In Wonder Woman #13 (1945), our superheroine finds herself in a tight spot, literally, as she's bound to a wooden post with ropes and chains by her fellow Amazon warriors.
He created Wonder Woman as a way to prepare young boys for a woman who was stronger and more powerful than them, to illustrate submission with bondage imagery.
Marston, a psychologist and avowed feminist, believed that submission from a "loving authority" was the ideal form of human interaction.
In Marston's ideal world, Wonder Woman might've been the beginning of a kink takeover of superhero comics, yet history reduced her bondage roots to a forgotten footnote.
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