#djeliya
![](https://64.media.tumblr.com/31454e15cacc64b9fe3c6698c256b5a4/b46d8c56525d449c-4c/s640x960/c08ef5ecd18f4caac2f3ef479aaf7f2cbaaa0fef.jpg)
![](https://64.media.tumblr.com/054e4409e76e08c2a93d0616d9fe9ebd/b46d8c56525d449c-f6/s640x960/01b65db5e2f24bce35cbdef1a52a695a8095e702.jpg)
![](https://64.media.tumblr.com/9c7294885fb6a588f815a46215bc5fab/b46d8c56525d449c-9e/s640x960/577b216879720f492ef9085cb85f115c5155f65c.jpg)
![](https://64.media.tumblr.com/1079fcafa9e793a111c9c1ca830705b1/b46d8c56525d449c-13/s640x960/ecaf335ef4779beda163e1c5187080c189bac287.jpg)
![](https://64.media.tumblr.com/1e73b3d83a6564e3452decbf85a176b3/b46d8c56525d449c-0c/s640x960/dd61bcab0e9652b76285030d82dc1fc87de5da80.jpg)
There’s a new wave of comics creators using their own cultural history and folklore to create superpowered heroes and fantastic worlds – comics writer Zack Quaintance spoke to a few of them (like DjeliyaauthorJuni Ba) about how the comics market has changed to allow more creators to tell these kinds of stories – check it out here!
![loading](images/loading.gif)