fighting, adding "It's total wish-fulfillment […] I, as a woman, want Wonder Woman to be sexy, hot as hell, fight badass, and look great at the same time […] the same way men want Superman to have ridiculously huge pecs and an impractically big body. That makes them feel like the hero they want to be. And my hero, in my head, has really long legs."[113] This corresponds to the original intent by William Moulton Marston, who wanted his character to be alluringly feminine.

Invisible plane

The Pre-Crisis version of the invisible plane was a necessity because before the Crisis on Infinite Earths rewrote Wonder Woman's history – along with the histories of many other heroes – Wonder Woman simply could not fly. She grew increasingly powerful through the Silver Age of comic books and beyond, acquiring the power to ride wind currents thus allowing her to imitate flight over short distance. This had limitations, however; for example, if there was no wind and the air was completely still she would be trapped on the ground or if dropped from a distance that she would helplessly fall out of control to the ground. Though this meant that she would rely on the invisible plane less frequently, she always had need of it.

The Invisible Plane was a creation of Diana's during her younger years on Paradise Island. She created it to be an improvement on her mother's planes which would be shot down in Man's World. The result of her innovation was an invisible plane that could fly at terrific speeds silently and not be detected by hostile forces, thus avoiding unpleasant conflict. Initially, it was portrayed as being transparent.

The Invisible Plane appeared in the very first comic stories, including All-Star Comics #8, where it is shown as being able to fly at over 2,000 mph (3,200 km/h) and to send out rainbow rays that penetrate the mist around Paradise Island, as well as landing stealthily and having a built-in radio. Wonder Woman is seen storing the plane at an abandoned farm near Washington, D.C., in the barn; she goes there as Lt. Prince and changes clothes in some of the earliest tales. Though never explicitly stated, the Plane is presumably stored there when not in use for the rest of the Pre-Crisis era. In a story made shortly after, it flies at 40マイル (64 km) a second.

Shortly thereafter, the telepathic capacities of Wonder Woman's tiara allow her to summon it, often to hover or swoop by the War Department, and she would exit on a rope ladder. She uses the plane to fly into outer space, and frequently transports Etta Candy and the Holliday Girls, Steve Trevor, or others. During the 1950s, the plane became a jet, and was often shown swooping over Lt. Prince's office; she stripped out of her uniform at super speed and would bound to the plane. Though the Plane was depicted as semi-transparent for the reader's convenience, in-story dialogue indicated that it actually was completely invisible, or at least able to become so as the need arose. (DC Comics Presents... #41)

Wonder Woman continued to use the plane for super-speed, outer space, and multi-dimensional transport up until the un-powered era of Diana Prince. When Wonder Woman resumed super-powered, costumed operations in 1973, she continued to use the jet as before, but did glide on air currents for short distances. At one point, Aphrodite granted the plane the power to fly faster than the speed of light for any interstellar voyages her champion might undertake.[114] Thanks to tinkering by gremlins, the Plane even developed intelligence and the power to talk.[115] The Plane proved a good friend, eager to help his "mistress" and her loved ones in any way possible. It got along especially well with Steve Trevor.

Bracelets of Submission

Diana's bulletproof bracelets were formed from the remnants of Athena's legendary shield, the Aegis, to be awarded to her champion. The shield was made from the indestructible hide of the great she-goat, Amalthea, who suckled Zeus as an infant. These forearm guards have thus far proven indestructible and able to absorb the impact of incoming attacks, allowing Wonder Woman to deflect automatic weapon fire and energy blasts.[116] Diana can slam the bracelets together to create a wave of concussive force capable of making strong beings like Superman's ears bleed.[61] Recently, she gained the ability to channel Zeus's lightning through her bracelets as well. Zeus explained to her that this power had been contained within the bracelets since their creation, because they were once part of the Aegis, and that he had only recently unlocked it for her use.[117] After the 2011 relaunch of the character, it was revealed that Diana was the daughter of Zeus and Hippolyta[118] and that the bracelets are able to keep the powers she had inherited from Zeus in check.[108] In addition, Hephaestus has modified the bracelets to allow Wonder Woman the sorcerous ability to manifest a sword of grayish metal from each bracelet. Each sword, marked with a red star, takes shape from a flash of lightning, and when Wonder Woman is done with them, the swords disappear, supposedly, back into her bracelets. As such, she has produced other weapons from the bracelets in this way such as a bow that fires explosive arrows, spears and energy bolts among others.[119]

The inspiration to give Diana bracelets came from the pair of bracelets worn by Olive Byrne, creator William Moulton Marston's assistant and lover.[3]

Lasso of Truth

The Lasso of Truth, or Lasso of Hestia, was forged by Hephaestus from the golden girdle of Gaea.[102] The original form of the Lasso in the Golden Age was called the Magic Lasso Of Aphrodite. It compels all beings who come into contact with it to tell the absolute truth and is virtually indestructible;[102] in Identity Crisis, Green Arrow mistakenly describes it as "the only lie detector designed by Zeus." The only times it has been broken were when Wonder Woman herself refused to accept the truth revealed by the lasso, such as when she confronted Rama Khan of Jarhanpur,[120] and by Bizarro in Matt Wagner's non-canonical Batman/Superman/Wonder Woman: Trinity.[121] During the Golden Age, the original form of the Lasso had the power to force anyone caught to obey any command given them, even overriding the mind control of others; this was effective enough to defeat strong-willed beings like Captain Marvel.[122] Diana wields the Lasso with great precision and accuracy and can use it as a whip or noose.

Other items

Diana occasionally uses additional weaponry in formal battle, such as ceremonial golden armour with golden wings, pteruges, chestplate, and golden helmet in the shape of an eagle's head. She possesses a magical sword forged by Hephaestus that is sharp enough to cut the electrons off an atom.[102]

As early as the 1950s,[123] Wonder Woman's tiara has also been used as a razor-edged throwing weapon, returning to her like a boomerang.[102] The tiara allows Wonder Woman to be invulnerable from telepathic attacks, as well as allowing her to telepathically contact people such as the Amazons back on Themyscira using the power of the red star ruby in its center.[61]

The Golden, Silver, and Bronze Age portrayals of Wonder Woman showed her using a silent and invisible plane that could be controlled by mental command [124] and fly at speeds up to 3,000 mph (4,800 km/h).[125] Its appearance has varied over time; originally it had a propeller, while later it was drawn as a jet aircraft resembling a stealth aircraft.[126]

During the golden age Wonder Woman possessed a Purple Ray capable of healing even a fatal gunshot wound to the brain.[127] She also possessed a Mental Radio that could let her receive messages from those in need.[124]

As a recent temporary inductee into the Star Sapphires, Wonder Woman gained access to the violet power ring of love. This ring allowed her to alter her costume at will, create solid-light energy constructs, and reveal a person's true love to them. She was able to combine the energy with her lasso to enhance its ability.

Fictional character biography

20th century

Origin

In her debut in All Star Comics #8, Diana was a member of a tribe of women called the Amazons, native to Paradise Island – a secluded island set in the middle of a vast ocean. Captain Steve Trevor's plane crashes on the island and he is found alive but unconscious by Diana and fellow Amazon, and friend, Mala. Diana has him nursed back to health and falls in love with him. A competition is held amongst all the Amazons by Diana's mother, the Queen of the Amazons Hippolyta, in order to determine who is the most worthy of all the women; Hippolyta charges the winner with the responsibility of delivering Captain Steve Trevor back to Man's World and to fight for justice. Hippolyta forbids Diana from entering the competition, but she takes part nonetheless, wearing a mask to conceal her identity. She wins the competition and reveals herself, surprising Hippolyta, who ultimately accepts, and must give in to, Diana's wish to go to Man's World. She then is awarded a special uniform made by her mother for her new role as Wonder Woman and safely returns Steve Trevor back to his home country.[128][129]

Golden Age

Coming to America for the first time, Wonder Woman comes upon a wailing army nurse. Inquiring about her state, she finds that the nurse wanted to leave for South America with her fiancé but was unable due to shortage of money. As both of them looked identical and Wonder Woman needed a job and a valid identity to look after Steve (who was admitted in the same army hospital), she gives her the money she had earned earlier to help her go to her fiancé in exchange for her credentials. The nurse reveals her name as Diana Prince, and thus, Wonder Woman's secret identity was created, and she began working as a nurse in the army.[57][130]

Wonder Woman then took part in a variety of adventures, mostly side by side with Trevor. Her most common foes during this period would be Nazi forces led by a German baroness named Paula von Gunther, occasionally evil deities/demigods such as Mars and the Duke of Deception, and then colorful villains like Hypnota, Doctor Psycho, and the Cheetah.[131]

Silver Age

In the Silver Age, Wonder Woman's history received several changes. Her earlier origin, which had significant ties to World War II, was changed and her powers were shown to be the product of the gods' blessings, corresponding to her epithet, "beautiful as Aphrodite, wise as Athena, stronger than Hercules, and swifter than Hermes".[36][132] The concepts of Wonder Girl and Wonder Tot were also introduced during this period.[133]

Wonder Woman (vol. 1) #179 (Nov. 1968) showed Wonder Woman giving up her powers and returning her costume and title to her mother in order to continue staying in Man's World. The reason behind this was that all the Amazons were shifting to another dimension, but Diana was unable to accompany them as she needed to stay behind to help Steve, who had been wrongly convicted.[134] Thus, she no longer held the title of Wonder Woman and after meeting and training under a blind martial arts mentor I-Ching, Diana resumed crime fighting as the powerless Diana Prince. She ran a mod-boutique as a business and dressed in a series of jumpsuits while fighting crime.[38][59][60][135][136] During this period, Samuel R. Delany took over scripting duties with issue #202. Delany was initially supposed to write a six-issue story arc, which would culminate in a battle over an abortion clinic, but Delany was removed reportedly due to criticism from Gloria Steinem, who, not knowing the content of the issues Delany was writing, was upset that Wonder Woman had lost her powers and was no longer wearing her traditional costume.[137]

