Esther De Dauw is a comics scholar who focuses on the intersection of gender and race. Awarded her PhD by the University of Leicester in 2018, she teaches and provides student support at the University of Leicester. Her work has been featured in The Journal of Graphic Novels and Comics and FRONTIER #4. Daniel J. Connell is an independent researcher whose work focuses on deconstructing hypermasculinity in various mediums. His PhD, awarded by Brunel University in 2011, focuses on the hypermasculine phenomenon in the fledging comic book literary fiction genre.
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In an era when masculinity in politics, terrorism, big business, and the media industry seems to exhibit increasingly toxic qualities, this collection of essays is more than timely as it illustrates masculine strategies for maintaining and extending masculine power.--Joan Ormrod, author of Wonder Woman: The Female Body and Popular Culture Superhero culture remains on the front lines as our societies renegotiate the boundaries and roles of gender in everyday life. De Dauw and Connell have here taken an expansive notion of the superhero--from Doctor Who to Dumbledore via Superman and Emma Frost--and the assembled chapters examine the complex iterations of sexuality and gender in these wide-ranging texts. How can we break free of the toxic patterns of oppression that limit men's and women's (and nonbinary folks') human potential? How can putting gender and sexuality front and center in our analyses of superheroes advance this cause? I am grateful to De Dauw and Connell for working toward these answers.--Jason Dittmer, coauthor of Popular Culture, Geopolitics, and Identity The collection offers a varied exploration of portrayals of masculinities in (super)hero narratives by scholars from a diverse group of academic fields.--Bryan Bove "International Journal of Comic Art"

