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it’s all about looking in on things “everyone knows” and questioning them, trying to build a legitimate understanding of the world, but being denied. this makes a great deal of sense in the context of the toxin symbiote’s character and relationship with its host. The toxin symbiote is also implied to be agender, but actually tries to bring this up to rebuff the assumption that it must be a boy by default. Now, of course, not every symbiote’s like the venom symbiote! in the text, it displays a complete lack of regard for the very concept of gender, along with a readiness to go along with whatever’s projected on it. One way or another, the venom symbiote’s been around the block, pronoun-wise. Now, if you’re thinking “hey, that kind of looks like a pattern wherein the symbiote being seen as sympathetic is linked to it being slotted into human social norms of what a person should be, including “either male or female"” - you know, you might be on to something.
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also, this sudden gendering happens during the symbiote’s final acts of redemption, likely intended to endear it to the reader, too. With a female host - specifically, with spider-girl from earth-982 -Īgain, spider-man’s use of “it” contrasts spider-girl’s use of “she” to showcase his negative and her positive attitude towards the symbiote. with a male host, the symbiote, too, is more commonly thought of as male. symbiotes develop every aspect of their identity in the context of symbiosis, the venom symbiote especially so. So then you might think that the symbiote, by itself, skews more towards the masculine, right? not necessarily. Then there’s flash, who goes from using “it” to using “he” to signify that he’s gone from considering the symbiote a suit to considering the symbiote a person.Īnd then writer dan slott, very unusually, has eddie refer to the symbiote as “he” and a “guy”, too, due to… personal preference, i guess. as of 2018, the rex symbiote has been the only character to use the singular “they”. Of course, one also has to consider that the singular “they” as a gender-neutral pronoun still hasn’t found widespread acceptance, meaning that “it” originally established itself due to a perceived lack of other options, too. the symbiote, itself, has also used “it” to refer to other symbiotes. i use “it” for the latter reason. eddie, in the majority of depictions, does, too.
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“it” has been most widely used for it, both negatively to imply that the symbiote is a thing, an animal, and positively to mean that it is non-human, fundamentally different. by all accounts, it simply doesn’t seem to care.
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pronoun usage for it has varied more widely than you’d think, but it has never expressed any objections to or preferences for any of them or any gendered terms. The venom symbiote would, in human terms, best be described as agender or genderfluid. So, when we do introduce a symbiote to our cultural context - by, in-universe, bringing it to earth, or, on a meta level, it being written for humans, by humans - there’s always, always something rife with queer appeal going on. This means that symbiotes operate outside of the concepts of sex and gender. Good news! venom is queer at the conceptual level.įirst of all, the only two facts about symbiotes that have remained untouched by retcons and rereretcons over the years are these: part 1: where do the the gays get off, anyway, sinking their sexy little claws so deep into venom? explaining the major characterisation split that makes it damn near impossible to think of venom canon as one cohesive whole. focusing on queer themes and matters of morality, because it turns out those things are pretty intertwined.