Superheroes and Masculinity: Unmasking the Gender Performance of Heroism
Editat de Sean Parson, J.L. Schatz Contribuţii de Hailey J. Austin, Julian Barr, Anne Bialowas, TJ Buttgereit, Ryan Cheek, Kevin Cummings, Kiera Gaswint, Brian Johnson, Emily Mendelson, Jacob Murel, David J. Roberts, Edgar Sandovalen Limba Engleză Hardback – 24 oct 2019
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Specificații
ISBN-13: 9781498591492
ISBN-10: 1498591493
Pagini: 168
Dimensiuni: 159 x 233 x 18 mm
Greutate: 0.41 kg
Editura: Bloomsbury Publishing
Colecția Lexington Books
Locul publicării:New York, United States
ISBN-10: 1498591493
Pagini: 168
Dimensiuni: 159 x 233 x 18 mm
Greutate: 0.41 kg
Editura: Bloomsbury Publishing
Colecția Lexington Books
Locul publicării:New York, United States
Cuprins
Chapter One: Deconstructing the Hero-Sidekick Bromance: Foggy, Kato, and the Masculine Performance of Friendship
Ryan Cheek and Anne Bialowas
Chapter Two: If She Be Worthy: Performance of Female Masculinity and Toxic Geek Masculinity in Jason Aaron's Thor: The Goddess of Thunder
Hailey J. Austin
Chapter Three: Witches and Witchbreed in Marvel 1602
Kevin Cummings
Chapter Four: The Joker's Dionysian Philosophy of Gender and Sexuality in The Dark Knight
Jacob Murel
Chapter Five: There are Different Ways of Being Strong: Steven Universe and Developing a Caring Superhero Masculinity
Edgar Sandoval, Julian Barr, and David J. Roberts
Chapter Six: There Must Always be a Thor: Marvel's Thor the Goddess of Thunder and the Disruption of Heroic Masculinities
Kiera M Gaswint and Jeff Brown
Chapter Seven: Poisoning Masculinity: Poison Ivy as a Counter-Narrative of Villainy and Trauma through Representations of Queer Love in DC's Everyone Loves Ivy
TJ Buttgereit, Emily Mendelson, and JL Schatz
Chapter Eight: The New Teen Titans for Queer Boys: Emergent Masculinities and Sentimental Superhero Melodrama in the 1980s
Brian Johnson
Ryan Cheek and Anne Bialowas
Chapter Two: If She Be Worthy: Performance of Female Masculinity and Toxic Geek Masculinity in Jason Aaron's Thor: The Goddess of Thunder
Hailey J. Austin
Chapter Three: Witches and Witchbreed in Marvel 1602
Kevin Cummings
Chapter Four: The Joker's Dionysian Philosophy of Gender and Sexuality in The Dark Knight
Jacob Murel
Chapter Five: There are Different Ways of Being Strong: Steven Universe and Developing a Caring Superhero Masculinity
Edgar Sandoval, Julian Barr, and David J. Roberts
Chapter Six: There Must Always be a Thor: Marvel's Thor the Goddess of Thunder and the Disruption of Heroic Masculinities
Kiera M Gaswint and Jeff Brown
Chapter Seven: Poisoning Masculinity: Poison Ivy as a Counter-Narrative of Villainy and Trauma through Representations of Queer Love in DC's Everyone Loves Ivy
TJ Buttgereit, Emily Mendelson, and JL Schatz
Chapter Eight: The New Teen Titans for Queer Boys: Emergent Masculinities and Sentimental Superhero Melodrama in the 1980s
Brian Johnson
Recenzii
The superhero genre has undoubtedly dominated global popular culture in the past decade. Streaming shows, traditional television, film, graphic novels, and comic books have all featured the figure of the superhero, traditionally in all of his masculine glory. This collection, edited by Parson (Northern Arizona Univ.) and Schatz (Binghamton Univ.), shines when focusing on larger societal issues that problematize manhood, such as toxic masculinity, geek culture, the concept of bromance, and "homonationalism.". . The most successful essays include those on homosocial bonding between male superheroes and their sidekicks, by Anna Bialowas and Ryan Cheek; geek masculinity in Thor: The Goddess of Thunder, by Hailey J. Austin; and The New Teen Titans and its relationship to queer boys and adolescents, by Brian Johnson. . . the editors clearly demonstrate the multiple directions that such a topic can encompass. Summing Up: Recommended. With reservations. Lower-division undergraduates through faculty.
With the influx of superhero multimedia saturating our culture, the time has come for a serious analysis of masculinity that underscores both the harmful and empowering aspects of heroism. This text explains what is missing in our popular conceptions of the superheroes genre and tells us how to fix it-an essential read for anyone interested in social justice, media, and gender studies.
In this current era of superhero trends in media literacies-of film, television series, toys, and comics-there are generations that are (re)connecting with new takes on hero identities and representations that go further and further into a much-needed critical understanding of justice and equity. This timely and pertinent book brings a deeper level of analysis to superheroes and offers fresh takes on the real and symbolic impact of the superhero genre on our understandings of the complex relationships in our everyday lives. Parson and Schatz edit this collection of pivotal chapters from authors in ways that direct our attention to the powerful potentials of both how superheroes aid and undermine how we understand masculinities at a time where toxic forms of identifying as male have for too long dominated politics of heroism, personhood, species, and the planet.
As the culture of comic books increasingly becomes 'culture,' this important text explores the issue of gender construction in comics. While comic characters are frequently only perceived in terms of traditional masculinity, this manuscript helps to uncover the complicated, and often conflicting, gender dynamics at play. It is hard to imagine a more timely or significant text.
With the influx of superhero multimedia saturating our culture, the time has come for a serious analysis of masculinity that underscores both the harmful and empowering aspects of heroism. This text explains what is missing in our popular conceptions of the superheroes genre and tells us how to fix it-an essential read for anyone interested in social justice, media, and gender studies.
In this current era of superhero trends in media literacies-of film, television series, toys, and comics-there are generations that are (re)connecting with new takes on hero identities and representations that go further and further into a much-needed critical understanding of justice and equity. This timely and pertinent book brings a deeper level of analysis to superheroes and offers fresh takes on the real and symbolic impact of the superhero genre on our understandings of the complex relationships in our everyday lives. Parson and Schatz edit this collection of pivotal chapters from authors in ways that direct our attention to the powerful potentials of both how superheroes aid and undermine how we understand masculinities at a time where toxic forms of identifying as male have for too long dominated politics of heroism, personhood, species, and the planet.
As the culture of comic books increasingly becomes 'culture,' this important text explores the issue of gender construction in comics. While comic characters are frequently only perceived in terms of traditional masculinity, this manuscript helps to uncover the complicated, and often conflicting, gender dynamics at play. It is hard to imagine a more timely or significant text.