What "Hawkeye" gets right about deafness – and what it glosses over (2024)

COMMENTARY

Alaqua Cox & Jeremy Renner are just part of why this is the most nuanced onscreen representation of deafness so far

By Alison Stine

Staff Writer

Published December 6, 2021 7:00PM (EST)

What "Hawkeye" gets right about deafness –and what it glosses over (1)

Zahn McClarnon and Darnell Besaw in "Hawkeye" (Marvel Studios)

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On the third episode of "Hawkeye," the Disney+ show about the Marvel archer, kidnapped Hawkeye/Clint Barton (Jeremy Renner) and aspiring Avenger Kate Bishop (Hailee Steinfeld) meet villain Maya Lopez/Echo, and have an interesting conversation. Maya, who is deaf on the show and portrayed by Alaqua Cox who is also deaf, does a decidedly kind and un-villainous first action: She cuts the tape binding Clint's hands.

Echo has noticed Clint wears a hearing aid in one ear. Clint is deaf too, or partially so, but unlike Echo, Clint is late-deafened, the result of years of explosions, violence, and general superhero stuff alluded to in a great, brief flashback. Echo signs to Clint, who immediately apologizes in oral English and signs to her that he is Hard of Hearing, not fully deaf. When she signs again, he can't follow. He signs "More cookie, please. Thank you" — rudimentary signs that perhaps his youngest son, learning American Sign Language (ASL) in support of his dad, might sign to him.

Echo turns away, dismissive of him due to his ignorance, and her interpreter, Kazi (Fra Fee) binds Clint's hands again. "You rely too much on technology," Echo says through her interpreter. "You might find you're better off without it." Clint looks at Kate, who is hearing, before answering orally: "Yeah, sometimes I think that very same thing."

The conversation moves on. But it is not over.

RELATED:Marvel's first deaf superhero shines, but "Eternals" has an accessibility problem

This episode, titled "Echoes," has been mostly welcomed by theDeaf communityfor its mostly accurate representation of deafness. Along with the casting of Cox, stunning in her debut role,Renner himself identifies as Hard of Hearing, which lends authenticity to his subtle but nuanced performance.

After Echo crushes his hearing aid in a fight, Clint can't hear anything. He doesn't realize Kate has spoken (and Renner doesn't make the mistake of turning to her), yet repeats some of her spoken thoughts, indicating that they're on the same page — she's the Robin to his Batman. Clint moves to the opposite side of Kate as they walk on the street so he can hear her better. He removes his repaired hearing aid from his ear while at lunch with her — and earlier in the series, at aBroadway-musical versionof the Avengers — to give himself a break from hearing. Or, from the Captain America-heavy dance numbers.

Listening fatigue is a real phenomenon. The intense concentration required for deaf people to navigate a hearing world, including trying to follow spoken conversations, have situational awareness, and handle noisy situations, causes physical pain such as headaches. I'm not sure I've ever seen a story purportedly about deafness that includes this detail, nor even begins to make the argument, like Echo seems to be doing, as to why deaf people might not want to or need to physically hear all the time.

Disclosure time: I am half deaf, and have been since birth. I don't wear hearing aids or any assistive technology; originally, because I was told my condition couldn't really be helped by them. But now, like Echo, I am happy the way I am. Like Clint, I hear some, I read lips some, and I sign some.

For me as a deaf person, the most accurate scene of deafness in "Hawkeye" comes early in the "Echoes" episode: Maya as a young, deaf child (the luminous Darnell Besaw) in a "mainstream" school, with no deaf classmates, no deaf friends. An outsider, excluded, she simply puts her head down and does all her work, to the amazement of her hearing teacher. She is totally alone.

Later, when Mayaasks her father, played by the always wonderful Zahn McClarnon, why she can't go to a deaf school (the familycan't afford it— a realistic detail about life as a disabled person which I hope is explored more), her father explains that she will simply have to learn to "jump between two worlds, the hearing and the deaf . . . just by watching."

It was at that moment my partner, who is hearing, reached across the couch to seize my hand. "It's you," he said.

As someone who is partially deaf, kept from sign language as a child, mainstreamed but unable to pass as hearing: I don't think I've ever seen my identity portrayed on screen this way.

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Being both/neither can be difficult. Jumping between worlds, or trying to, means you have no central world to call your own, no home. What reads as very real to me about Echo is her loneliness, loneliness that comes off Cox's performance in waves — and loneliness that Clint, as a character who went deaf later in life, doesn't exactly have in the same way.

An aspect of being deaf is that people exclude you constantly. One way I learned to handle that myself wasto retreat, to put my head down, to do all my work, to the amazement of my hearing teachers. It makes sense that Echo seems to be a loner, that she is hyper-capable, vigilant, observant, and tough. She's had to be.

What "Hawkeye" gets right about deafness –and what it glosses over (2)Alaqua Cox in "Hawkeye" (Marvel Studios)

Some aspects of deafness in the show do not seem as realistic or nuanced to me. Clint's hearing aid works perfectly — said no deaf person ever. It squeals when he puts it in, but otherwise, the show fails to convey how hearing aids turn the whole world up — not simply one conversation — which can be overwhelming and deadening. His hearing aid destroyed, Clint still manages to hear a Tracksuit henchman behind him. And the specifics of Clint's deafness remain fuzzy, which is sort of in line with thesource material, where deafness played an essential, if not always consistently remembered, role.

These inaccuracies may stem from the fact that no writers of "Hawkeye" identify as deaf, though the show did have deaf consultants, including, according to co-writerKatie Mathewson, a representative from the disability nonprofit RespectAbility.