Bronze Age

In Wonder Woman Vol 1 #204, Diana's powers and costume were returned to her and she is once again reinstated as Wonder Woman.[136] I-Ching is killed by a crazy sniper in the same issue.[138] Later, Diana meets her sister Nubia, who is Hippolyta's daughter fashioned out of dark clay (hence Nubia's dark complexion).[139][140] Nubia claimed to be the "Wonder Woman of The Floating Island", and she challenges Diana to a duel which ends in a draw.[140] Returning to her home, Nubia would have further adventures involving Diana.[139]

The last issue of Volume 1 showed Diana and Steve Trevor announce their love for each other and their subsequent marriage.[141][142]

Modern Age

ファイル:Wonder woman 02.jpg
Cover of Wonder Woman vol. 2, #1 (Feb. 1987), showing the character's look after the Crisis on Infinite Earths continuity reboot. Art by George Pérez.
Crisis on Infinite Earths

The events of Crisis on Infinite Earths greatly changed and altered the history of the DC Universe. Wonder Woman's history and origin were considerably revamped by the event. Wonder Woman was now an emissary and ambassador from Themyscira (the new name for Paradise Island) to Patriarch's World, charged with the mission of bringing peace to the outside world. Various deities and concepts from Greek mythology were blended and incorporated into Wonder Woman's stories and origin. Diana was formed out of clay of the shores of Themyscira by Hippolyta, who wished for a child; the clay figure was then brought to life by the Greek deities. The Gods then blessed and granted her unique powers and abilities – beauty from Aphrodite, strength from Demeter, wisdom from Athena, speed and flight from Hermes, Eyes of the Hunter and unity with beasts from Artemis and sisterhood with fire and the ability to discern the truth from Hestia.[143] Due to the reboot, Diana's operating methods were made distinctive from Superman and Batman's with her willingness to use deadly force when she judges it necessary. In addition, her previous history and her marriage to Steve Trevor were erased. Trevor was introduced as a man much older than Diana who would later on marry Etta Candy.[144]

War of the Gods

Starting in Wonder Woman Vol 2 #51, The Amazons, who had revealed their presence to the world in Wonder Woman Vol 2 #50, are blamed for a series of murders and for the theft of various artifacts. The Amazons are then taken into custody, Queen Hippolyta is nowhere to be found and Steve Trevor is forced by General Yedziniak to attack Themyscira. These events lead to the "War of the Gods" occurring. The culprit of the murders, thefts and the framing of the Amazons is revealed to be the witch Circe, who "kills" Diana by reverting her form back into the clay she was born from. Later, Wonder Woman is brought back to life and together with Donna Troy, battles Circe and ultimately defeats her.[145][146][147][148] Circe would later return by unknown means.

When Hippolyta and the other Amazons were trapped in a demonic dimension, she started receiving visions about the death of Wonder Woman.[149] Fearing her daughter's death, Hippolyta created a false claim that Diana was not worthy of continuing her role as Wonder Woman, and arranged for a contest to determine who would be the new Wonder Woman, thus protecting Diana from her supposed fate.[150] The participants of the final round were Diana and Artemis, and with the help of some mystic manipulation by Hippolyta, Artemis won the contest.[151] Thus, Diana was forced to hand over her title and costume to Artemis, who became the new Wonder Woman and Diana started fighting crime in an alternate costume.[152] Artemis later died in battle with the White Magician – thus, Hippolyta's vision of a dying Wonder Woman did come true, albeit not of Diana as Wonder Woman.[153] Diana once again became Wonder Woman, a request made by Artemis in her last seconds. Artemis would later return as Requiem. Prior to Artemis' death, Hippolyta would admit to her daughter about her own part in Artemis' death, which strained their relationship as Diana was unable to forgive her mother for sending another Amazon to her death knowingly for the sake of saving her own daughter.

The demon Neron engaged Diana in battle and managed to kill her.[154] The Olympian Gods granted Diana divinity and the role of the Goddess of Truth who started to reside in Olympus; her mother Hippolyta then assumed the role of Wonder Woman and wore her own different incarnation of the costume.[154] In Wonder Woman Vol 2 #136, Diana was banished from Olympus due to interfering in earthly matters (as Diana was unable to simply watch over people's misery on earth).[154] She immediately returned to her duties as Wonder Woman, but ran into conflicts with her mother over her true place and role as Hippolyta seemed accustomed to her life in America.[154] Their fight remained unsolved, as Hippolyta tragically died during an intergalactic war.[154] Themyscira was destroyed during the war, but was restored and reformed as a collection of floating islands.[154] Circe later resurrected Hippolyta in Wonder Woman Vol 3 #8.[155]

The OMAC Project

One of the events that led to Infinite Crisis was of Wonder Woman killing the villain Maxwell Lord in Wonder Woman (vol. 2) #219.[156] Maxwell Lord was mind-controlling Superman, who as a result was near to killing Batman. Wonder Woman tried to stop Superman, Lord (who was unable to mind control her) made Superman see her as his enemy Doomsday trying to kill Lois Lane. Superman then attacked Wonder Woman, and a vicious battle ensued. Buying herself time by slicing Superman's throat with her tiara, Wonder Woman caught Lord in her Lasso of Truth and demanded to know how to stop his control over Superman. As the lasso forced the wearer to speak only the truth, Lord told her that the only way to stop him was to kill him. Left with no choice, Wonder Woman snapped Lord's neck and ended his control over Superman.[156] Unknown to her, the entire scene was broadcast live around every channel in the world by Brother Eye. The viewers were not aware of the entire situation, and saw only Wonder Woman murdering a Justice League associate. Wonder Woman's actions put her at odds with Batman and Superman, as they saw Wonder Woman as a cold-blooded killer, despite the fact that she saved their lives.[157]

One Year Later

At the end of Infinite Crisis, Wonder Woman temporarily retires from her costumed identity. Diana, once again using the alias Diana Prince, joins the Department of Metahuman Affairs. Donna Troy becomes the new Wonder Woman and is captured by Diana's enemies. Diana then goes on a mission to rescue her sister, battling Circe and Hercules. Diana defeats the villains, freeing Donna and takes up the role of Wonder Woman again. Circe places a spell on Diana, which renders Diana into a normal, powerless human being when in the role of Diana Prince; her powers come to her only when she is in the role of Wonder Woman.[158][159][160][161][162]

The Circle

The storyline "The Circle" was focused on the revelation of a failed assassination attempt on Diana when she was a baby, by four rogue Amazons.[163] These Amazons – Myrto, Charis, Philomela and Alkyone, collectively referred to as The Circle – were Hippolyta's personal guards and were extremely loyal and devoted to her.[164] However, when Hippolyta decided to raise a daughter, The Circle was horrified and considered the baby ill-fate, one who would ruin their entire race.[165] Thus, after Diana was sculpted out of clay and brought to life, The Circle decided to assassinate the baby. Their attempt was foiled however, and the four Amazons were imprisoned.[166] After years, the Circle escaped their prisons with the help of Captain Nazi, and decided to accomplish their previously failed mission and kill Diana. Diana defeated Myrto, Charis, Philomela and then approached Alkyone, who runs off and succumbs to her death by falling into the ocean. The other three Amazons return to their prisons.[166][167]

Issue #600 introduced Wonder Woman to an alternate time-line created by the Gods in which Themyscira had been destroyed and the Amazons scattered around the world.[44] In this timeline, Diana is an orphan raised in New York who is learning to cope with her powers. The entire world has forgotten Wonder Woman's existence and the main story of this run was of Diana trying to restore reality even though she does not properly remember it herself.[168] Diana has no memories of her prior adventures as Wonder Woman, recollecting her memories in bits and pieces and receiving different abilities and resources (such as the power of flight and her lasso) during the progression of her adventure. A trio of Death Goddesses called The Morrigan acted as Wonder Woman's main enemies.[169] Diana ultimately defeats the evil goddesses and returns everything back to normal.[170]

21st century

The New 52

In September 2011, DC Comics relaunched its entire publication line, dubbing the event the New 52. Among the major changes to the character, Wonder Woman now appears wearing a new costume similar to her older one, and has a completely new origin. In this new timeline, Wonder Woman is no longer a clay figure brought to life by the magic of the gods. Rather, she is the demigoddess daughter of Queen Hippolyta and Zeus: King of the Greek Gods. Her original origin is revealed as a cover story to explain Diana's birth as a means to protect her from Hera's wrath. Currently, Diana has taken on the role and title as the new "God of War".[171][172]

The Greek messenger god, Hermes, entrusts Wonder Woman with the protection of Zola, a young woman, who is pregnant with Zeus's child, from Hera, seething with jealousy and determined to kill the child.[173][174][175][176][177] With the appearance of a bizarre, new, chalk-white enemy, the goddess Strife (a reimagined version of Eris, the goddess of discord who had battled Wonder Woman in post-Crisis continuity), Wonder Woman discovers she, herself, is the natural-born daughter of Hippolyta and Zeus, who, after a violent clash, became lovers.[118] Hippolyta revealed Diana's earlier origin story to be a lie, spread amongst the Amazons to protect Diana from the wrath of Hera, who is known for hunting and killing several illegitimate offspring of Zeus.[118]

The first of these half-mortal siblings to reveal himself to Wonder Woman was her older half-brother, Lennox Sandsmark, who could transform himself into living, marble-like stone and, before his death, was revealed to be the father of Wonder Girl (Cassie Sandsmark).[178] His killer, the First Born, the eldest progeny of Zeus, would become Wonder Woman's first major super-villain of the New 52.

