
by Brian Wood (writer), Cliff Chiang (art), Jeromy Cox (colors), and Jared K. Fletcher (letters)
The Story: Amina recovers an abandoned baby in the streets of the DMZ, forcing her to grapple with motherhood, her history, and an end to her solitude.
What’s Good: Through this issue, Wood makes it painfully clear how different standards of morality and ethics are in the DMZ. At times, so different are these standards that it’s tempting to write them off entirely and believe that they’re either non-existent or drastically lesser than our accepted social rules and conscience. Of course, while events may have us lean in that direction, Wood’s excellent work with main character Amina’s narration quickly chastises us for this consideration; it puts a human face to the situations of this issue and the moral and ethical choices that play out. The narration complicates things a great deal and makes it clear that morality and ethics are in play, they are simply those of people who are fundamentally damaged and thus they are of a more malleable sort, both forgiving and resigned. It’s complex and very heavy stuff.
The motherhood side of the issue is also reasonably dealt with, if only because the baby provides an anchor to the otherwise ever-changing Amina. The situation helps to make the character at least somewhat relatable and sympathetic. It also allows Wood to analyze and showcase her emotions and her humanity. There’s both a tenderness and a desperation here that has always been the meat of DMZ.
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Filed under: DC Comics, Reviews, Vertigo | Tagged: Alex Evans, Amina, Amina Mother of One, Brian Wood, Civil War, Cliff Chiang, Collective Punishment, Comic Book Reviews, comic reviews, DC Comics, Delgado Nation, DMZ, DMZ #57, DMZ #57 review, Matty Roth, Mother of One, motherhood, neighborhood militants, New York, New York City, NYC, Parco City, Parco Delgado, Vertigo Comics, Weekly Comic Book Review | Leave a comment »


