Description

Book Synopsis

Winner, John G. Cawelti Award for the Best Textbook/Primer, Popular Culture Association/American Culture Association, 2019
MPCA/ACA Book Award, Midwest Popular Culture Association / Midwest American Culture Association, 2020

Taking a multifaceted approach to attitudes toward race through popular culture and the American superhero, All New, All Different? explores a topic that until now has only received more discrete examination. Considering Marvel, DC, and lesser-known texts and heroes, this illuminating work charts eighty years of evolution in the portrayal of race in comics as well as in film and on television.

Beginning with World War II, the authors trace the vexed depictions in early superhero stories, considering both Asian villains and nonwhite sidekicks. While the emergence of Black Panther, Black Lightning, Luke Cage, Storm, and other heroes in the 1960s and 1970s reflected a cultural revolution, the book reveals how nonwhite superheroes nonet

Trade Review
An invaluable resource for textual examples of the handling of race in American superhero comics and for considering the kinds of characters and stories featuring racial minorities that were common to the different eras it covers. * Inks: The Journal of the Comics Studies Society *
The authors’ consideration of race [in All New, All Different?] is holistic, framing the genre over time and providing the reader with a means to understand the superhero archetype and to consider the limitation of racial liberalism in the United States...All New, All Different? offers an important narrative about the gradations around race in superhero comics and the broader society. * American Historical Review *
[All New, All Different?] is an incredibly useful text...an inside look at the ever-changing landscape of comics, and audiences will be enlightened by how attitudes have developed right along with it. * Journal of Graphic Novels and Comics *
[Austin and Hamilton's] contribution is more than just compiling a damning narrative. The authors read their material through the history of race in America and alongside a slew of recent scholarship on comics…[All New, All Different?] offers useful insights and ways to read nonwhite superhero tales from the 1960s onward...the scope of the work is impressive. * Journal of American History *

Table of Contents

  • List of Illustrations
  • Acknowledgments
  • Introduction: Into the “Gutters”
  • 1. “World’s Finest”? The Wartime Superhero and Race, 1941–1945
  • 2. Struggling for Social Relevance: DC, Marvel, and the Cold War, 1945–1965
  • 3. “We’re All Brothers!”: The Ideal of Liberal Brotherhood in the 1960s and 1970s
  • 4. Guess Who’s Coming to Save You? The Rise of the Ethnic Superhero in the 1960s and 1970s
  • 5. “Something for Everyone”: The Superteam in the Age of Multiculturalism, 1975–1996
  • 6. Replacement Heroes and the Quest for Inclusion, 1985–2011
  • 7. Something Old, Something New: Heroes Reborn and Reimagined, 1990–2015
  • Coda: Born Again (and Again and Again . . . and Again and Again . . .)
  • Notes
  • Bibliography
  • Index

All New All Different

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    £67.15

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    RRP £79.00 – you save £11.85 (15%)

    Order before 4pm today for delivery by Fri 3 Jul 2026.

    A Hardback by Allan W. Austin, Patrick L. Hamilton

    1 in stock

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      Publisher: University of Texas Press
      Publication Date: 05/11/2019
      ISBN13: 9781477318966, 978-1477318966
      ISBN10: 1477318968

      Description

      Book Synopsis

      Winner, John G. Cawelti Award for the Best Textbook/Primer, Popular Culture Association/American Culture Association, 2019
      MPCA/ACA Book Award, Midwest Popular Culture Association / Midwest American Culture Association, 2020

      Taking a multifaceted approach to attitudes toward race through popular culture and the American superhero, All New, All Different? explores a topic that until now has only received more discrete examination. Considering Marvel, DC, and lesser-known texts and heroes, this illuminating work charts eighty years of evolution in the portrayal of race in comics as well as in film and on television.

      Beginning with World War II, the authors trace the vexed depictions in early superhero stories, considering both Asian villains and nonwhite sidekicks. While the emergence of Black Panther, Black Lightning, Luke Cage, Storm, and other heroes in the 1960s and 1970s reflected a cultural revolution, the book reveals how nonwhite superheroes nonet

      Trade Review
      An invaluable resource for textual examples of the handling of race in American superhero comics and for considering the kinds of characters and stories featuring racial minorities that were common to the different eras it covers. * Inks: The Journal of the Comics Studies Society *
      The authors’ consideration of race [in All New, All Different?] is holistic, framing the genre over time and providing the reader with a means to understand the superhero archetype and to consider the limitation of racial liberalism in the United States...All New, All Different? offers an important narrative about the gradations around race in superhero comics and the broader society. * American Historical Review *
      [All New, All Different?] is an incredibly useful text...an inside look at the ever-changing landscape of comics, and audiences will be enlightened by how attitudes have developed right along with it. * Journal of Graphic Novels and Comics *
      [Austin and Hamilton's] contribution is more than just compiling a damning narrative. The authors read their material through the history of race in America and alongside a slew of recent scholarship on comics…[All New, All Different?] offers useful insights and ways to read nonwhite superhero tales from the 1960s onward...the scope of the work is impressive. * Journal of American History *

      Table of Contents

      • List of Illustrations
      • Acknowledgments
      • Introduction: Into the “Gutters”
      • 1. “World’s Finest”? The Wartime Superhero and Race, 1941–1945
      • 2. Struggling for Social Relevance: DC, Marvel, and the Cold War, 1945–1965
      • 3. “We’re All Brothers!”: The Ideal of Liberal Brotherhood in the 1960s and 1970s
      • 4. Guess Who’s Coming to Save You? The Rise of the Ethnic Superhero in the 1960s and 1970s
      • 5. “Something for Everyone”: The Superteam in the Age of Multiculturalism, 1975–1996
      • 6. Replacement Heroes and the Quest for Inclusion, 1985–2011
      • 7. Something Old, Something New: Heroes Reborn and Reimagined, 1990–2015
      • Coda: Born Again (and Again and Again . . . and Again and Again . . .)
      • Notes
      • Bibliography
      • Index

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