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・ Anokhi Ada (1948 film)
・ Anokhi Kahaniyan
・ Anokhi Pehchan
・ Anokhi Raat
・ Anokhin
・ Anokhin Museum
・ Anokopsis
・ Anola
・ Anolacia
・ Anolacia aperta
・ Anolacia bozzettii
・ Anolacia mauritiana
・ Anolaima
・ Anolbanolis
・ Anolcites
Anole (comics)
・ Anolis
・ Anolis acutus
・ Anolis bimaculatus
・ Anolis carolinensis anole series
・ Anolis conspersus
・ Anolis cristatellus
・ Anolis cuvieri
・ Anolis ecomorphs
・ Anolis eewi
・ Anolis fuscoauratus
・ Anolis grahami
・ Anolis griseus
・ Anolis lineatopus
・ Anolis lividus


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Anole (comics) : ウィキペディア英語版
Anole (comics)

Anole (Victor Borkowski) is a fictional mutant superhero in the Marvel Universe. He was created by Christina Weir and Nunzio DeFilippis and first appeared in issue #2 of ''New Mutants'' vol. 2 (August 2003). A student at the Xavier Institute and junior member of the X-Men, Anole is one of the few openly gay characters in the Marvel Universe. His reptilian mutation grants him superhuman abilities including wallcrawling, a prehensile tongue, and adaptive camouflage.
Initially a supporting character in ''New Mutants'' vol. 2 and its relaunched title, ''New X-Men: Academy X'', Weir and DeFilippis intended for the character to commit suicide early in the series after coming out as gay and finding himself rejected by his family and friends. According to the writers, the story was to serve as a message about intolerance. Marvel editors scrapped the story due to concerns about the controversy it might generate. The storyline was rewritten and the character survived. He since became a fan favorite and began to be featured regularly throughout the series and as a main character in subsequent X-Men-related titles, including ''New X-Men'' and the short-lived ''Young X-Men''.
==Publication history==
Victor Borkowski first appears in ''New Mutants'' vol. 2 #2 in August 2003. Christina Weir and Nunzio DeFilippis originally wrote a storyline for ''New Mutants'' that was to take place between issues 8 and 10.〔 The plot involved Victor committing suicide after coming out as gay and being rejected by his parents and his friends, serving as "a powerful message about what intolerance can do to people."〔 Due to the controversial subject matter, the storyline was dropped, with Victor coming from an accepting family and hometown.
Despite only rare initial appearances as a supporting character, Victor developed a fan following.〔 Victor was given the codename "Anole" a kind of lizard frequently and incorrectly known as an American chameleon, after it was suggested to Weir and DeFilippis by a fan via a post on their forum.〔Nunzio DeFilippis. ComixFan Forum - "New X-Men Q & A 2005 Part 2", p.11, ''http://www.comixfan.com/ X-World Comics Presents...Comixfan, the #1 Online Comics Resource!'' May 17, 2005. Accessed November 3, 2008.〕 He continued to make numerous appearances during Craig Kyle and Chris Yost's run on ''New X-Men'' (2nd Series), having a more active role in the plots than most of the other background characters.
Anole was featured as a main character beginning in ''New X-Men'' vol. 2 #37, illustrated by comic book artist Skottie Young. He was later added to the New X-Men as a teammate. Anole was a "pretty early pick" for new additions to the team, according to Yost, who felt that Anole had a decent set of abilities and represented "a kind of level-headed, good, normal kid." Additionally, Yost and Kyle felt adding Anole and the character Pixie to the New X-Men team gave the roster "tonal balance" and the opportunity to slightly "twist and warp" the characters through darker events to come in the series. While alluded to since his first main appearances in the franchise〔〔〔 and confirmed off-panel during their run by DiFilippis and Weir〔 and in Marvel character profiles,〔 it was during this series in ''New X-Men'' (2nd Series) #43 that Anole's gay identity was stated and dealt with explicitly on-panel for the first time.〔
When the series ended, Anole was featured in a vignette entitled "Blend In" written and illustrated by Young in ''X-Men: Divided We Stand'' #1. The story explored the effects of the darker events in Yost and Kyle's run on younger characters such as Anole, Young feeling that younger characters were often improperly characterized like mature adults in how they dealt with large, traumatic events in comic series. He described his decision to illustrate and write about Anole as "a natural choice" and that he wanted to flesh out his previously unknown backstory, claiming that drawing Anole for a year during his time on ''New X-Men'' allowed him to understand the character. In developing Anole's backstory, Young also established the character's hometown as his own—Fairbury, Illinois. Young added that he chose to write Anole's divestment from the X-Men at the conclusion of the story in a way that would allow him to explore more of the character's future decisions and experiences at another time. Anole would later reappear as a team member in the main cast of ''Young X-Men'' as of ''Young X-Men'' #6 and as a supporting character in ''X-Men'' franchise crossover events such as ''X-Men: Manifest Destiny'',〔 ''Secret Invasion: X-Men,''〔 and ''X-Men: Nation X''.

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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