The story then focuses on Wonder Woman's quest to rescue Zola from Hades, who had abducted her and taken her to Hell at the end of the sixth issue of the series.[179][180][181][182] The male children of the Amazons are introduced and Diana learns about the birth of her "brothers" – the Amazons used to infrequently invade ships coming near their island and force themselves on the sailors, before killing them. After nine months, the birth of the resulting female children was highly celebrated and they were inducted into the ranks of the Amazons while the male children were rejected. In order to save the male children from being drowned to death by the Amazons, Hephaestus traded weapons to the Amazons in exchange for them.[179][183][184]

After saving Zola from Hades, Wonder Woman tries to protect her further from Apollo, as it is prophesied that one of Zeus' children will be his downfall whom Apollo considers to be Zola's child.[185][186] Wonder Woman receives the power of flight by one of Hermes' feathers piercing her thigh and Zola's baby is stolen by Hermes at the end and given to Demeter. The issue's last page shows a dark and mysterious man rising from the snow, taking a helmet and disappearing.[187][188] This man is later revealed to be Zeus' first son, known only as First Born, who seeks to rule over Olympus and the rest of the world, and take Diana as his bride.Template:Issue

A stand-alone #0 issue was released in September which explored Diana's childhood and her tutelage under Ares, the God of War, now known most often as simply 'War'.[87] The issue was narrated in the style of a typical Silver Age comic book and saw Diana in her childhood years.[189] The main plot of the issue was Diana training under War as he thought of her being an extraordinary girl with immense potential. The issue ultimately concluded with Diana learning and experiencing the importance of mercy, which she first learned when War showed it to her during their sparring. This later translated into her refusal to kill the Minotaur – a task given to her by War; however, this show of mercy makes her a failure in War's eyes, which was actually his fault since he inadvertently "taught" her mercy and affection as his protege.[87][189][190] Later in the series, Wonder Woman is forced to kill War during a conflict with her evil half-brother, Zeus' son First Born, and herself becomes the God of War. After the Amazons are restored, she rules over them both as a warrior queen and God of War, as the ongoing conflict with First Born escalates. At the end of Azzarello's run, as part of a final conflict, Wonder Woman kills First Born, while Zeke is revealed to have be Zeus' plan for resurrection, with Zola revealed to have been a mortal shell for the goddess Athena, who gave birth to Zeus just as he once did to her. Wonder Woman pleads with Athena not to allow the Zola personality, whom she has grown to love as a friend, die with Athena's awakening. Athena leaves the site in animal form, leaving a stunned and confused Zola behind with Wonder Woman.[191]

Wonder Woman appears as one of the lead characters in the Justice League title written by Geoff Johns and drawn by Jim Lee that was launched in 2011 as part of the New 52.[192] In August 2012, she and Superman shared a kiss in Justice League Vol 2 #12, which has since developed into a romantic relationship.[193][194][195] DC launched a Superman/Wonder Woman series that debuted in late 2013, which focuses both the threats they face together, and on their romance as a "Power Couple".[196][197]

After the events of Convergence, Wonder Woman would don a new costume. She would also face Donna Troy, who is now reimagined as a villanous doppellganger created by a vengeful Amazon elder, not only to physically defeat Wonder Woman but also to outmaneuver her in Themyscirian politics.

Earth 2

The New 52 version of Earth 2 was introduced in Earth 2 #1 (2012). In that issue, the Earth 2 Wonder Woman is introduced via flashback. She, along with Superman and Batman, are depicted dying in battle with forces from Apokolips five years in the past.[198] This Wonder Woman worshiped the deities of Roman mythology as opposed to the Greek; the Roman gods perish as a result of the conflict. An earlier version of the Earth-2 Wonder Woman, prior to the Apokoliptian invasion, is seen in the comic book Batman/Superman, where she is seen riding a pegasus.

In Earth 2 #8 (2013), Wonder Woman's adult daughter, Fury, is introduced. She is loyal to the Apokoliptian Steppenwolf.[199]

DC Rebirth

In 2016, DC Comics started DC Rebirth, a relaunch of its entire line of comic books.

Following the events of the Darkseid War, Wonder Woman is told by the dying Myrina Black that on the night of Diana's birth, Hippolyta gave birth to a twin child. This child was revealed to be male, known as Jason, and is said to be incredibly powerful. Wonder Woman makes it her mission to find him.[200] At the same time, she finds the truth behind her origin and history is now cluttered, as she remembers two versions: the pre-Flashpoint one, and the New 52 rendition. She cannot locate Themiscyra or her fellow Amazons and the Lasso of Truth does not work for her anymore.

The "Year One" storyline retells Diana's origin growing up on Themyscira. She lives an idyllic life and harbors interest for the outside world, and the first connection to it comes in the form of Steve Trevor, who crashes on the island and is the sole survivor. A contest is held to determine which Amazon is the best candidate to take Steve home, with Diana volunteering despite knowing the cost to leave the island is to never return. Diana wins the contest and departs with Steve. Once arriving in America, Diana is taken into custody by the government to discern her origins. She meets Etta Candy and Barbara Ann Minerva along the way. While incarcerated Diana is visited by the gods in animal form and bestow upon her powers of strength, speed, agility, durability, and flight. She discovers Ares, the god of war, is working to destroy humanity. Accepting her new role in Man's World, Diana, with the help of the gods in animal form, subdues Ares with the lasso. Now called Wonder Woman, Diana becomes one of the world's greatest heroes.

The "Lies" story arc runs parallel and explores Diana's search. No longer able to get into Mount Olympus, Diana tracks down Barbara Ann Minerva, the Cheetah, to get help.[201][202] Cheetah agrees to help in exchange for Diana aiding her in killing the god Urzkartaga and end Minerva's curse. The pair battle their way through Urzkartaga's minions, the Bouda, and defeat Andres Cadulo, a worshiper of Urzkartaga that planned to sacrifice Steve Trevor to the plant god. Once reverted to her human form, Minerva agreed to help Wonder Woman find her way back to Paradise Island. During this time Wonder Woman reconnects with Steve. Minerva eventually realizes Paradise Island is an embodiment of emotion instead of a physical place, so Wonder Woman and Steve head out to find the island. They succeed and Wonder Woman is greeted by her mother and sisters, though Steve senses something is wrong. Wonder Woman comes to realize nothing is as she remembers and, upon using the Lasso of Truth, discovers everything she thought she knew was a lie: she never really returned to Themyscira after departing with Steve years earlier. The revelation shatters Diana's mind and she is left nearly insane. Veronica Cale, a businesswoman who has been desiring to find Themyscira and the leader of Godwatch, sends a military group called Poison after her, but Diana's state has left her vulnerable and oblivious to the danger she and Steve are in. Steve wards them off long enough for them to be rescued, and reluctantly places Diana in a mental hospital so she can get help. While there she comes to grasp the reality she thought she knew was false, eventually coming out of her stupor and able to rejoin the others in tracking down Veronica Cale, who is trying to find Themyscira.

Cultural impact

Critical reception and legacy

As a compassionate warrior with-god-like strength, Wonder Woman preferred peace and love to war and violence, a contradiction that has long made her a symbol of female empowerment, and the center of controversy. The early Wonder Woman stories featured an abundant amount of bondage portrayals, which had critics worried.

Although created to be a positive role model and a strong female character for girls and boys, Wonder Woman has had to deal with the misogyny that was commonplace in comic book industry for decades. For example, Wonder Woman was a founding member of the Justice Society of America. This roster included the original Flash and Green Lantern. Wonder Woman was an experienced leader and easily the most powerful of them all; yet was rendered a secretary. This would also be accompanied with her losing her powers or getting captured on most Justice League adventures. During the ’50s and ’60s, comic writers regularly made Wonder Woman love sick over Steve Trevor, a Major in the United States Army. Stories frequently featured Wonder Woman hoping or imagining what it would be like to marry Steve Trevor.

Wonder Woman was named the 20th greatest comic book character by Empire magazine.[203] She was ranked sixth in Comics Buyer's Guide's "100 Sexiest Women in Comics" list.[204] In May 2011, Wonder Woman placed fifth on IGN's Top 100 Comic Book Heroes of All Time.[205]

Not all reaction to Wonder Woman has been positive. In the controversial Seduction of the Innocent, psychiatrist Fredric Wertham claimed Wonder Woman's strength and independence made her a lesbian in a condemning way.[206]

Feminist icon

Feminist icon Gloria Steinem, founder of Ms. magazine, was responsible for the return of Wonder Woman's original abilities. Offended that the most famous female superhero had been depowered into a boyfriend-obsessed damsel in distress, Steinem placed Wonder Woman (in costume) on the cover of the first issue of Ms. (1972) – Warner Communications, DC Comics' owner, was an investor – which also contained an appreciative essay about the character.[207] Wonder Woman's powers and traditional costume were restored in issue #204 (January–February 1973).[207]

In 1972, just months after the groundbreaking US Supreme Court decision Roe v. Wade, science fiction author Samuel R. Delany had planned a story for Ms. that culminated in a plainsclothes Wonder Woman protecting an abortion clinic. However, Steinem disapproved of Wonder Woman being out of costume, and the controversial story line never happened.[208]

The original significance of Wonder Woman had the intentions of influencing many women of all ages, displaying the physical and mental strengths, values, and ethical attributes that not only men acquire. "Wonder Woman symbolizes many of the values of the women's culture that feminists are now trying to introduce into the mainstream: strength and self-reliance for women; sisterhood and mutual support among women; peacefulness and esteem for human life; a diminishment both of 'masculine' aggression and of the belief that violence is the only way of solving conflicts," Steinem wrote at the time.[209]

The origin of Wonder Woman and the psychological reasoning behind why William Morton Marston created her in the way he did illustrated Marston's educational, ethical, and moral values.[210] “William Marston intended her to be a feminist character, showing young boys the illimitable possibilities of a woman who could be considered just as strong as the famed Superman.” Gladys L. Knight explains the impact and influences that superheroes have on us in society ranging from the 1870s until the present day.

