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==List of other well-known examples== ==List of other well-known examples==
*Barbara Gordon, the ] ] was shot and paralysed by ] *Barbara Gordon, the ] ], was shot and paralysed by ]
*] murdered two love interests of ], first ], who eventually returned, and later ] *] murdered two love interests of ], first ], who eventually returned, and later ]
*] was severely injured when the mutant ] absorbed her mind, memories and powers, which caused years of hardship for both *] was severely injured when the mutant ] absorbed her mind, memories, and powers, which caused years of hardship for both
*In the '']'' ], ] sacrificed herself to save the ], dying in ]’s arms. *In the '']'' ], ] sacrificed herself to save the ], dying in ]’s arms.
*], a lover interest of ] was murdered by ] *], a lover interest of ], was murdered by ]
*], the ]'s wife, was ]ed by the villain ] *], the ]'s wife, was ]ed by the villain ]
*The ]’s ] was seemingly killed by the villain ] but later returned. *The ]’s ] was seemingly killed by the villain ] but later returned.
*], an X-Men ] and former love interest of both ] and ] was assassinated by ] *], an X-Men ] and former love interest of both ] and ], was assassinated by ]
*]'s wife Nora fell terminally ill and, after being kept alive in (notably) a ], died when the device was destroyed. *]'s wife Nora fell terminally ill and, after being kept alive in (notably) a ], died when the device was destroyed.
*]'s wife, Sue, was killed recently in ], ironically by ]'s ex-wife ]. *]'s wife, Sue, was killed recently in ], ironically by ]'s ex-wife ].

Revision as of 07:13, 27 September 2005

Girlfriend-in-Refrigerator Syndrome is a term used to describe the use of a tragedy in the life of a female comic book character as a plot device. The term was coined by comics writer Gail Simone in 1999.

The name comes from an incident in Green Lantern #54 (1994), written by Ron Marz, in which the title hero comes home to his apartment to find that his girlfriend, Alex DeWitt, had been killed by the villain Major Force and stuffed in a refrigerator. Due to the obscured view of the fridge to appease the censors, it ironically served to fuel speculation that she had been dismembered beforehand. In 2004, Marz revisited this scene. Green Lantern found what he thought to be his mother's severed head in his oven; this was later revealed to be the head of a mannequin.

Most cases of "Girlfriend-in-Refrigerator" syndrome deal with a gruesome injury or murder at the hands of a supervillain usually as a personal tragedy to the male superhero the victim is related to. In many cases, the incident helps cement the hatred between the hero and the villain responsible.

Many say the actual trend started when Gwen Stacy, girlfriend of Spider-Man, was killed by the Green Goblin. In fact, another name for the syndrome is "Gwen Stacy Syndrome"

The killing off of long-running characters is somewhat common in comic books and so are their predictable returns (see Comic book death). Another example given is that second and third-string characters (and not first-grade leads) are typical targets to be killed off, and this just so happens to include many female heroines who are derived originally from male stars.

List of other well-known examples

External links

The Women in Refrigerators site which coined the term

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