Comics often have an explicitly progressive message about equality. The X-Men, for instance, have often been used as an analogy for race and homosexuality. Esther De Dauw investigates how, despite this message, comics fail to present a narrative that is anti-sexist and anti-racist when examined beneath the surface. The looks, actions, and design of the characters can inadvertently reinforce toxic ideas surrounding gender and race, especially when it comes to white masculinity
This article discusses the run of the comics series Nightwing (Dixon/McDaniel 1996-2009) with partic...
For as long as stories have been told, written, and performed heroes have been the measures of a cul...
Research on comic books has mainly focused on how issues of crime and justice are dealt with. This r...
This study analyzes the changes in physical presentation of several DC comic book superheroes, findi...
The attitudes and beliefs that individuals form towards men and women are influenced by role models ...
I. Appeals of Multiple Masculinities: Maintaining Hegemonic Heteronormative Masculinity in the 21st ...
In this dissertation, I argue that comic books are a form of dynamic and performative aesthetic comm...
Identity and representation remain contested in popular media. Comic book characters are not just ic...
28 pagesIt is important to understand the content of media, as media can promote stereotypes that co...
To understand how gender and sexuality are portrayed in comics, an extremely understudied medium, we...
With iconic characters like Superman, Batman, Spider-Man, and Iron Man representing the wider cultur...
Although Marvel and DC have been making comics since the 1930s, the recent boom in superhero films' ...
Hegemonic masculinity conditions the hierarchal gender binary in which masculinity dominates in soci...
In July 2014, Marvel Entertainment announced that the white, blue-eyed character of Captain America ...
Because many members of society have seen movies involving one or more superheroes, individuals begi...
This article discusses the run of the comics series Nightwing (Dixon/McDaniel 1996-2009) with partic...
For as long as stories have been told, written, and performed heroes have been the measures of a cul...
Research on comic books has mainly focused on how issues of crime and justice are dealt with. This r...
This study analyzes the changes in physical presentation of several DC comic book superheroes, findi...
The attitudes and beliefs that individuals form towards men and women are influenced by role models ...
I. Appeals of Multiple Masculinities: Maintaining Hegemonic Heteronormative Masculinity in the 21st ...
In this dissertation, I argue that comic books are a form of dynamic and performative aesthetic comm...
Identity and representation remain contested in popular media. Comic book characters are not just ic...
28 pagesIt is important to understand the content of media, as media can promote stereotypes that co...
To understand how gender and sexuality are portrayed in comics, an extremely understudied medium, we...
With iconic characters like Superman, Batman, Spider-Man, and Iron Man representing the wider cultur...
Although Marvel and DC have been making comics since the 1930s, the recent boom in superhero films' ...
Hegemonic masculinity conditions the hierarchal gender binary in which masculinity dominates in soci...
In July 2014, Marvel Entertainment announced that the white, blue-eyed character of Captain America ...
Because many members of society have seen movies involving one or more superheroes, individuals begi...
This article discusses the run of the comics series Nightwing (Dixon/McDaniel 1996-2009) with partic...
For as long as stories have been told, written, and performed heroes have been the measures of a cul...
Research on comic books has mainly focused on how issues of crime and justice are dealt with. This r...