Marc DiPaolo introduces us to Wonder Woman's creator and history and he demonstrates how she is a “WWII veteran, a feminist icon, and a sex symbol” all throughout her “career”. Wonder Woman stars in multiple films and is most commonly known for her red, white and blue one piece, and her tall, sexy assertiveness. What many people don't know is that she is a big part of history in the comic and superhero world because of how her character influences real life people of all ages, sexes, ethnicities, and races. “Marston created the comic book character Wonder Woman to be both strong and sexy, as a means of encouraging woman to emulate her unapologetic assertiveness.”[211]

Continuing her legacy as an influential feminist icon, in 2015 Wonder Woman became the first superhero to officiate a same-sex wedding in a comic series.[212][213]

On October 21, 2016, the United Nations controversially named Wonder Woman a UN Honorary Ambassador for the Empowerment of Women and Girls in a ceremony attended by Under-Secretary-General for Communications and Public Information Cristina Gallach and by actors Lynda Carter and Gal Gadot.[18][19] The character was dropped from the role two months later after a petition against the appointment stated Wonder Woman was "not culturally...sensitive" and it was "alarming that the United Nations would consider using a character with an overtly sexualized image".[20]

Pacifist icon

Gloria Steinem, editor for Ms. Magazine and a big supporter of Wonder Woman, stated "... [Marston] had invented Wonder Woman as a heroine for little girls, and also as a conscious alternative to the violence of comic books for boys." Badower described a near-international incident (involving an unnamed Russian general rolling dozens of tanks and munitions through a shady mountain pass) as an outstanding example for standing up to bullies. "She ends up deflecting a bullet back and disarming the general," he says, adding that "she doesn't actually do anything violent in the story. I just think that Wonder Woman is smarter than that."

Nick Pumphrey stated that Wonder Woman stands as a non-violent beacon of hope and inspiration for women and men. Grant Morrison stated "I sat down and I thought, 'I don't want to do this warrior woman thing.' I can understand why they're doing it, I get all that, but that's not what [Wonder Woman creator] William Marston wanted, that's not what he wanted at all! His original concept for Wonder Woman was an answer to comics that he thought were filled with images of blood-curdling masculinity, and you see the latest shots of Gal Gadot in the costume, and it's all sword and shield and her snarling at the camera. Marston's Diana was a doctor, a healer, a scientist."[214][215][216]

LGBT icon

William Marston's earliest works were notorious for containing "sapphic-undertones" subtext. Fredric Wertham's Seduction of the Innocent referred to her as the "lesbian counterpart to Batman" (whom he also identified as a homosexual). In the decades since, DC Comics attempted to downplay her sexuality, and comic book writers and artists didn't do much more than hint at Wonder Woman's erotic legacy.

Grant Morrison's 2016 comic Wonder Woman: Earth One, which exists parallel to the current DC comics Rebirth canon, Diana is depicted being kissed on her right cheek by a blonde woman who has put her left arm around Diana.[217]

Wonder Woman feels she need not be "labelled sexually", that she "loves people for who they are" and is "just herself". Coming from a society that was only populated by women, "lesbian" in [the world's] eyes may have been "straight" for them. "Her culture is completely free from the shackles of heteronormativity in the first place so she wouldn't even have any 'concept' of gender roles in sex."[218] Wonder Woman is suggested as being queer[219] or bisexual, as she and another Amazon, Io, had reciprocal feelings for each other[220]

In 2016, Sensation Comics featured Wonder Woman officiating a same-sex wedding (Issue #48) drawn by Australian illustrator Jason Badower. "My country is all women. To us, it's not 'gay' marriage. It's just marriage", she states to Superman. Inspired by the June Supreme Court ruling that established marriage equality in all 50 United States, Badower says DC Comics was "fantastic" about his idea for the issue. In an interview with The Sydney Morning Herald, he said his editor "Was like 'great, I love it! Let's do it.' It was almost anticlimactic." [221] "Diana's mother, the queen, at the very least authorized or in some cases officiated these weddings," Badower says. "It just seems more like a royal duty Diana would take on, that she would do for people that would appreciate it."[222]

Wonder Woman's advocacy for gay rights was taken a step further in September 2016, when comic book writer Greg Rucka announced that she is canonically bisexual, according to her rebooted Rebirth origin.[223] Rucka stated that in his opinion, she "has to be" queer and has "obviously" had same-sex relationships on an island surrounded by beautiful women.[224][225] This follows the way Wonder Woman was written in the alternate continuity or non-canon Earth One by Grant Morrison,[226] and fellow Wonder Woman writer Gail Simone staunchly supported Rucka's statement.[227] Surprised at the amount of backlash from her fanbase, Rucka responded to "haters" that consensual sex with women is just as important to Wonder Woman as the Truth is to Superman.[228]

Wonder Woman actress Gal Gadot reacted positively to Diana's rebooted orientation, and agreed her sexuality was impacted by growing up in the women-only Themyscira.[229][230][231]

In other media

ファイル:Gal Gadot as Wonder Woman.jpg
Gal Gadot as Wonder Woman in the DC Extended Universe.

Since her debut in All Star Comics #8 (December 1941), Diana Prince/Wonder Woman has appeared in a number of formats besides comic books. Genres include animated television shows including Super Friends, direct-to-DVD animated films, video games, the 1970s live-action television show, Wonder Woman, the 2014 CGI theatrical release, The Lego Movie (technically her first silver screen debut), and the live-action DCEU films, Batman v Superman: Dawn of Justice (2016) and Wonder Woman (2017). In November 2017, she will appear in the DCEU release, Justice League.

An upcoming biographical drama titled Professor Marston & the Wonder Women, about Elizabeth Holloway Marston, her husband William Moulton Marston, Olive Byrne, and the creation of Wonder Woman, is scheduled for release on October 27, 2017.[232]

