List of fictional vegetarian and vegan characters
This is a list of fictional characters who either self-identify as vegetarian or vegan, or have been identified as such by others.
Analysis and reception of characters
[edit]Some scholars have argued that mass media serves as a "source of information for individuals" interested in vegetarianism or veganism,[1] while there are "increasing social sanctions against eating meat."[2][3] Even so, there are lingering stereotypes of vegans and vegetarians in the same media,[4][5] with journalist Farhad Manjoo writing in August 2019 that it is "still widely acceptable to make fun of vegans." Manjoo observed that vegetarian and vegan characters are often portrayed negatively, such as being "smug" and "annoying". This portrayal, he suggested, can contribute to vegaphobia and may encourage meat-eaters to mock and provoke those who do not consume meat.[6] Some writers, such as John L. Cunningham, have argued for "more sympathetic vegetarian characters in the mass media".[7]
Criteria for inclusion
[edit]- Listed characters are either protagonists and recurring characters.
- Characters must come from somewhat well-known media, as opposed to obscure or indie media.
- Animal characters (herbivores) are, for the most part with some exceptions, excluded from this list, especially if it is not actually stated that they do not eat meat.
The names are organized alphabetically by surname (i.e. last name), or by single name if the character does not have a surname. If more than two characters are in one entry, the last name of the first character is used.
Animated series
[edit]Characters | Show title | Character debut date | Country | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|
Aang | Avatar: The Last Airbender, The Legend of Korra | February 21, 2005 | USA | According to the show's creators, "Buddhism and Taoism have been huge inspirations behind the idea for Avatar."[8] As shown in "The King of Omashu" and "The Headband", a notable aspect of Aang's character is his vegetarian diet,[9] which is consistent with Buddhism, Hinduism, and Taoism.[8] In the Brahmajala Sutra, a Buddhist code of ethics, vegetarianism is encouraged.[10] |
Appa | Avatar: The Last Airbender | Appa, Aang's Sky Bison, is also vegetarian.[11] | ||
Beast Boy | Teen Titans, Teen Titans Go! | July 19, 2003 | USA | He has been transformed into "animals who are commonly used for meat production," with some criticizing his character as a stereotype of a "militant crybaby vegetarian."[12][13] He has also been a vegetarian in the comics since 2017.[9] |
Jessica Cruz (Green Lantern) | DC Super Hero Girls | March 8, 2019 | USA | A lead character in this series, she is not only a pacifist, but also a vegan and environmentalist,[14][15] resulting in her becoming friends with Pam Isley. She often professes her commitment to the environment and plant-based meals.[16][17] |
Count Duckula | Count Duckula | September 6, 1988 | UK | As the series went into production, one of the writers suggested he become a vegetarian, which added an even sillier concept to the series, making him "an egotistical vegetarian vampire duck" within a castle.[18][19] |
Draculaura | Monster High | May 5, 2010 | USA | Some have said she deserves recognition as "one of the very few outspoken vegan cartoon characters out there."[20] Despite being a vampire, she consumes fruits, vegetables and "a lot of iron supplements" instead of blood.[21] Mattel vice-president of design Kiyomi Haverly said "she's a vegan. She's turned off by meat. Girls could really relate to that because that's part of what they're thinking of these days."[22] |
Bliss Goode | The Goode Family | May 27, 2009 | USA | The family are made up of a number of vegetarian environmentalists who attempt to be "politically correct in every way."[23] |
Charlie | ||||
Che | ||||
Gerald Goode | ||||
Helen Goode | ||||
Ubuntu Goode | ||||
Petratishkovna "Tish" Katsufrakis | The Weekenders | February 26, 2000 | USA | Intelligent and artistic, Tish is openly vegetarian, and eats a "carrot in a bun" in the show's opening credits.[9] |
Mira | The Hollow | June 8, 2018 | Canada | In the first episode of Season 2, Mira's dad, Curtis, says "one veggie burger, for our favorite herbivore" and later, her adopted brother, Miles, says "...you're a vegetarian, remember?"[24] While Mira accepts this, she still realizes the world is fake. In the series finale, Curtis serves Mira and her friends veggie burgers.[25] |
Nadia | Nadia: The Secret of Blue Water | April 13, 1990 | Japan | The main protagonist of the series. She has the ability to communicate with animals and cares deeply for them. She is a pacifist and a vegetarian, and openly condemns violence, meat-eating, and hunting.[26] |
