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El. knyga: Unstable Masks: Whiteness and American Superhero Comics

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Contextualizes the history of race within comic books and the unspoken whiteness that overwhelms American superhero narratives.

In Unstable Masks: Whiteness and American Superhero Comics, Sean Guynes and Martin Lund bring together a series of essays that contextualize the histories and stakes of whiteness studies, superhero comics, and superhero studies for academics, fans, and media-makers alike. The volume illustrates how the American comic book superhero is fundamentally a figure of white power and white supremacy and ultimately calls for diversity in superhero comics as well as a democratized media culture.
Contributors not only examine superhero narratives but also delve into the production, distribution, audience, and reception of those narratives, highlighting the imbrication of forces that have helped to create, normalize, question, and sometimes even subvert American beliefs about whiteness and race. Unstable Masks considers the co-constitutive nature of identity, representation, narrative, production and consumption, and historical and cultural contexts in forging the stereotypes that decide who gets to be a superhero and who gets to be American on the four-color pages of comic books.
 
List of Illustrations
ix
Foreword Unmasking Whiteness: Re-Spacing the Speculative in Superhero Comics xi
Frederick Luis Aldama
Acknowledgments xvii
Introduction Not to Interpret, but to Abolish: Whiteness Studies and American Superhero Comics 1(18)
Sean Guynes
Martin Lund
PART I OUTLINING SUPERHEROIC WHITENESS
Chapter 1 Marked For Failure: Whiteness, Innocence, And Power In Defining Captain America
19(19)
Osvaldo Oyola
Chapter 2 The Whiteness Of The Whale And The Darkness Of The Dinosaur: The Africanist Presence In Superhero Comics From Black Lightning To Moon Girl
38(19)
Eric Berlatsky
Sika Dagbovie-Mullins
Chapter 3 "The Original Enchantment": Whiteness, Indigeneity, And Representational Logics In The New Mutants
57(15)
Jeremy M. Carnes
Chapter 4 Fearfully And Wonderfully Made: The Racial Politics Of Cloak And Dagger
72(18)
Olivia Hicks
Chapter 5 Worlds Collide: Whiteness, Integration, And Diversity In The Dc/Milestone Crossover
90(13)
Shamika Ann Mitchell
Chapter 6 Whiteness And Superheroes In The Comix/Codices Of Enrique Chagoya
103(24)
Jose Alaniz
PART II REACHING TOWARD WHITENESS
Chapter 7 Seeing White: Normalization And Domesticity In Vision's Cyborg Identity
127(15)
Esther De Dauw
Chapter 8 "Beware The Fanatic!": Jewishness, Whiteness, And Civil Rights In X-Men (1963--1970)
142(16)
Martin Lund
Chapter 9 Mutation, Racialization, Decimation: The X-Men As White Men
158(16)
Neil Shyminsky
Chapter 10 White Plasticity And Black Possibility In Darwyn Cooke's Dc: The New Frontier
174(19)
Sean Guynes
PART III WHITENESS BY A DIFFERENT COLOR
Chapter 11 White Or Indian? Whiteness And Becoming The White Indian Comics Superhero
193(19)
Yvonne Chireau
Chapter 12 "A True Son Of K'Un-Lun": The Awkward Racial Politics Of White Martial Arts Superheroes In The 1970S
212(14)
Matthew Pustz
Chapter 13 The Whitest There Is At What I Do: Japanese Identity And The Unmarked Hero In Wolverine (1982)
226(16)
Eric Sobel
Chapter 14 The Dark Knight: Whiteness, Appropriation, Colonization, And Batman In The New 52 Era
242(16)
Jeffrey A. Brown
Afterword Empowerment for Some, or Tentacle Sex for All 258(7)
Noah Berlatsky
List of Contributors 265(4)
Index 269