See also

References

  1. ^ All Star Comics #8 was cover-dated Dec/Jan 1941/1942, but released in October 1941 (see Mike's Amazing World of Comics).
  2. ^ a b c d Garner, Dwight (2014年10月23日). “Books – Her Past Unchained 'The Secret History of Wonder Woman,' by Jill Lepore”. The New York Times. https://www.nytimes.com/2014/10/24/books/the-secret-history-of-wonder-woman-by-jill-lepore.html 2014年10月23日閲覧。 
  3. ^ a b c Lepore, Jill, The Secret History of Wonder Woman, New York: Alfred A. Knopf, 2014. ISBN 9780385354042
  4. ^ Moon, Michael (March 12, 2012) (英語). Darger's Resources. Duke University Press. ISBN 0822351560. https://books.google.com/books?id=H3yST26ZUJUC 
  5. ^ Catherine Bennett. “The Secret History of Wonder Woman review – is this what a feminist looks like? | Books”. The Guardian. https://www.theguardian.com/books/2014/dec/28/secret-history-wonder-woman-jill-lepore-observer-review 2016年12月14日閲覧。 
  6. ^ Wonder Woman's Kinky Feminist Roots”. The Atlantic. 2016年12月14日閲覧。
  7. ^ Caplan, Rebecca. “Wonder Woman's Secret Past”. The New Yorker. http://www.newyorker.com/magazine/2014/09/22/last-amazon 2016年12月14日閲覧。 
  8. ^ a b Hendrix, Grady (2007年12月11日). “Out for Justice”. The New York Sun 
  9. ^ Beedle, Tim (2013年12月25日). “Ten Moments that Mattered: Wonder Woman Becomes War | DC”. Dccomics.com. 2016年12月14日閲覧。
  10. ^ Rogers, Vaneta (2013年8月28日). “WONDER WOMAN Kills…Who? Is the New GOD of What? AZZARELLO Explains (Spoilers)”. Newsarama.com. 2016年12月14日閲覧。
  11. ^ Wonder Women! The Untold Story of American Superheroines – She Rescues Herself”. YouTube (2015年6月25日). 2016年12月14日閲覧。
  12. ^ Crawford, Philip. “The Legacy of Wonder Woman”. School Library Journal. 2007年3月1日閲覧。
  13. ^ Adalian, Josef (2012年9月6日). “The CW Is Developing a Wonder Woman Origins Series”. http://www.vulture.com/2012/09/cw-is-developing-wonder-woman-origins-series.html 2012年9月16日閲覧。 
  14. ^ Andreeva, Nellie (2013年7月30日). “CW Eyes 'Flash' Series With 'Arrow's Greg Berlanti, Andrew Kreisberg & David Nutter”. Deadline Hollywood. 2013年7月30日閲覧。
  15. ^ Kroll, Justin (2013年12月4日). “Gal Gadot to Play Wonder Woman in 'Batman vs. Superman'”. Variety. http://variety.com/2013/film/news/gal-gadot-wonder-woman-batman-vs-superman-1200918310/ 2013年12月4日閲覧。 
  16. ^ Ford, Rebecca (2016年4月6日). “Warner Bros. Pushes 'Jungle Book' to 2018, 'Wonder Woman' Gets New Date”. The Hollywood Reporter. 2016年4月18日閲覧。
  17. ^ Maglio, Tony. “Women, Blacks, Gays: Warner Bros. Catapults DC Ahead of Marvel in Superhero Diversity Race”. Thewrap.com. 2016年12月14日閲覧。
  18. ^ a b UNITED NATIONS TO NAME WONDER WOMAN HONORARY AMBASSADOR”. Comic Book Resources (2016年10月10日). 2016年10月21日閲覧。
  19. ^ a b Alexander, Erik (2016年10月21日). “Wonder Woman named UN ambassador in controversial move”. CNN. http://www.cnn.com/2016/10/21/health/wonder-woman-un-ambassador-trnd/ 2016年10月21日閲覧。 
  20. ^ a b “Wonder Woman dropped from UN role for being too sexy”. RTE. (2016年12月13日). http://www.rte.ie/entertainment/2016/1213/838547-wonder-woman/ 
  21. ^ What that mysterious teaser before 'Wonder Woman' was about”. Template:Cite webの呼び出しエラー:引数 accessdate は必須です。
  22. ^ Lyons, Charles. “Suffering Sappho! A Look at the Creator & Creation of Wonder Woman”. Comic Book Resources. 2006年8月23日閲覧。 “In October 1940, the popular women's magazine "Family Circle" published an interview with Marston entitled "Don't Laugh at the Comics," in which the psychologist discussed the unfulfilled potential of the medium.”
  23. ^ Lyons, Charles. “Suffering Sappho! A Look at the Creator & Creation of Wonder Woman”. Comic Book Resources. 2006年8月23日閲覧。 “Maxwell Charles Gaines, then publisher of All-American Comics, saw the interview and offered Marston a job as an educational consultant to All-American and sister company DC Comics.”
  24. ^ Lamb, Marguerite (Fall 2001). “Who Was Wonder Woman?”. Bostonia. 2007年12月8日時点のオリジナルよりアーカイブ。 Template:Cite webの呼び出しエラー:引数 accessdate は必須です。
  25. ^ Daniels, Les (April 6, 2004). Wonder Woman: The Complete History. Chronicle Books. pp. 28–30. ISBN 978-0-8118-4233-4 
  26. ^ All-Star Comics #8”. dcindexes.com. Mike's Amazing World. 2017年5月19日閲覧。
  27. ^ Bunn, Geoffrey C. (1997). “The lie detector, Wonder Woman, and liberty: The life and work of William Moulton Marston”. History of the Human Sciences (London: Routledge) 10 (1): 91–119. doi:10.1177/095269519701000105. 
  28. ^ Tartakovsky, Margarita. “A Psychologist and A Superhero”. Psych Central. Template:Cite webの呼び出しエラー:引数 accessdate は必須です。
  29. ^ WatchMojo.com (2015年11月28日). “Top 10 Wonder Woman Facts”. YouTube. 2016年12月14日閲覧。 “Marston even wrote in a weakness for Wonder Woman that made chaining her bracelets together take away her super strength.”
  30. ^ Sargent (2011年9月22日). “The 6 Most Ridiculous Superhero Weaknesses”. Cracked.com. 2016年12月14日閲覧。 “all of Wonder Woman's amazing powers were rendered completely useless if her hands were bound by a man”
  31. ^ Wonder Woman's Bracelets (Object)”. Comicvine.gamespot.com. 2016年12月14日閲覧。 “In the golden age if Diana's bracelets (or those of any Amazon) were bound by a man it made her lose all her powers.”
  32. ^ All Star Comics #8 (October 1941)
  33. ^ Hanley, Tim. “Wonder Woman: Secretary Of The Justice Society Of America”. Straitened Circumstances. 2012年6月25日閲覧。
  34. ^ All Star Comics #12 (August/September 1942)
  35. ^ Wonder Woman (vol. 1) #98 (May 1958)
  36. ^ a b c d e Wonder Woman (vol. 1) #105 (April 1959)
  37. ^ Wonder Woman #179 (1968)
  38. ^ a b Reed, Bill. “365 Reasons to Love Comics”. Comic Book Resources. 2007年3月5日閲覧。
  39. ^ "We were all in love with Diana Rigg and that show she was on." Mike Sekowsky, quoted in Les Daniels, Wonder Woman: The Complete History (Chronicle, 2004), p. 129.
  40. ^ Wonder Woman Vol 1 #204
  41. ^ Keith Dallas, Jason Sacks, Jim Beard, Dave Dykema, Paul Brian McCoy (2013). American Comic Book Chronicles: The 1980s. TwoMorrows Publishing. ISBN 1605490466 
  42. ^ Klein, Todd (2008年1月18日). “Logo Study: WONDER WOMAN part 3”. Klein Letters. 2017年4月21日閲覧。
  43. ^ Mangels, Andy (January 1, 1989). “Triple Threat The George Pérez Interview”. Amazing Heroes (Fantagraphics Books) (156): 30. "Wonder Woman's sales are some of the best the Amazing Amazon has ever experienced, and the book is a critical and popular success with its weaving of Greek mythology into a feminist and humanistic atmosphere." 
  44. ^ a b Who destroyed Paradise Island?”. DC Comics (2010年4月15日). 2012年5月24日時点のオリジナルよりアーカイブ。2012年5月23日閲覧。
  45. ^ Rogers, Vaneta (2010年6月29日). “JMS Talks Wonder Woman's New Look and New Direction”. Newsarama. 2012年5月24日時点のオリジナルよりアーカイブ。2012年5月23日閲覧。
  46. ^ George, Richard (2010年7月7日). “Wonder Woman's New Era”. IGN. 2012年5月24日時点のオリジナルよりアーカイブ。2012年5月23日閲覧。
  47. ^ Gustines, George Gene (2010年6月29日). “Makeover for Wonder Woman at 69”. The New York Times. オリジナルの2012年5月24日時点におけるアーカイブ。. https://www.webcitation.org/67t9tT8Aw?url=http://www.nytimes.com/2010/06/30/books/30wonder.html?_r=2 2012年5月23日閲覧。 
  48. ^ Ching, Albert (2010年11月10日). “JMS Leaving Superman and Wonder Woman for Earth One Sequel”. Newsarama.com. 2012年5月24日時点のオリジナルよりアーカイブ。2012年5月23日閲覧。
  49. ^ Esposito, Joey. “The Best of DC Comics in 2011”. IGN. 2011年12月14日閲覧。
  50. ^ Renaud, Jeffrey. “Azzarello Lowers the Boom(Tube) on Wonder Woman”. Comic Book Resources. 2012年8月22日閲覧。
  51. ^ Garcia, Joe. “The Best & Worst of DC Comics' New 52, One Year Later”. Front Towards Gamer. 2012年9月5日閲覧。 “Despite being one part of the Justice League's "Holy Trinity", Wonder Woman never seems to get the recognition that she deserves. While she might not be invincible, her strength is second only to Superman and she's arguably a better fighter. Her solo outings, however, were rarely very interesting. The New 52 put an end to that injustice, with Brian Azzarello and Cliff Chiang spearheading one of the best books DC is putting out. Azzarello currently has Wonder Woman tearing through the ranks of Greek mythology, and Chiang's art manages to be intense despite his use of softer lines. If you're not reading Wonder Woman, go rectify that.”