Unlike most media that includesrepresentations of deafness(or any disability), ableism doesn't run rampant through "Hawkeye." Kate accepts Clint's deafness instantly. She doesn't expect him to hear her or get annoyed when he doesn't. The Tracksuit Mafia, the bad guys that Echo leads, portrayed as bumbling meatheads, have not learned ASL to communicate with her, but her hearing father did. Importantly, Clint's deafness is not played for laughs. It's not a joke and it's not his whole identity, nor a superpower, as it is not for Echo. Deafness is simply part of them, one part.

The deaf actors in "Hawkeye" are a great first step, as is the constant awareness of deafness that runs through the show. But "Hawkeye" needs deaf writers too. Along with acknowledging the existence of deaf lives, Marvel needs to acknowledge the existence of deaf talent, talent that extends beyond disabled actors performing roles written by abled creators (possibly Echo's plannedspin-offis a platform to start doing this). "Nothing about us without us," a slogan with roots in disability justice, is one Marvel would do well to study, perhaps just as much as "Avengers assemble."

"Hawkeye" releases new episodes on Wednesdays on Disney+.

More stories like this:

  • Making the "Only Murders in the Building" nearly silent episode
  • Jeremy Renner on what's missing from Marvel movies
  • "Hawkeye" reminds us why Jeremy Renner's archer is the least Avenger

By Alison Stine

Alison Stine is a former staff writer at Salon. She is the author of the novels "Trashlands" and "Road Out of Winter," winner of the 2021 Philip K. Dick Award. A recipient of an Individual Artist Fellowship from the National Endowment for the Arts (NEA), she has written for The New York Times, The Guardian, and others.

MORE FROM Alison Stine

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What "Hawkeye" gets right about deafness – and what it glosses over (2024)

FAQs

What fraction of Hawkeye is deaf? ›

At one point in his comics history, Hawkeye was 80% deaf in the aftermath of a big battle. He was held captive by a villain named Crossfire, and while fighting another villain named Mockingbird, he bit down on a sonic arrow, which stopped the fight but permanently damaged his hearing.

Why is Hawkeye going deaf? ›

Hawkeye's hearing loss is a result of the cumulative impact of trauma, which offers a physical balance to the mental trauma that played such a key part in Iron Man's Phase 2 story arc and for Black Widow in her life, as well, which also explains Natasha's use of ibuprofen.

Is Jeremy Renner actually deaf? ›

Is Jeremy Renner deaf in real life? During a press conference hosted by Brandon Davis of ComicBook.com, Jeremy Renner spoke about his hearing difficulties, clarifying that he is not completely deaf but rather hard of hearing. Renner stated that this has been a significant aspect of his life.

Why is Hawkeye the weakest Avenger? ›

Hawkeye might be considered the weakest Avenger in the Marvel Cinematic Universe due to the extent of his abilities, but his best superpower has nothing to do with a bow and arrow. From the moment the McU's Avengers were assembled, Jeremy Renner's Clint Barton has stood out a bit.

Why can t Clint hear? ›

To spare Mockingbird's life, Clint sacrificed himself using an invention of his own: a sonic arrowhead. The pair eventually disarmed the villain, but Clint was left 80% deaf due to the encounter and was given hearing aids at the end of the issue.

Is Maya in Hawkeye actually deaf? ›

After making her debut as Echo (aka Maya Lopez) in last year's Disney+ series Hawkeye, Cox became the first major Indigenous character — and only second deaf one — to be prominently featured in the Marvel Cinematic Universe. And next year, Cox, 25, will get her own spinoff series, Echo.

Was Hawkeye born deaf in the comics? ›

After dying and coming back, Clink Barton's hearing was restored. It wasn't until Fraction and artist David Aja's Hawkeye did the character lose his hearing again, this time through a retcon. In Fraction's run, Clint wasn't originally born deaf but was deafened as a child.

Why did Hawkeye become Ronin? ›

As in comic books, Clint's grief and trauma led him to leave behind his Hawkeye identity to become Ronin, though in the MCU this is due to the loss of his family as a result of Thanos' Snap.

Was Hawkeye always deaf in the comics? ›

He was only deaf for a minority of his time in the comics (Hawkeye's been around for nearly 52 years, from 1964, and he was deaf in the comics for 14 of those years, from 1983 to 1997) and the MCU hasn't really been heavily influenced by the 80s and 90s versions of its characters.

Who is the 2 weakest avenger? ›

10 Weakest Avengers With The Most Useful Powers
  1. 1 The Wasp.
  2. 2 Ant-Man/Yellowjacket/Giant-Man/Goliath (Hank Pym) ...
  3. 3 Hawkeye. ...
  4. 4 Captain America (Steve Rogers) ...
  5. 5 Black Widow. ...
  6. 6 Black Panther. ...
  7. 7 Wolverine. ...
  8. 8 Ant-Man II (Scott Lang) ...
Feb 16, 2023

Who is the weakest version of Avengers? ›

The Weakest Avenger

On the other side of the spectrum, we have Ant-Man, his daughter Cassie Lang, and the two Hawkeyes: Clint Barton and Kate Bishop.

Who is the number 1 weakest avenger? ›

Hawkeye. On numerous occasions in the comics, Clint Barton has said he's just a regular guy with a bow and arrow. Unfortunately, his lack of power usually leads to him suffering injuries regularly and has led to fans deeming him the weakest member of the Avengers.

Is Hawkeye deaf in 616? ›

For a time, he was 80% deaf due to an injury sustained while in Crossfire's captivity, but his hearing was restored during his rebirth on Franklin Richards' Counter-Earth.

Is Hawkeye good deaf representation? ›

Hawkeye is hard of hearing (HoH), though the show does give audiences a Deaf protagonist in Alaqua Cox's Maya Lopez aka Echo. Clint Barton (Jeremy Renner) even tells Maya this in the show…and yet, there are still dozens of articles calling Hawkeye deaf.

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