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El. knyga: Black Panther and Philosophy: What Can Wakanda Offer the World?

4.50/5 (12 ratings by Goodreads)
Edited by (University of Washington, Seattle, WA), Series edited by (Wilkes-Barre, Pennsylvania), Edited by (Tarrant County College, Hurst, TX; University of Texas, Arlington, TX)
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Explore the fascinating historical and contemporary philosophical issues that arise in Black Panther

In Black Panther and Philosophy: What Can Wakanda Offer The World, a diverse panel of experts delivers incisive critical reflections on the Oscar-winning 2018 film, Black Panther, and the comic book mythology that preceded it. The collection explores historical and contemporary issues—including colonialism, slavery, the Black Lives Matter movement, intersectionality, and identity—raised by the superhero tale.

Beyond discussions of the influences of race and ethnicity on the most critically and culturally significant movie in the Marvel Cinematic Universe, this book presents the moral, feminist, metaphysical, epistemological, existential, and Afrofuturistic issues framing Black Panther’s narrative. The explorations of these issues shed light on our increasingly interconnected world and allow the reader to consider engaging questions like:

  • Should Wakanda rule the world?
  • Was Killmonger actually a victim?
  • Do Wakanda’s Black Lives Matter?
  • Does hiding in the shadows make Wakanda guilty?
  • What does Wakanda have to offer the world?

Perfect for fans of the most culturally significant film in the Marvel Cinematic Universe, Black Panther and Philosophy will also earn a place in the libraries of students of philosophy and anyone with a personal or professional interest in the defining issues of our time.

Contributors: One Single Tribe xi
Introduction: A Few Words from the Wakandan International Outreach Centre 1(2)
Edwardo Perez
Timothy E. Brown
Part I Yibambe! 3(48)
1 Challenge Day: Tradition and Revolution in Wakanda
5(9)
Armond Boudreaux
2 Transforming Wakanda: Justice (or Not?) in Black Panther
14(8)
Steve Bein
Deana Lewis
3 Sins of the Fathers: Historical Injustice and Its Repair in Black Panther
22(10)
Ben Almassi
4 "What Would You Have Wakanda Do about It?": Black Panther, Global Justice, and African Philosophy
32(10)
Christine Hobden
5 T'Challa's Liberalism and Killmonger's Pan-Africanism
42(9)
Stephen C.W. Graves
Part II Wakanda Forever! 51(44)
6 Panther Virtue: The Many Roles of T'Challa
53(8)
Mark D. White
7 Should Wakanda Take Over the World? The Ethics of International Power
61(9)
Greg Littmann
8 T'Challa, the Revolutionary King: Legitimation Crises in Wakanda
70(10)
Kevin J. Porter
9 T'Challa's Machiavellian Methods
80(7)
Ian J. Drake
Matthew B. Lloyd
10 Understanding the Reigns of T'Challa and Killmonger through Hannah Arendt
87(8)
Jolynna Sinanan
Part III The Heart-Shaped Herb 95(68)
11 Beastly Boys: The Racial-Sexual Politics of Meat
97(10)
Sofia Huerter
12 Panther Mystique: Wakandan Feminism Demystified
107(16)
J. Lenore Wright
Edwardo Perez
13 The Ancestral Plane: Metaphysical Mystery or Meaningful Metaphor?
123(9)
Dean A. Kowalski
14 The Afterlife of Erik Killmonger in African Philosophy
132(20)
Paul A. Dottin
15 Wakandan Resources: The Epistemological Reality of Black Panther's Fiction
152(11)
Ruby Komic
Part IV Vibranium 163(48)
16 When Tech Meets Tradition: How Wakandan Technology Transcends Anti-Blackness
165(10)
Timothy E. Brown
17 Vibranium Dreams and Afrofuturist Visions: Technology, Nature, and Culture
175(9)
Alessio Gerola
18 Black Panther's Afrofuturism: Reconnecting Neural and Cultural Pathways
184(9)
Michael J. Gormley
Benjamin D. Wendorf
Ryan Solinsky
19 Wakanda and the Dilemma of Racial Utopianism
193(10)
Juan M. Floyd-Thomas
20 The Value of Vibranium
203(8)
Edwardo Perez
Part V Black Lives Matter 211(45)
21 Dismantling the Master's House with the Master's Tools
213(8)
Thanayi M. Jackson
22 An Impossible Return? (Anti)Colonialism in/of Black Panther
221(9)
Julio C. Covarrubias-Cabeza
23 T'Challa's Dream and Killmonger's Means: Echoes of MLK and Malcolm X
230(8)
Gerald Browning
24 "It's Time They Knew the Truth about Us! We're Warriors!": Black Panther and the Black Panther Party
238(9)
Karen Joan Kohoutek
25 Fear of a Black Museum: Black Existentialism in Black Panther
247(9)
Charles F. Peterson
Index 256
Edwardo Pérez is Professor of English at Tarrant County College in Hurst, Texas, and Adjunct Assistant Professor of English at the University of Texas at Arlington in Texas. He is a frequent contributor to Wileys Philosophy and Popular Culture series and website at www.andphilosophy.com.

Timothy E. Brown is Assistant Professor of Bioethics and Humanities at the University of Washington. He is a founding member of the Neuroethics Trust in the Center for Neurotechnology and leads diversity, equity, and inclusion efforts in the International Neuroethics Society.