  52. ^ Hughes, Mark (2011年9月29日). “Top Ten Best Comics In DC's 'New 52' – UPDATED”. Forbes. https://www.forbes.com/sites/markhughes/2011/09/29/top-ten-best-comics-in-dcs-new-52/2/ 2011年9月29日閲覧。 
  53. ^ Wonder Woman: The Story Keeps Changing” (2017年3月3日). Template:Cite webの呼び出しエラー:引数 accessdate は必須です。
  54. ^ Wonder Woman: Rebirth Begins Diana's REAL Origin Story” (2016年6月9日). Template:Cite webの呼び出しエラー:引数 accessdate は必須です。
  55. ^ Wonder Woman: Rebirth Reveals How Diana Got Her Powers” (2016年9月16日). Template:Cite webの呼び出しエラー:引数 accessdate は必須です。
  56. ^ Christian Holub (2017年3月3日). “DC Rebirth: How Wonder Woman went back to her roots”. Template:Cite webの呼び出しエラー:引数 accessdate は必須です。
  57. ^ a b c Gutierrez, Jon. “The 6 Worst Jobs Wonder Woman Ever Had”. Topless Robot. 2011年3月30日閲覧。
  58. ^ Cronin, Brian. “Love Ya but You're Strange – That Time the Husband of Wonder Woman's Exact Double Chained Her to a Table”. Comic Book Resources. 2012年7月12日閲覧。
  59. ^ a b Hanley, Tim. “A Book Look: Ads vs. Audience”. Straitened Circumstances. 2010年11月19日閲覧。
  60. ^ a b Diana's Memory Album”. Dial B for Blog. Template:Cite webの呼び出しエラー:引数 accessdate は必須です。
  61. ^ a b c d e Wonder Woman (vol. 2) #219 (September 2005)
  62. ^ a b Goldstein, Hilary. “Defending Wonder Woman”. IGN. 2005年8月1日閲覧。
  63. ^ Infinite Crisis #7
  64. ^ Allan Heinberg (w), Terry Dodson (p), Rachel Dodson (i). "Who Is Wonder Woman Part 5" Wonder Woman Annual, vol. 3, no. 1 (2007年11月). DC Comics
  65. ^ Azzarello, Brian. “No, she (Wonder Woman) doesn't (have a secret identity”. IGN. 2011年9月21日閲覧。
  66. ^ Superman (Volume 3) #19
  67. ^ [1]
  68. ^ Blackest Night #6 (2010)
  69. ^ WonderAli. “Welcome to the Star Sapphires”. WonderAli. 2010年1月11日閲覧。
  70. ^ Phillips, Dan. “Wonder Woman #16 review”. IGN. 2012年10月1日閲覧。
  71. ^ Gal Gadot: Wonder Woman 'not there because of a love story' in Batman v Superman”. Entertainment Weekly's EW.com. Template:Cite webの呼び出しエラー:引数 accessdate は必須です。
  72. ^ Russell, Scarlett (2016年4月8日). “Wonder Woman star Gal Gadot says that her solo movie has 'moments of humour'”. Digital Spy. 2016年4月8日閲覧。
  73. ^ Charles Moulton (w), Harry G. Peter (a). Wonder Woman, no. 38, p. 5 (1949年). All American Comics
  74. ^ Azzarello, Brian (2012). NYCC 2012; Wonder Woman 101. New York Comic Con: DC Comics. Wonder Woman's greatest strength is her compassion; her greatest weakness is her compassion {{cite AV media}}: 不明な引数|trans_title=が空白で指定されています。 (説明)
  75. ^ When We First Met – When Did Wonder Woman First Fly Her Invisible Jet?”. Comic Book Resources. 2014年11月26日閲覧。 “In Wonder Woman #6, she says "Great Hera," which soon became one of her top phrases…”
  76. ^ Pollitt, Katha (2014年10月14日). “Wonder Woman's Kinky Feminist Roots”. Atlantic Monthly. https://www.theatlantic.com/magazine/archive/2014/11/wonder-womans-kinky-feminist-roots/380788/ 
  77. ^ Wonder Woman (vol. 2) #127 (November 1997)
  78. ^ Wonder Woman (vol. 2) #128 (December 1997)
  79. ^ Wonder Woman (vol. 2) #129 (January 1998)
  80. ^ Wonder Woman revisited”. Byrne Robotics. 2011年1月16日閲覧。
  81. ^ Wonder Woman (vol. 2) #130-133 (February–May 1998)
  82. ^ Wonder Woman (vol. 2) #185 (November 2002)
  83. ^ JLA #18-23 (May–October 1998)
  84. ^ JLA #30 (June 1999)
  85. ^ Ambush Bug: Year None #4 (December 2008)
  86. ^ Justice League of America (vol. 2) #13 (Nov. 2007)
  87. ^ a b c Azzarello, Brian (w), Chiang, Cliff (a). "The Lair of the Minotaur!" Wonder Woman, vol. 4, no. 0 (2012年11月)
  88. ^ Charles Moulton (w), Harry G. Peter (a). Wonder Woman, no. 13, pp. 3–5 (1945年). All American Comics
  89. ^ Sensation Comics #6 (June 1942)
  90. ^ Charles Moulton (w), Harry G. Peter (a). Sensation Comics, no. 1, pp. 5–7 (1942年). All American Comics
  91. ^ Mike (2015年1月31日). “Panel featuring Aphrodite's Law”. SuperDickery.com. 2008年9月3日閲覧。 “when an Amazon girl permits a man to chain her bracelets of submission together she becomes weak as other women in a man-ruled world”
  92. ^ Charles Moulton (w), Harry G. Peter (a). Sensation Comics, no. 46, p. 6 (1945年). J.R. Publishing Co
  93. ^ Charles Moulton (w), Harry G. Peter (a). Wonder Woman, no. 5, pp. 14–15 (1943年). J.R. Publishing Co
  94. ^ Wonder Woman (vol. 1) #115 (July 1960)
  95. ^ Fleisher, Michael L. (September 1976). The Encyclopedia of Comic Book Heroes, Volume 2: Wonder Woman. Macmillan Publishers. ISBN 978-0-02-080080-4 
  96. ^ Amazon Archives”. Amazon Archives. 2016年12月14日閲覧。
  97. ^ Amazon Archives”. Amazon Archives. 2016年12月14日閲覧。
  98. ^ Wonder Woman (vol. 2) #1 (February 1987)
  99. ^ “And the New Wonder Woman Is…”. Time. (2013年12月4日). http://entertainment.time.com/2013/12/04/and-the-new-wonder-woman-is/ 
  100. ^ a b c Dougall, Alastair, ed (2008). The DC Comics Encyclopedia. Dorling Kindersley. ISBN 978-0-7566-4119-1. OCLC 213309017 
  101. ^ Johns, Geoff (February 2006). Wonder Woman: Land of the Dead. ISBN 978-1-4177-5102-0 
  102. ^ a b c d e f Beatty, Scott (November 2003). Wonder Woman: The Ultimate Guide to the Amazon Princess. Dorling Kindersley. ISBN 978-0-7894-9616-4 
  103. ^ Wonder Woman (vol. 4) #12 (Sept. 2012)
  104. ^ a b Hanley, Tim. “Wonder Woman #12 Review OR I Really Didn't See That Coming At All!!”. Straitened Circumstances. 2012年8月16日閲覧。
  105. ^ Nyalapogula, Lohith. “10 DC Superheroes That Can Defeat Superman”. Movie Pilot. Template:Cite webの呼び出しエラー:引数 accessdate は必須です。
  106. ^ Jimenez, Phil et al. The Essential Wonder Woman Encyclopedia. Published by Random House Digital, Inc. 2010, pp. 271, 116, 244 & 165.
  107. ^ Wonder Woman (vol. 2) #56, 75, 77, 97 (July 1991 – May 1995); Wonder Woman Special #1 (May 1992); Artemis: Requiem #1 (June 1996)
  108. ^ a b c Steinem, Gloria; Chesler, Phyllis; Feitler, Bea (1972). “Origins preface”. Wonder Woman. Holt, Rinehart and Winston. ISBN 0-03-005376-5 
  109. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l Cronin, Brian. “Wonder Woman Throughout The Years”. ComicBookResources.com. 2012年9月17日閲覧。
  110. ^ Wonder Woman Costume”. carolastrickland.com. Template:Cite webの呼び出しエラー:引数 accessdate は必須です。
  111. ^ Polo, Susana. “DC Inexplicably, Quietly Changes Wonder Woman's outfit... Again”. The Mary Sue. 2011年7月13日閲覧。
  112. ^ New Wonder Woman Image; Patty Jenkins On Costumes”. The Mary Sue (2016年3月24日). 2016年12月14日閲覧。
  113. ^ Sperling, Nicole (2016年3月23日). “Wonder Woman: Gal Gadot, Robin Wright, Connie Nielsen first look”. EW.com. 2016年12月14日閲覧。
  114. ^ Wonder Woman Vol. 1 #261
  115. ^ Wonder Woman Vol. 1 #312
  116. ^ Wallace, Dan (2008). “Wonder Woman's Magical Weapons”. In Dougall, Alastair. The DC Comics Encyclopedia. New York: Dorling Kindersley. p. 93. ISBN 978-0-7566-4119-1. OCLC 213309017 
  117. ^ Wonder Woman (vol. 3) #39 (February 2010)
  118. ^ a b c Azzarello, Brian (w), Chiang, Cliff (p), Chiang, Cliff (i). "Clay" Wonder Woman, vol. 4, no. 3 (2012年1月)
  119. ^ Azzarello, Brian (w), Chiang, Cliff (p), Chiang, Cliff (i). Wonder Woman (vol. 4), #15
  120. ^ JLA #62 (March 2002)
  121. ^ Wagner, Matt (July 1, 2005). Batman/Superman/Wonder Woman: Trinity. DC Comics. ISBN 978-1-4012-0187-6 
  122. ^ War of the Gods #1 (September 1991)
  123. ^ Kanigher, Robert (August 22, 2007). Showcase Presents: Wonder Woman, Vol. 1. DC Comics. ISBN 978-1-4012-1373-2 
  124. ^ a b Charles Moulton (w), Harry G. Peter (a). Sensation Comics #1, p. 10 (1942年). All American Comics
  125. ^ Charles Moulton (w), Harry G. Peter (a). Sensation Comics, no. 81, p. 5 (1947年). All American Comics
