Matthew Brake (M.Div., Regent University; M.A. in philosophy and interdisciplinary studies, George Mason University) is the series editor for the Theology, Religion, and Pop Culture series from Lexington Books and Fortress Academic. He also serves as the co-editor (with A. David Lewis) for the Religion and Comics series from Claremont Press. C.K. Robertson, Ph.D., is an Episcopal priest and professor, editor of the academic book series Studies in Episcopal and Anglican Theology, and a former board member and frequent guest editor of the Anglican Theological Review.
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Introduction: Batman as a Focus of Theological Inquiry C.K. Robertson, Ph.D., and Matthew Brake Section One: Theodicy and Evil 1. The Karmic Tragedy of Bruce Wayne: Batman as Anti-Buddha Wesley D. Cray 2. Suffering and Evil in the Book of Job and Batman: The Killing Joke Francesco Del Bianco 3. Evil After Christianity: Joker (2019) as Post-Christian Theodicy Katherine Kelaidis 4. Beginning with Wickedness, or the Long Dark Knight of the Polis' Soul John C. McDowell 5. Batman Encounters Judaism and the Holocaust Rafael Medoff Section Two: Ethics and Morality 6. "Fear of Faith" and Faith over Fear: Scarecrow as Emblem of a Purgatorial Gotham Christina M. Knopf 7. Pride Goeth Before the Knightfall: Sabbath as Heroic Practice Drew McIntyre 8. Batman Forever: Morality and Narrative in Grant Morrison's Batman: The Return of Bruce Wayne Andrew Kuzma 9. The Bat-Bodhisattva: A Buddhist reading of our favorite (Anti)Hero John Thompson 10. Batman's Cardinal Virtues in Dark Knight Returns Joseph Turner Section Three: Justice and Vengeance 11. Reflections on Revolutionary Gotham: Sovereignty, Sacrifice, and Theological Fantasy in Christopher Nolan's The Dark Knight Trilogy Ryan Haecker 12. No Saviors in Gotham: Black Liberation and Whiteness in Batman: The Cult Peter Herman 13. Vengeance, Justice, and Batman's War on Crime Randall M. Jensen 14. False Messiah and Real Devils: Batman and Girard on the Fate of Gotham Mimesis and the Messianic Clint Jones 15. Fighting for Righteousness: Batman's Atonement Joshua Wise Section Four: Deities and the Divine 16. Morality, Epistemology, and How Batman Can Know That God Exists Batman: Atheist? Armond Boudreaux 17. How One Becomes What One Is: The Nietzschean Polytheology of Joker (2019) Vernon W. Cisney 18. Dark Knight of the Soul: Reading Batman with Apophatic Theology Stephen Garner 19. The Dark Knight and the Dark Side of God Michael D. Nichols 20. God-Confusion in Batman v Superman: Dawn of Justice Michael Anthony Novak
To have a book focus on the most famous superhero of recent decades is always a delight, but to have one that addresses that hero through the lens of theology is truly a gem. This study of the Batman will feed the mind and soul of students, scholars, theologians, and superhero aficionados alike. It is a fascinating read that dives deeply into the character of the Batman and his colorful nemeses to uncover latent theological, spiritual, and ethical truths behind their stories. This book will be a valuable asset to courses on theology or popular culture; indeed it will be a great addition to anyone's library. -- B. J. Oropeza, Azusa Pacific University, and editor of The Gospel According to Superheroes: Religion and Popular Culture This book is delightfully engaging. I have not come across a volume that offers such a diverse and yet simultaneously cohesive treatment of Batman. The book manages breadth and depth that are truly representative, offering not just deep dives into the popular franchise but practical insights of relevance to our historical moment. While there is no way to cover every possible story from such a long-running franchise to which so many different authorial and directorial visions have contributed, the representative coverage is excellent and will make this book a standard reference for academics as well as clergy and others who want to offer substantive engagement with the theological insights that can be gleaned from popular culture. -- James F. McGrath, Butler University Theology and Batman is a must read in these seemingly apocalyptic times in which many now recognize both authentic weakness in the hero/heroine and authentic strength in the villain. Our apocalypses reveal the hero/heroine and villain in a fluidity that can no longer be overlooked. Bravo to the authors and editors of this book! -- Michael Battle, General Theological Seminary