Apu Nahasapeemapetilon | The Simpsons | February 25, 1990 | USA | Apu is a vegan, as revealed in the season 7 episode "Lisa the Vegetarian".[20] |
Panda | We Bare Bears | July 27, 2015 | USA | The show's pilot and in the episode "Tote Life" he is revealed to be a vegetarian who does not eat eggs.[27] The latter is shown in the episode "Christmas Parties." While it isn't known if he drinks milk, he is, at least, an ovo vegetarian, along with having severe allergies to peanuts and cats. |
Iron Fist (Danny Rand) | Ultimate Spider-Man | April 1, 2012 | USA | A martial artist also known by the name Iron Fist, he can not only "summon his chi," but he is a vegetarian, with his diet mentioned directly in this animated series.[13] |
Norville "Shaggy" Rogers | What's New, Scooby Doo? | September 14, 2002 | USA | Before this animated series, Shaggy, known for having an "enormous appetite" earlier in the Scooby-Doo franchise, "started leaving meat out of his meals" and in one episode it is shown that he is vegetarian. The decision to make Shaggy a vegetarian occurred after his voice actor, Casey Kasem, convinced the producers to do so, since he was a vegan who supported animal rights and opposed factory farming, saying he would refuse to voice Shaggy unless the character was vegetarian.[28][29] |
Lisa Simpson | The Simpsons | December 17, 1989 | USA | In the October 15, 1995, episode, "Lisa the Vegetarian," Lisa decides to stop eating meat after bonding with a lamb at a petting zoo. Her schoolmates and family members ridicule her for her beliefs, but with the help of Apu as well as Paul and Linda McCartney, she commits to vegetarianism.[30] The staff promised that she would remain a vegetarian,[31][32] resulting in one of the few permanent character changes made in the show.[33] |
Tenzin | The Legend of Korra | April 28, 2012 | USA | Tenzin, like all Air Nomads, follows a strict vegetarian diet.[34][35] He attempts to convince a meat-eating airbender to join them in the episode "Rebirth", by noting the vegetarian diet of airbenders.[36] |
Steven Universe | Steven Universe, Steven Universe Future | November 4, 2013 | USA | In the episode "Snow Day" of Steven Universe Future, Steven tells the other Crystal Gems that he has been a vegetarian for a month, drinks protein shakes, and does "his own skincare routine."[37] |
Comics
[edit]Characters | Name of comic | Years | Country | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|
Bernhard "Buddy" Baker (Animal Man) | Animal Man | 1988-1990 | USA | Buddy, otherwise known as Animal Man, argued with his wife "about meat consumption," criticized conditions in factory farms, and opposed scientific testing on animals. He also, in another comic, assists animal rights activists in helping save dolphins, leading some to call him "probably most active in fighting for animal rights" of all the superhero characters.[12][13][9] |
Bruce Banner | Ultimate Wolverine vs. Hulk | 2005-2009 | USA | While the Hulk eats people, it is shown in Ultimate Wolverine vs. Hulk that Bruce Banner is vegan, but it is not known if this has "anything to do with his alter ego's cannibalistic tendencies."[13] |
Broo | Astonishing X-Men Vol. 3 | 2004–2013 | USA | Mutant of the Brood race and formerly a student at the Jean Grey School of the X-Men, he is an "extremely sensitive, intelligent, and caring" character who is also vegetarian.[12] |
Karolina Dean | Runaways | 2003–present | USA | Dean, also known as Lucy in the Sky or L.S.D., is a lesbian, a vegan, and "an ardent animal lover...committed to a life completely free of meat and dairy."[13][9] |
Connor Hawke (Green Arrow) | More Fun Comics | 1935-1947 | USA | Previously the sidekick of Green Arrow, he becomes "the second Green Arrow," and it was shown that he "was a practicing Buddhist and devout vegetarian."[13] Later he ended up in a coma, not remembering being a hero, archer, or vegetarian, although he somehow healed himself. |
Todd Ingram | Scott Pilgrim | 2006 | Canada | Todd is Ramona Flowers's third ex-boyfriend and a rock star who is "really smart or incredibly dumb." However, being a vegan gives him "psychic powers" which he uses against Pilgrim in Scott Pilgrim and the Infinite Sadness, although he is later revealed to be "cheating on his vegan diet."[13] He later appears in Scott Pilgrim Takes Off, where he can make "vegan portals" and is in a romantic relationship with Wallace Wells on the movie set.[38] |
