Uncanny bodies : superhero comics and disability /
"Explores how superhero comics, with their creative fusions of fantasy and realism, provide a flexible visual form for engaging issues of disability and intersectional identity (race, class, gender, sexuality) as well as for imagining and valuing different physical and cognitive ways of being i...
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Other Authors: | , |
Format: | Electronic eBook |
Language: | English |
Published: |
University Park, Pennsylvania :
The Pennsylvania State University Press,
2019
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Series: | Graphic medicine.
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Subjects: |
Table of Contents:
- "Mechanical Boys": Omega the Unknown on the Spectrum / José Alaniz
- Sane Superheroes: Mental Distress in the Gutters of Moon Knight / Charlie Christie
- Echo: The Silence Between the Notes / Sarah Bowden
- Mistress of Cyberspace: Oracle, Disability, and the Cyborg / Marit Hanson
- More than a Retcon Replacement: Disability, Blackness, and Sexuality in the Origin of Operator / Lauren O'Connor
- "Okay . . . This Looks Bad": Disability, Masculinity, and Ambivalence in Matt Fraction and David Aja's Hawkeye / Daniel Pinti
- The deaf Issue: Hawkeye #19 and Deaf Accessibility in the Comics Medium / Naja Later
- That Hawkguy: Deaf and Disability Gain in Matt Fraction and David Aja's Hawkeye / Sarah Gibbons
- Dialectical Identity: Silver Scorpion as Disabled/Superhero / Deleasa Randall-Griffiths and Daniel J. O'Rourke
- "Of Course, I Am a Hero": Disability as Posthuman Ideal in Cece Bell's El Deafo / Lauranne Poharec
- Unraveling the Supercrip: Superheroes as Subversion, a Personal Essay in Comic Form / Andrew Godfrey-Meers
- Fearsome Possibilities: An Afterword / Charles Hatfield.