Fr. 140.00

Superheroes and Masculinity - Unmasking the Gender Performance of Heroism

English · Hardback

Shipping usually within 3 to 5 weeks

Description

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Superheroes and Masculinity examines how heteropatriarchal representations of gender are both perpetuated and challenged within the superhero genre. This collection critiques stereotypical portrayals of hegemonic masculinity and explores queer alternatives to such formulations within superhero comics, film, and television.

List of contents










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

About the author










Edited by Sean Parson and J.L. Schatz - Contributions by Hailey J. Austin; Julian Barr; Anne Bialowas; TJ Buttgereit; Ryan Cheek; Kevin Cummings; Kiera Gaswint; Brian Johnson; Emily Mendelson; Jacob Murel; Sean Parson; David J. Roberts; Edgar Sandoval and

Summary

Superheroes and Masculinity examines how heteropatriarchal representations of gender are both perpetuated and challenged within the superhero genre. This collection critiques stereotypical portrayals of hegemonic masculinity and explores queer alternatives to such formulations within superhero comics, film, and television.

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