  126. ^ Strickland, Carol A.. “The Invisible Plane/Jet!”. Carol A. Strickland. Template:Cite webの呼び出しエラー:引数 accessdate は必須です。
  127. ^ Charles Moulton (w), Harry G. Peter (a). Sensation Comics, no. 50, p. 3 (1942年). All American Comics
  128. ^ Charles Moulton (w), Harry G. Peter (a). "Introducing Wonder Woman" All Star Comics, vol. 1, no. 8 (1942年1月). DC Comics
  129. ^ Eddie138. “Wonder Woman: A History”. webtv.net. 2013年2月22日時点のオリジナルよりアーカイブ。 Template:Cite webの呼び出しエラー:引数 accessdate は必須です。
  130. ^ Charles Moulton (w), Harry G. Peter (a). Sensation Comics, no. 1, p. 8 (1942年). All American Comics
  131. ^ Cronin, Brian. “When We First Met – Wonder Woman's Golden Age Rogues”. Comic Book Resources. 2012年10月28日閲覧。
  132. ^ MARIONETTE. “The complicated origin of Wonder Woman”. Dance of the Puppets. 2005年9月28日閲覧。
  133. ^ Hanley, Tim. “A Book Look: Kanigher's Giant Birds”. Straitened Circumstances. 2011年1月10日閲覧。
  134. ^ Denny O'Neil (w), Mike Sekowsky (p), Dick Giordano (i). "Wonder Woman's Last Battle" Wonder Woman, vol. 1, no. 179 (1968年11月)
  135. ^ Mr. Morrow. “Wonder what I did on my Christmas vacation?”. TwoMorrows Publishing. 2010年1月5日閲覧。
  136. ^ a b Guion, Richard. “Introducing the NEW Wonder Woman”. Giant Size Geek. 2011年3月21日閲覧。
  137. ^ Monash Arts Online Presence Team. “Colloquy”. Arts.monash.edu.au. 2014年2月5日閲覧。
  138. ^ Cronin, Brian. “Diana Prince – Forgotten Classic”. Snark Free Waters. 2005年4月23日閲覧。 “Sadly, though, in the last issue of the run, I-Ching was murdered and Wonder Woman was given amnesia. When the Amazons returned her memories (and her powers), they left out her memories of her experiences as just plain "Diana Prince."”
  139. ^ a b Jones, Jr., Robert. “Wonder of Wonders”. Comic Book Resources. 2009年12月31日閲覧。
  140. ^ a b Strickland, Carol. “The Illustrated Nubia Index”. Carol A. Strickland. Template:Cite webの呼び出しエラー:引数 accessdate は必須です。
  141. ^ Gerry Conway (w), Don Heck (a). "Of Gods And Men" Wonder Woman, vol. 1, no. 329 (1986年2月). DC Comics
  142. ^ Mozzocco, J. Caleb. “The Many Loves of Wonder Woman: A Brief History Of The Amazing Amazon's Love Life”. ComicsAlliance. 2012年8月30日時点のオリジナルよりアーカイブ。2012年8月28日閲覧。
  143. ^ Colluccio, Ali. “Top 5: Wonder Woman Reboots”. iFanboy. 2012年4月10日閲覧。 “After she was "erased" from existence in the final pages of Crisis on Infinite Earths, George Perez, Len Wein and Greg Potter brought the Amazon Princess back to the DC Universe. While the basics of the story remained the same, Wonder Woman;s powers were adjusted to include Beauty from Aphrodite, Strength from Demeter, Wisdom from Athena, Speed and Flight from Hermes, Eyes of the Hunter from Artemis, and Truth from Hestia. This run established Paradise Island as the mythical Amazon capital, Themyscira. Perez's Diana is not only strong and smart, but graceful and kind – the iconic Wonder Woman.”
  144. ^ Mozzocco, J. Caleb. “The Many Loves of Wonder Woman: A Brief History Of The Amazing Amazon's Love Life”. ComicsAlliance. 2012年8月30日時点のオリジナルよりアーカイブ。2012年8月28日閲覧。 “When the next volume of Wonder Woman would start, Trevor was sidelined as Diana's love interest. He still appeared in the series, but as an older man, one who would ultimately marry the post-Crisis version of Wondy's Golden Age sidekick, Etta Candy.”
  145. ^ George Pérez (w), George Pérez, Cynthia Martin (p), Cynthia Martin (i). "War of the Gods, Chapter One: Hellfire's Web" War of the Gods, vol. 1, no. 1 (1991年9月). DC Comics
  146. ^ George Pérez (w), George Pérez, Cynthia Martin (p), Cynthia Martin (i). "The Holy Wars" War of the Gods, vol. 1, no. 2 (1991年10月). DC Comics
  147. ^ George Pérez (w), George Pérez, Cynthia Martin (p), Cynthia Martin (i). "Casualties of War" War of the Gods, vol. 1, no. 3 (1991年11月). DC Comics
  148. ^ George Pérez (w), George Pérez (p). "In the Beginning... There Was the End" War of the Gods, vol. 1, no. 4 (1991年12月). DC Comics
  149. ^ Superhero Makeovers: Wonder Woman, part two”. The Screamsheet. 2011年2月10日閲覧。 “Hippolyta received a vision where Wonder Woman died.”
  150. ^ Superhero Makeovers: Wonder Woman, part two”. The Screamsheet. 2011年2月10日閲覧。 “Desperate to save her daughter, she claimed that Diana had failed in her role as an ambassador to Man's World and called for a do-over on the contest that had determined Diana fit to carry the Wonder Woman mantle in the first place.”
  151. ^ Superhero Makeovers: Wonder Woman, part two”. The Screamsheet. 2011年2月10日閲覧。 “Due to Hippolyta secretly meddling so her daughter would lose the contest, Diana lost to one of the Bana named Artemis, who became the new Wonder Woman.”
  152. ^ Superhero Makeovers: Wonder Woman, part two”. The Screamsheet. 2011年2月10日閲覧。 “Meanwhile, Diana herself wore the costume equivalent of black lingerie and a jacket and continued to fight crime.”
  153. ^ Superhero Makeovers: Wonder Woman, part two”. The Screamsheet. 2011年2月10日閲覧。 “Artemis was killed off, resulting in the death of Wonder Woman that Hippolyta had foreseen, and Diana returned as Wonder Woman.”
  154. ^ a b c d e f Wonder Woman & Hippolyta – As All Great Heroes Do...”. Cosmic Teams. Template:Cite webの呼び出しエラー:引数 accessdate は必須です。
  155. ^ Jodi Picoult (w), Terry Dodson (p), Rachel Dodson (i). "Love and Murder, Part 3" Wonder Woman, vol. 3, no. 8 (2007年6月). DC Comics
  156. ^ a b Goldstein, Hilary. “Infinite Crisis Guide”. IGN. 2005年3月23日閲覧。
  157. ^ Goldstein, Hilary. “Defending Wonder Woman – Why the Amazonian princess should be spared punishment from DC's heroes”. IGN. 2005年8月1日閲覧。
  158. ^ Allan Heinberg (w), Terry Dodson (p), Rachel Dodson (i). "Who is Wonder Woman?: Part One" Wonder Woman, vol. 3, no. 1 (2006年8月). DC Comics
  159. ^ Allan Heinberg (w), Terry Dodson (p), Rachel Dodson (i). "Who is Wonder Woman?: Part Two" Wonder Woman, vol. 3, no. 2 (2006年9月). DC Comics
  160. ^ Allan Heinberg (w), Terry Dodson (p), Rachel Dodson (i). "Who is Wonder Woman?: Part Three" Wonder Woman, vol. 3, no. 3 (2006年10月). DC Comics
  161. ^ Allan Heinberg (w), Terry Dodson (p), Rachel Dodson (i). "Who is Wonder Woman?: Part Four" Wonder Woman, vol. 3, no. 4 (2007年2月). DC Comics
  162. ^ Allan Heinberg (w), Terry Dodson (p), Rachel Dodson (i). "Who is Wonder Woman?: Part Five" Wonder Woman Annual, vol. 3, no. 1 (2007年11月). DC Comics
  163. ^ Gail Simone (w), Terry Dodson (p), Rachel Dodson (i). "The Circle Part One of Four: What You Do Not Know Yet" Wonder Woman, vol. 3, no. 14 (2008年1月). DC Comics
  164. ^ Gail Simone (w), Terry Dodson (p), Rachel Dodson (i). "The Circle Part Two of Four: Dead Heat" Wonder Woman, vol. 3, no. 15 (2008年2月). DC Comics
  165. ^ Gail Simone (w), Terry Dodson (p), Rachel Dodson (i). "The Circle Part Three of Four: The Wellspring of all Vengeance" Wonder Woman, vol. 3, no. 16 (2008年3月). DC Comics
  166. ^ a b Gail Simone (w), Terry Dodson (p), Rachel Dodson (i). "The Circle Conclusion: A Time Of Reckoning" Wonder Woman, vol. 3, no. 17 (2008年4月). DC Comics
  167. ^ Raou. “Wonder Woman: The Circle”. Trade Talks. 2009年5月29日閲覧。
  168. ^ George, Richard. “Wonder Woman's New Era”. IGN. 2010年6月29日閲覧。
  169. ^ SS/OM: All New Wonder Woman Review Part 3: The Morrigan”. That Guy With the Glasses. 2011年10月17日閲覧。
  170. ^ Phil Hester (w), Don Kramer, Lee Garbett (p). "The Odyssey Part Fourteen: The Return" Wonder Woman, vol. 1, no. 614 (2011年10月). DC Comics
  171. ^ Ching, Albert. “WONDER WOMAN Gets a NEW 52 Origin, Parent in November”. Newsarama. 2011年10月10日閲覧。
  172. ^ Gregorian, Dareh. “Zeus your daddy, Diana!”. New York Post. http://www.nypost.com/p/news/national/zeus_your_daddy_diana_ppW48O4ICruECUubnH5G1H 2011年10月10日閲覧。 
  173. ^ Azzarello, Brian (w), Chiang, Cliff (p), Chiang, Cliff (i). "The Visitation" Wonder Woman, vol. 4, no. 1 (2011年11月)
  174. ^ Azzarello, Brian (w), Chiang, Cliff (a). "Home" Wonder Woman, vol. 4, no. 2 (2011年12月)
