Unstable Masks
Published by Ohio State University Press
English
2020
ISBN 9780814277508
eBook
Buy at Association of University Presses - Tienda FILUNI
🇺🇸
Catademic
🇺🇸
Visit store →
ebookstaolistic
🇺🇸
Visit store →
Bajalibros Latam
🇺🇸
Visit store →
Association of University Presses - Tienda FILUNI
🇺🇸
Visit store →
TH
THEOSUPress
🇺🇸
Visit store →
publica.la marketplace
🇦🇷
Visit store →
Ebooks Librería Antártica
🇨🇱
Visit store →
Ebooks Agustin
🇪🇸
Visit store →
Bajalibros Argentina
🇦🇷
Visit store →
Sanborns Ebooks
🇲🇽
Visit store →
ebooks Libreria del GAM
🇺🇾
Visit store →
Bookshop Uruguay
🇺🇾
Visit store →
ebookskitapenas
🇬🇹
Visit store →
Ebooks Yenny - El Ateneo
🇦🇷
Visit store →
Crisol Ebooks
🇨🇴
Visit store →
Available at 15 bookshops
Catademic
🇺🇸
Visit store →
ebookstaolistic
🇺🇸
Visit store →
Association of University Presses - Tienda FILUNI
🇺🇸
Visit store →
TH
THEOSUPress
🇺🇸
Visit store →
publica.la marketplace
🇦🇷
Visit store →
Ebooks Librería Antártica
🇨🇱
Visit store →
Ebooks Agustin
🇪🇸
Visit store →
Sanborns Ebooks
🇲🇽
Visit store →
ebooks Libreria del GAM
🇺🇾
Visit store →
ebookskitapenas
🇬🇹
Visit store →
Ebooks Yenny - El Ateneo
🇦🇷
Visit store →
Crisol Ebooks
🇨🇴
Visit store →
About this book
<b>A </b><b><i>CHOICE</i></b><b> Outstanding Academic Title for 2020</b><br> <br> In <i>Unstable Masks: Whiteness and American Superhero Comics</i>, 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.<br> 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. <i>Unstable Masks </i>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.<br>
- Language
- English
Share