On Friday, the United Nations named Wonder Woman an Honorary Ambassador for the Empowerment of Women and Girls, and predictably, not everyone is happy about the elevation of a white comic book superhero most commonly portrayed as a scantily clad, overly voluptuous vixen. To be sure, the outfit is problematic—little more than go-go boots and a strapless armored American-flag-themed swimsuit one rogue jiggle away from toplessness—and it’s hard to see how much traction she could hope to gain in many of the culturally conservative nations where the most gender-oppressed women and girls she’s meant to inspire live.
But dig into the actual Wonder Woman comic canon, and it’s clear she is much, much more than a crimefighting sex kitten. (In fact, Wonder-Woman-as-UN-ambassador sounds a heck of a lot like the Wonder Woman character Joss Whedon dreamed up for a movie that Warner Brothers scuttled in 2011.) Add to that the fact that while women in the West enjoy an unprecedented level of independence today, there is still plenty of progress to be made here, too—not the least in geek culture itself. So even if Wonder Woman doesn’t quite play in Saudi Arabia, it’s still a big deal to finally see her get her due in the West.
And if she has to claim her rightful place in the world wearing an uncomfortable outfit that conforms to a man’s vision of what she should wear—doing it "backwards in high heels"—that’s something women anywhere in the world can relate to.