Superhero Bodies

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Arkham Asylum
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B01=Elizabeth MacFarlane
B01=Sarah Richardson
B01=Wendy Haslem
Caped Crusader
Captain America
Category1=Non-Fiction
Category=JBCC1
Category=JFCA
CGI Technology
Child Lore
Clark Kent
Comic Book Artists
Comic Book Characters
comic studies
comics studies
COP=United Kingdom
cultural identity
cultural studies
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disability theory
Early Italian Cinema
ecocriticism
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eq_society-politics
ethnicity
Female Superheroes
film
gender
gender representation
graphic novel
Green Goblin
identity studies
Justice League
Language_English
Lex Luthor
literature
Live Action Spectacle
Long Shots
Matthew J. Smith
media adaptation
Mri Slice
national identity
Netflix Series
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Patriarchal Nuclear Family
physical transformation
Poison Ivy
popular culture
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Purple Man
race
Randy Duncan
softlaunch
superhero embodiment in popular culture
Superhero Genre
Superhero Narrative
Superhero's Body
superhero's materiality
Superhero’s Body
Technological Augmentation
Young Man

Product details

  • ISBN 9781138389892
  • Weight: 416g
  • Dimensions: 152 x 229mm
  • Publication Date: 20 Nov 2018
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Hardback
  • Language: English
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Throughout the history of the genre, the superhero has been characterised primarily by physical transformation and physical difference. Superhero Bodies: Identity, Materiality, Transformation explores the transformation of the superhero body across multiple media forms including comics, film, television, literature and the graphic novel. How does the body of the hero offer new ways to imagine identities? How does it represent or subvert cultural ideals? How are ideologies of race, gender and disability signified or destabilised in the physicality of the superhero? How are superhero bodies drawn, written and filmed across diverse forms of media and across histories?

This volume collects essays that attend to the physicality of superheroes: the transformative bodies of superheroes, the superhero’s position in urban and natural spaces, the dialectic between the superhero’s physical and metaphysical self, and the superhero body’s relationship with violence. This will be the first collection of scholarly research specifically dedicated to investigating the diversity of superhero bodies, their emergence, their powers, their secrets, their histories and their transformations.

Wendy Haslem researches and teaches in the Screen Studies program at the University of Melbourne.

Elizabeth MacFarlane is a writer and lecturer in the Creative Writing program at the University of Melbourne.

Sarah Richardson is a PhD candidate and tutor in the English Literature program at the University of Melbourne.