Citations:Richonne

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English citations of Richonne

Proper noun: "(fandom slang) the ship of characters Rick Grimes and Michonne from the television series The Walking Dead"

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  • 2016, "Spartan Shield", The Sentinel Konah (Sentinel High School, Missoula), 3 March 2016, page 8:
    Let's just make sure Richonne leaves room for Jesus.
  • 2016, Danielle S. Tepper, "Top Five TV Power Couples", Town & Country Gazette, 17 March 2016, page 40:
    Richonne just seemed like something all of Tumblr was screaming for but might not ever happen (like Caryl, though I'm still gunning for that one), but now it's actually real.
  • 2017, Amanda Taylor, "Love and Marriage in the Time of The Walking Dead", in Romancing the Zombie: Essays on the Undead as Significant "Other" (eds. Ashley Szanter & Jessica K. Richards), page 87:
    Though Glenn and Maggie and "Richonne" are monogamous, heteronormative relationships: one man, one woman, and clear relationship roles, the roles are interchangeable and fluid dependent on the situation.
  • 2017, Bryan Cairns, "Fighting Back!", The Walking Dead: The Official Magazine, Spring 2017, page 20:
    With just a few episodes of seasons seven left to air, TWDM caught up with Danai Gurira to talk Negan, Richonne, the coming war, and some exciting projects away from AMC's The Walking Dead.
  • 2017, Tara Bennett, "Carnival Of Monsters", The Walking Dead: The Official Magazine, Fall 2017, page 43:
    The setting is a long-abandoned elementary school, where Rick and Michonne will get the rare opportunity to revel in a fleeting bubble of romance and humor, celebrating one of the show's most famous 'ships: Richone.
  • 2018, Yvette Nicole Brown, quoted in Jeremey Vincent Adolphson, "'We'll Get Through This Together': Fan Cultures and Mediated Social Support on AMC's The Walking Dead", dissertation submitted to the University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee, page 91:
    I will run into someone who’s a fan of the show and they’ll have a question or want to discuss the finer points of Richonne.
  • 2019, Brooke Bennett, "'Posts' in the zombie apocalypse: post-feminism and postracial discourses in The Walking Dead and Z Nation", Feminist Media Studies, Volume 19, Issue 5 (2019):
    Michonne is not presented in any sexual or romantic relationships until much later in the series with the appearance of the Richonne (Rick and Michonne) relationship in season six, which is beyond the scope of this paper as mentioned above.
  • 2019, Sumiko Saulson "From Sidekick to Romantic Lead: Rise of the Strong Black Woman", in Fourth Wave Feminism in Science Fiction and Fantasy: Volume 2. Essays on Television Representations, 2013-2019 (ed. Valerie Estelle Frankel), page 93:
    The Walking Dead's Richone was a big deal because it elevated Michonne from sidekick to romantic female lead.
  • 2019, Suzanne Scott, Fake Geek Girls: Fandom, Gender, and the Convergence Culture Industry, page 137:
    Brown's longstanding advocacy for the “Richonne” ship is especially illustrative to consider.