  175. ^ Azzarello, Brian (w), Chiang, Cliff (p), Chiang, Cliff (i). "Blood" Wonder Woman, vol. 4, no. 4 (2012年2月)
  176. ^ Azzarello, Brian (w), Akins, Tony (p), Akins, Tony (i). "Lourdes" Wonder Woman, vol. 4, no. 5 (2012年3月)
  177. ^ Azzarello, Brian (w), Akins, Tony (p), Akins, Tony; Green, Dan (i). "Thrones" Wonder Woman, vol. 4, no. 6 (2012年4月)
  178. ^ Teen Titans #19 (2013)
  179. ^ a b Azzarello, Brian (w), Chiang, Cliff (p), Chiang, Cliff (i). "Il Gangster dell'amore" Wonder Woman, vol. 4, no. 7 (2012年5月)
  180. ^ Azzarello, Brian (w), Chiang, Cliff (p), Chiang, Cliff (i). "Casting Shadows" Wonder Woman, vol. 4, no. 8 (2012年6月)
  181. ^ Azzarello, Brian (w), Chiang, Cliff (p), Chiang, Cliff (i). "The Dearly Beloved" Wonder Woman, vol. 4, no. 9 (2012年7月)
  182. ^ Azzarello, Brian (w), Chiang, Cliff (p), Chiang, Cliff (i). "Vows" Wonder Woman, vol. 4, no. 10 (2012年8月)
  183. ^ Lima, Sara. “Is Changing Wonder Woman and the History of the Amazons A Good Idea?”. ComicVine. 2012年3月27日閲覧。
  184. ^ Hunsaker, Andy. “Wonder Woman #7: Amazon Sex Pirate Spartans”. CraveOnline. 2012年3月26日閲覧。
  185. ^ Azzarello, Brian (w), Chiang, Cliff (p), Chiang, Cliff (i). "Son Rise" Wonder Woman, vol. 4, no. 11 (2012年9月)
  186. ^ Azzarello, Brian (w), Chiang, Cliff (p), Chiang, Cliff (i). "Birth Right" Wonder Woman, vol. 4, no. 12 (2012年10月)
  187. ^ Rogers, Vaneta. “BRIAN AZZARELLO On Ending WONDER WOMAN #12 With a 'BOOM'”. Newsarama. 2012年8月17日閲覧。
  188. ^ Johnston, Rich. “The End Of Wonder Woman #12 That You Really Might Not Have Expected”. Bleeding Cool. 2012年8月15日閲覧。
  189. ^ a b Sava, Oliver. “Wonder Woman #0 goes back to the Silver Age”. The A.V. Club. 2012年9月21日閲覧。
  190. ^ Hanley, Tim. “Wonder Woman #0 Review OR Kind Of Cute On The Surface, But Troubling Below”. Straitened Circumstances. 2012年9月20日閲覧。
  191. ^ Wonder Woman #35 (2014)
  192. ^ Johns, Geoff (w), Lee, Jim (p), Williams, Scott (i). "Justice League Part Three" Justice League, vol. 2, no. 3 (2012年1月)
  193. ^ “Superman and Wonder Woman kiss with powerful consequences”. USA Today. (2012年8月27日). https://www.usatoday.com/life/comics/story/2012-08-27/Superman-Wonder-Woman-kiss-in-Justice-League-comic-book/57328804/1 2012年9月21日閲覧。 
  194. ^ Superman-Wonder Woman Romance rocks DC Comics”. MSNBC.com. 2012年9月21日閲覧。
  195. ^ Superman-and-Wonder Woman become the world's newest power couple”. DCcomics.com. 2012年9月21日閲覧。
  196. ^ Charles Soule And Tony Daniel Discuss Superman and Wonder Woman Comic”. Newsarama. Template:Cite webの呼び出しエラー:引数 accessdate は必須です。
  197. ^ Soule and Daniel Join Forces for Superman-Wonder Woman”. Comic Book Resources. Template:Cite webの呼び出しエラー:引数 accessdate は必須です。
  198. ^ Who's Who on EARTH 2”. Newsarama.com. 2013年1月9日閲覧。
  199. ^ Look's Like Earth 2's Wonder Woman Left a Certain Something Behind... (SPOILERS)”. BleedingCool.com. 2013年1月9日閲覧。
  200. ^ Justice League #50 (2016)
  201. ^ Wonder Woman: Rebirth #1 (2016)
  202. ^ Wonder Woman #1 (2016)
  203. ^ The 50 Greatest Comic Book Characters – Wonder Woman”. Empire. Template:Cite webの呼び出しエラー:引数 accessdate は必須です。
  204. ^ Frankenhoff, Brent (2011). Comics Buyer's Guide Presents: 100 Sexiest Women in Comics. Krause Publications. p. 14. ISBN 1-4402-2988-0 
  205. ^ Wonder Woman – #5 Top Comic Book Heroes”. IGN. 2012年1月19日閲覧。
  206. ^ Wertham, Fredric (1954), Seduction of the Innocent, Rinehart & Company, Inc., pp. 192, 234–235 
  207. ^ a b McAvennie, Michael; Dolan, Hannah, eds (2010). “1970s”. DC Comics Year By Year A Visual Chronicle. Dorling Kindersley. p. 154. ISBN 978-0-7566-6742-9. ""After nearly five years of Diana Prince's non-powered super-heroics, writer-editor Robert Kanigher and artist Don Heck restored Wonder Woman's... well, wonder."" 
  208. ^ Matsuuchi, Ann (2012). “Wonder Woman Wears Pants: Wonder Woman, Feminism and the 1972 'Women's Lib' Issue”. Colloquy: text theory critique (archived at Monash University) (24). http://artsonline.monash.edu.au/colloquy/download/colloquy_issue_twenty-four_/matsuuchi.pdf. 
  209. ^ “Wonder Woman at 75: How the superhero icon inspired a generation of feminists” (英語). SBS Movies. http://www.sbs.com.au/movies/article/2016/10/12/wonder-woman-75-how-superhero-icon-inspired-generation-feminists?cid=inbody:wonder-woman-new-trailer-goes-deeper-into-dianas-backstory 2017年4月12日閲覧。 
  210. ^ Knight, Gladys (2010). Female Action Heroes : A Guide to Women in Comics, Video Games, Film, and Television.. Santa Barbara United States: Greenwood, ProQuest Ebrary.. pp. 1 
  211. ^ DiPaola, Marc (2011). Wonder Woman as A World War II Veteran, Feminist Icon, and Sex Symbol. Jefferson, North Carolina, and London: McFarland & Company, Inc., Publishers. pp. 70. ISBN 978-0-7864-4718-3 
  212. ^ “Wonder Woman | Equality Archive” (英語). Equality Archive. (2016年5月9日). http://equalityarchive.com/issues/wonder-woman/ 2017年3月7日閲覧。 
  213. ^ Groetzinger, Kate. “Suffering Sappho: Wonder Woman Endorses Marriage Equality” (英語). The Atlantic. https://www.theatlantic.com/entertainment/archive/2015/09/wonder-woman-gay-marriage/402799/ 2017年3月7日閲覧。 
  214. ^ Romano, Aja (2015年8月9日). “The pacifist past and war-torn future of Wonder Woman”. Kernelmag.dailydot.com. 2016年12月14日閲覧。
  215. ^ The Legacy of Original Intentions: The Non Violence of Wonder Woman by Nick Pumphrey”. Feminismandreligion.com (2012年3月27日). 2016年12月14日閲覧。
  216. ^ The True Nature of Pacificism - Wonder Woman - Comic Vine”. Comicvine.gamespot.com. 2016年12月14日閲覧。
  217. ^ e2zvaxuicmjwogxcwo9t Image” (PNG). I-kinga-img.com. 2016年12月14日閲覧。
  218. ^ Wonder Woman has sex with women. Get over it.”. Revelist (2016年9月28日). 2016年12月14日閲覧。
  219. ^ McMillan, Grame (2016年11月10日). “Cape Watch: Wonder Woman Would Like a Girlfriend, Please”. WIRED. 2016年12月14日閲覧。 “the comic book Wonder Woman was confirmed to be queer last month”
  220. ^ Spastic Man (2008年). “Lesbian interpretation? - Wonder Woman”. Comic Vine. 2016年12月14日閲覧。 “It may be that Wonder Woman may also be bisexual, as she and another Amazon, Io, had reciprocal feelings for each other.”
  221. ^ Browning, Bil (2015年8月20日). “Wonder Woman Performs Same-Sex Wedding in New Comic”. Advocate.com. 2016年12月14日閲覧。
  222. ^ Melissa Leon (2015年8月19日). “See Wonder Woman Officiate a Gay Wedding and Avert a Crisis in Crimea”. The Daily Beast. 2016年12月14日閲覧。
  223. ^ Lyn, Nicole (2016年9月30日). “Wonder Woman is bisexual - 'obviously' says DC Comics”. New York Daily News. http://www.nydailynews.com/life-style/woman-bisexual-dc-comics-article-1.2813018 2016年12月14日閲覧。 
  224. ^ Comic Book Hero Wonder Woman is Bisexual” (英語) (2016年10月1日). 2016年10月1日閲覧。
  225. ^ Exclusive Interview: Greg Rucka on Queer Narrative and WONDER WOMAN” (英語) (2016年9月28日). 2016年10月3日閲覧。
  226. ^ Yehl, Joshua (2016年4月6日). “Grant Morrison on Wonder Woman: Earth One's Birth, Race, and Sexuality Changes”. IGN. 2016年12月14日閲覧。
  227. ^ Beth Elderkin (2016年10月4日). “Gail Simone, Longtime 'Wonder Woman' Writer, Says Cut Out Queer Fear”. Inverse. 2016年12月14日閲覧。
  228. ^ Wonder Woman Writer Says Haters Need to 'Get Over It' About Diana's New Canon Bisexuality”. Io9.gizmodo.com. 2016年12月14日閲覧。
  229. ^ Mcgrath, Rachel (2016年10月12日). “Gal Gadot says Wonder Woman 'can be bisexual' and 'loves people for who they are' | Daily Mail Online”. Dailymail.co.uk. 2016年10月14日閲覧。
  230. ^ DC Comics Writer Outs Wonder Woman”. Newser.com. 2016年10月14日閲覧。
  231. ^ Caitlin O'Toole. “Gal Gadot takes up the fight as Wonder Woman trailer debuts at SDCC 2016 | Daily Mail Online”. Dailymail.co.uk. 2016年10月14日閲覧。
  232. ^ Holub, Christian (2017年6月5日). “Wonder Woman creator biopic gets mysterious first teaser”. Entertainment Weekly. http://ew.com/movies/2017/06/05/wonder-woman-creator-biopic-teaser/ 2017年6月20日閲覧。 

External links

Template:Wonder Woman