Johnny Novgorod said:
Wonder Woman ages normally in Themyscira, while every other Amazon appears to be the same age 20 or 30 years later. Do Amazons grow up to a certain age then stay like that forever?
It really depends on the continuity, and I'm not sure they've explained how the rules work in the current era, post-Nu52, whose
horrible fucking bullshit has already been explained. Prior to that, the Amazons were not born at all. Rather, they were the reincarnated souls of women who died at the hands of male violence, sprung forth at their current age from the immaculate womb of Gaia by the female gods of Olympus to create a superior breed of human. Wonder Woman was the last of these souls, held back in order to fulfill a prophecy, imbued into a clay effigy of a baby when her mother Hippolyta was stricken by a (probably god-induced) urge to have a baby.
Johnny Novgorod said:
Are they immortal (as far as aging is concerned)?
In the continuity I just described, yes.
Johnny Novgorod said:
Is the island supposed to be stuck in time or something?
Not in the continuity I just described. It's just part of being an Amazon.
Johnny Novgorod said:
How do they reproduce if there aren't any men in the island (Diana acknowledges to Steve "men are necessary for reproduction")?
In the continuity I described, they don't.
Johnny Novgorod said:
Is there just a limited number of Amazons in existence?
In the continuity I &c, more Amazons can be created by the gods of Olympus as more women die to male violence.
Samtemdo8 said:
Nah, the whole clay thing just does not make any sense.
It makes plenty of sense. The man most credited (falsely and unfairly) with creating Wonder Woman, William Moulton Marston, lived in a polyamorous relationship with his wife, Elizabeth Holloway Marston, and their lover, Olive Byrne. Both women had children with him and raised them together as a single family. This is relevant because in continuity, Diana was formed from clay by Hippolyta at the urging of the oracle Menalippe, and Diana's birth was quickened by the god Artemis. It's a reference to the home life of Wonder Woman's creators; a child born of three parents, with a little magic thrown in to allow all three to be female.
Samtemdo8 said:
And her being the daughter of Zeus has to idea of involving the Greek Gods into the story more so.
This is factually untrue. It involves the Olympians
less, since it removes the influence of the six female Greek gods who released the Amazons' souls from Gaia's womb, and replaces them with the presence of one god, who peed in a woman's vagoo. Every part of the story is less mythical for it.