Magneto | Ultimate X-Men no. 1 - Ultimatum no. 5 | 2001-2009 | USA | He has "chosen to abstain from animal products" for unknown reasons, possibly because he "feels for the animals and does not want to harm innocent creatures."[13] |
Wanda Maximoff | Scarlet Witch vol. 2 | 2016 | USA | Originally introduced in 1964 as a villain, Wanda, otherwise known as the Scarlet Witch, later became "a member of the Avengers," and it is later revealed that she doesn't eat meat or drink alcohol.[13] She was later depicted in the Marvel Cinematic Universe. |
Millie | Mutts | 1994-present | USA | In a number of comic strips in Thanksgiving 2013, Millie, who owns a cat, "decides to cook a vegan meal" for Thanksgiving,[39] with her husband not "sold on the idea,"[40] but later admits he "didn't miss the turkey."[9][41] |
Persephone | Lore Olympus | 2018-present | New Zealand | 19-year-old Persephone, also known as Persie and Kore, is the goddess of spring, and a naive, warmhearted newcomer to Olympian life, and is searching for her independence.[42] She is revealed to be vegetarian in episode 79 of the webcomic.[43] |
Linus Van Pelt | Peanuts | 1950-2000 | USA | Linus self-identifies as a vegetarian in a Thanksgiving strip published on November 24, 1994.[44] |
Adrian Veidt (Ozymandias) | Watchmen | 1986-1987 | England | Veidt, otherwise known as Ozymandias, who began as a hero but later became a villain, is a vegetarian, perhaps because of his "love for his feline companion."[13] |
Damian Wayne (Robin) | Batman Incorporated Vol. 2, no. 1 | 2012 | USA | Robin, otherwise known as Damian Wayne, becomes a vegetarian after "a mission that took place in a slaughterhouse," adopting a cow, which dubs a "Bat-Cow."[12][9] His decision to continue being a vegetarian was also "referenced several issues later."[13] |
Zatanna Zatara | Hawkman | 1964-1968 | USA | A powerful magician, she is a vegetarian, works with animals in her magic acts, and "has a particular affinity for bunnies."[13][9] Due to her long history in DC Comics, she has been named as one of DC's best and most powerful female characters[45][46] and one of the Justice League's greatest and most important characters.[47] |
Film
[edit]Characters | Title / Franchise | Actor | Year | Country | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Lenny | Shark Tale | Jack Black | 2004 | USA | Lenny, Don Lino's youngest son, is a vegetarian shark, younger brother of Frankie, and later a good friend of Oscar. Additionally, Michael Imperioli is embarrassed of Lenny's vegetarian views.[48] |
Ian Miller | My Big Fat Greek Wedding | John Corbett | 2002 | USA/ Canada | It is stated in the film that Ian is a vegetarian.[49] |
Lex Murphy | Jurassic Park | Ariana Richards | 1993 | USA | [50] |
Maria Posada | The Book of Life | Zoe Saldaña | 2014 | USA | Maria is a woman who cared for a pig and rescued him from slaughter. Though she is not said to be vegetarian within the movie itself, director Jorge R. Gutierrez confirmed her to be vegetarian on Twitter, replying "Yup!" to the question "Is Maria a vegetarian because she loves animals so much?"[51] |
M'Baku | Black Panther | Winston Duke | 2018 | USA | In the film, M’Baku, the Jabari tribe leader who lives in the mountains of Wakanda, declares to a White CIA agent named Everett Ross, "if you say one more word, I'll feed you to my children!" After Everett is shaken by these words, he jokes, saying he is kidding because all those in his tribe, including himself, are vegetarians.[52] Some praised this scene for challenging a stereotype of Black culture and the perception of what vegetarians look like.[53] Duke later said that some Black outlets cooked vegan meals for him, and said that the scene is "kind of teaching kids that eating vegetables is cool," which is something he is for.[54] |
Megan | But I'm A Cheerleader | Natasha Lyonne | 2000 | USA | Before she is sent to a conversion therapy camp, her parents and others claim she is a lesbian because she is a vegetarian.[55] |
Elle Woods | Legally Blonde | Reese Witherspoon | 2001 | USA | When she introduces herself at Harvard Law School, she describes herself and her dog as "Gemini vegetarians."[56] |
Yeong-hye | Vegetarian | Chae Min-seo | 2009 | South Korea | This film is a portrait of a woman, Yeong-hye, who "swears off meat before retreating into a literally vegetative state."[57] |
Games
[edit]Characters | Title/Series | Year | Developer | Country | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Herbert P. Bear | Club Penguin | 2007 | New Horizon Interactive | Canada | The main antagonist of the game, Herbert is depicted with traits that contrast real-life polar bears, including following a vegetarian diet.[58] |
