First published in 1991, The Many Lives of the Batman is a serious academic exploration of the cultural phenomenon called Batman. Marketing savvy alone did not build the Batmans extraordinary success; it encompasses a variety of audiences who have embraced the hero through a collage of different media manifestations during his long history. Batmans overlapping lives are illuminated in this critical anthology, which analyses the contexts of the characters production and reception across a wide spectrum of time and media forms. This volume includes interviews with the characters original creators. The other essays consider such questions as the political economy of comic book and film production processes; the cult status of the sixtys television series in various fan communities; and the postmodernism of past and present Batman films. Using the tools of cultural studies, the book unmasks the Caped Crusaders mysterious attraction.
First published in 1991, The Many Lives of the Batman is a serious academic exploration of the cultural phenomenon called Batman.
Acknowledgements Holy Shifting Signifies: Foreword Contributors
Introduction
1. Batman: Commodity as Myth
2. Notes from The Batcave: An
Interview with Dennis ONeil
3. Batman and the Twilight of the Idols: An
Interview with Frank Miller
4. "Holy Commodity Fetish, Batman!": The
Political Economy of a Commercial Intertext
5. Batman and His Audience: The
Dialectic of Culture
6. Batman: The Ethnography
7. Same Bat Channel,
Different Bat Times: Mass Culture and Popular Memory
8. Batman, Deviance and
Camp
9. Batman: The Movie, Narrative: The Hyperconscious
10. "Im Not Fooled
by That Cheap Disguise"
Roberta E. Pearson and William Uricchio