Foreword, Steve Rogers
Acknowledgments
1. An Introduction to the Politics of the Marvel Cinematic University, Nicholas Carnes and Lilly J. Goren
Part One Origin Stories
2. Building Worlds: Three Paths toward Racial Justice in Black Panther, Allison Rank and Heather Pool
3. Tony Stark and the Classical Heroism of the Marvel Cinema Universe, Ari Kohen
4. Endurance in Marvel Cinema: Letting Go of Compulsory Overcoming in Superhero Stories, Anna Daily
5. Captain America vs. James Madison, Christopher J. Galdieri
6. “Operation: Rebirth” and the Marvel Cinematic Universe: Origin Stories as Founding Narratives, Ronald J. Schmidt, Jr.
7. Nostalgia, Nationalism, and Marvel Superheroics, Lilly J. Goren
Part Two With Great Power8. Government as the Bad Guy?, Nicholas Carnes
9. Democratic Monstrosity: Marvel’s Avengers and Extraordinary Politics, Elizabeth Barringer
10. Strange Sovereignty: Fantasies of Supremacy and Coloniality in the Marvel Cinematic Universe, Matthew Longo
11. Civilian Control of Superheroes: Applying What We Know from Civil-Military Relations, Stephen M. Saideman
12. Environmentalism and the Marvel Cinematic Universe: Spider-Man: Far from Home as a Cautionary Tale, Nancy J. Hirschmann
13. Marvel Cinematic Universe Villains and Social Anxieties, Haoyang Wang and Christina Zhang
Part Three An Expanding Universe
14. Wrestling with Power and Pleasure: Black Widow and the Warrior Women of the Marvel Cinematic Universe, Linda Beail
15. From “Grrrl Power” to “She’s Got Help”:: Captain Marvel as the Superhero of Second-Wave Feminism, Kristin Kanthank
16. Vulnerable Heroines: Gendering Violence in Jessica Jones, Menaka Philips
17. “I Know My Value”: Agency in the Prime-Time Network Portrayan of Peggy Carter, Christina Fattore
18. Men and Supermen: Gender and (Over)Compensation in the Marvel Cinematic Universe, Dan Cassino
19. Deep in Marvel’s Closet: Heteronormativity and Hidden LGBTQ+ Narratives in the Marvel Cinematic Universe, Patricia C. Rodda
20. Avengers, Assemblage, Danielle Hanley
21. Female Combatants in the Marvel Cinematic Universe, Ora Szekely
22. Who Watches the Marvel Cinematic Universe? Race, Sex, and the Audience for Onscreen Diversity, Bethany Lacina
23. Geopolitical Representations of Africa through the Marvel Cinematic Lens, Meghan S. Sanders
Part Four Conclusion
24. “You’ve Become Part of a Bigger Universe” Plurality, Public Things, and the Marvel Cinematic Universe, Jennifer Forestal
Afterwords
Afterword One: How Marvel Studios Makes a Universe, Carlee Goldberg
Afterword Two: Classical Dramatic Structure: A Primer on the Marvel Cinematic Universe, Matthew L. Free
Film List
List of Contributors
References
Index