ESTHER DE DAUW is a Leicester, UK based comics scholar, who works on superheroes, gender and race. She has published in The Journal of Graphic Novels and Comics, contributed a chapter to the edited volume Unstable Masks: Whiteness and American Superhero Comics, and was the primary editor for the collection Toxic Masculinity: Mapping the Monstrous in our Heroes.
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Description
Introduction Chapter 1: White Superheroes and Masculinity Chapter 2: The White Female Body Chapter 3: Gay Characters and Social Progress Chapter 4: Legacy, Community and the Superhero of Color Conclusion: The Next Steps Bibliography Index
"In Hot Pants and Spandex Suits: Gender and Race in American Superhero Comics, Esther De Dauw has addressed the complexities of identity politics reflected in superhero comics from their earliest appearance eighty years ago. The superhero, a metaphor for the concerns of our culture, presents an apt topic for our understanding of the intersections of gender, race and national identity. The eighty-year span of the book offers us a mirror to our changing perceptions of identity politics and it is of interest to anyone interested in cultural, historical and media studies."- Joan Ormrod, author of Wonder Woman, the Female Body and Popular Culture "Esther De Dauw's book Hot Pants and Spandex Suits is well versed in gender and sexuality studies."- Inks "Dr. Esther De Dauw asks us to reconsider the generic construct of the superhero and to ask not only who they serve, but how. More importantly, she shows how their high-minded words often obscure less lofty silences and thus also asks us who they be might harming."- Martin Lund, Malmoe University, author of Re-Constructing the Man of Steel