Bryce the Steer | Steer Madness | 2004 | Johnathan Skinner | UK | In this animal rights inspired action-adventure game, the player assumes the role of Bryce the Cow, a walking, talking bovine determined to put an end to animal exploitation and turn everyone vegetarian.[59] During gameplay, the player goes on a series of missions to save the animals using many different tactics. The game is based in an open city environment and features several transportation methods, with gameplay similar to the game Grand Theft Auto III (without the guns or violence), and was given a PETA award.[60] |
Sofia Daguerre | Fallout 76 | 2020 | Bethesda Softworks | USA | Sofia was added in the 2020 Wastelanders update. If the super mutant Graham passes by her, Sofia tells him she does not eat meat.[citation needed] |
Elena | Pandora's Tower | 2011 | Ganbarion | Japan | Elena is a young woman who is cursed to transform into a monster. Very early in the game, she is offered to eat meat to repress her condition. This is an issue for her because she follows a religion called Aios which forbids meat-eating. Although Elena eats it, she must do so to prevent transforming into a monster. She is unhappy about having to consume flesh to keep her humanity, and she self-identifies as a vegetarian nonetheless.[61] |
Jonrón | Far Cry 6 | 2021 | Ubisoft Toronto | Canada | Near the end of the game, the revolutionaries are holding a BBQ to celebrate. Jonrón requests plant-based options. Another character then explains that she’s vegan.[62] |
Monika | Doki Doki Literature Club! | 2017 | Team Salvato | USA | Near the end of the game, during the Monika's Talk segment, Monika mentions she is vegetarian, but mainly to reduce the carbon footprint on Earth as opposed to the ethics of slaughter.[63] |
Literature
[edit]Characters | Work | Author | Year | Country | Description |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Elizabeth Costello | Elizabeth Costello | J. M. Coetzee | 2003 | Australia | In this fictional work, Elizabeth is a well-regarded Australian writer who, instead of talking about her novel, wants to talk about "fiction, realism, and the human-animal divide," outlining her reasons for being in favor of animal rights and vegetarianism.[4] The book also has Elizabeth call the killing of animals an animal holocaust and engages with Franz Kafka, a "literary vegetarian." |
August Engelhardt | Imperium | Christian Kracht | 2012 | Switzerland | August is the author of an 1898 pamphlet entitled A Carefree Future, where he describes a utopian society founded on nudism and a diet of coconuts, so-called cocovorism. An ardent vegetarian, Engelhardt argues that just as man is God's embodiment in the animal kingdom, so too is the coconut God's embodiment in the plant kingdom; cocovorism, he concludes, is therefore the path to divinity.[64] |
Frankenstein's monster | Frankenstein; or, The Modern Prometheus | Mary Shelley | 1818 | England | Frankenstein's monster in this novel said he is a vegetarian who eats "acorns and berries."[65] |
Herb | Herb, the Vegetarian Dragon | Jules Bass | 1999 | USA | Herb, a friendly dragon who lives in Nogard, a magical forest, likes tending a vegetable patch and is captured by a knight, with others agreeing to help him only if he "agrees to eat meat."[66][67] The Vegetarian Resource Group praised this children's book for being fun, entertaining, and said that from it, "children can learn about the strength of ideals and individualism" and getting along with others.[68] |
Debbie Harter | |||||
Hazel Lancaster | The Fault in Our Stars | John Green | 2012 | USA | Hazel is vegetarian out of her desire to minimize the number of deaths she is "responsible for" as a human from her diet.[4][69] |
Simon Lewis | The Mortal Instruments series | Cassandra Clare | 2007-2014 | USA | Simon is the 16-year-old friend of the protagonist and has been a vegetarian for six years. As the story moves forward, his diet ends up only being "an interesting detail."[69] |
Lola Nolan | Lola and the Boy Next Door | Stephanie Perkins | 2012 | USA | Lola wears costumes of various themes and wigs daily and loves her dads. Her vegetarianism has been described as "a perfectly natural part" of her character.[69] |
Andi Oliver | Dakota | Martha Grimes | 2008 | USA | Andi is a drifter who suffers from amnesia, comes upon animal abuse, and feels she must do something, pointing out the inconsistency of eating animals when people say they care about animal welfare. The book was praised by the Vegetarian Resource Group for emphasizing the "need of individuals to speak out against factory farms."[70] |
Dawn Read Schafer | The Baby-Sitters Club series | Ann M. Martin | 1986-2000 | USA | Dawn, a recent transplant to Connecticut, meets four other girls who want to babysit for the whole neighborhood, and becomes the "resident Californian," dedicated to healthy food, sunshine, and "her vegetarian diet."[4] Some described her character as introducing "a generation of readers to vegetarianism." |
Vivian Sharpe | Adventures of Vivian Sharpe, Vegan Superhero | Marla Rose | 2012 | USA | Vivian, a character who is deeply empathetic, becomes a superhero and has a pathway that leads her to veganism.[71] Aileen McGraw of the Vegetarian Resource Group praised the book for being an "authentic coming-of-age story" that exposes vegan youth to "teenage challenges."[72] |
Mia Thermopolis | The Princess Diaries series | Meg Cabot | 2000-2015 | USA | At one point in the series, Mia, whose full name is Amelia Mignonette Grimaldi Thermopolis Renaldo, says she does not eat meat when talking about her mother's cooking, something which her mother respects.[4] She also lives in a community which is likely "more than accepting" of her vegetarianism.[69] |
Yeong-hye | The Vegetarian | Han Kang | 2007 | South Korea | Based on Han's 1997 short story "The Fruit of My Woman", The Vegetarian is set in modern-day Seoul and tells the story of Yeong-hye, a part-time graphic artist and home-maker, whose decision to stop eating meat after a bloody, nightmarish dream about human cruelty leads to devastating consequences in her personal and familial life.[73] |
Mathilde Yoder | Fates and Furies | Lauren Groff | 2015 | USA | Mathilde, a woman who manages the work of her husband, Lotto, after quitting her job at an art gallery, is a vegetarian due to an "exposé on television about industrial husbandry."[4] Some called this notable because vegetarianism, or pescatarianism to be specific, "is subtle throughout the majority of the book." |
Live-action television
[edit]Characters | Actor | Show | Duration | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|
Rachel Berry | Lea Michele | Glee | 2009–2015 | At the beginning of the show, she was depicted as vegan, but it was later clarified that she was "actually a vegetarian," meaning she can have eggs and dairy.[74][29] |
Phoebe Buffay | Lisa Kudrow | Friends | 1994–2004 | Due in no small part to her extremely traumatic childhood, Phoebe has developed a childlike naïveté in an attempt to shield her from the world's evils. In addition to being a vegetarian and an avid tree-hugger, she also displays a remarkable lack of experience with the "darker sides" of life.[75][29] |
Topanga Lawrence | Danielle Fishel | Boy Meets World | 1993–2000 | She is a vegetarian who begins dating Cory, and he invites her to dinner at the International House of Salad, known as IHOS, after learning her dietary preferences.[76] |
Angela Martin | Angela Kinsey | The Office | 2005–2013 | Angela has said that she is a vegetarian on multiple occasions.[29] However, some reviewers believed that writers may have forgot she was vegetarian.[77] |
Nikita Mears | Maggie Q | Nikita | 2010–2013 | The episode "Glass Houses" features Nikita conspicuously declining to eat the meat she is served as a guest at a family dinner, which other characters comment on. While Maggie Q herself is a vegan,[78] Nikita is shown in that same episode to be eating ice cream, indicating that the character is not. |
Britta Perry | Gillian Jacobs | Community | 2009–2015 | A vegetarian, she prides herself on judging others in her study group, including on their eating habits, with her heart "always in the right place."[29] She also is an anarchist, atheist, and activist who traveled around the world after dropping out of high school. |
Spock | Leonard Nimoy | Star Trek | 1966–1969 | Said to be "television's first vegetarian," he and other Vulcans avoided eating meat due to a "philosophy of non-violence."[29] He is identified as vegetarian following an episode where he was "transported back to pre-civilised times" and ate meat. |
See also
[edit]- Go Vegan
- South Asian Veggie Table
- List of vegetarians
- List of vegans
- List of vegetarian and vegan companies
- List of vegetarian festivals
- List of vegetarian restaurants
- Environmental vegetarianism
- Ethics of eating meat
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External links
[edit]- Grant Lingel, Veganism Gets No Respect in the Media and This is Why, Sentient Media, May 9, 2019
- Jack Price-Darbyshire, Feminists and vegans are given an unfair portrayal in the media, Epigram, October 31, 2018
- Anam Alam, Representation of vegans in movies and TV shows, The Vegan Review, July 19, 2020
- Archived Greenpeace International "Fun & games" page