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A Hero in All of Us?
Heroism and American Political Thought as Seen on TV
Stephen Clouse (Anthology Editor) , Aaron Kushner (Anthology Editor) , Jacob Boros (Contributor) , Martin Claar (Contributor) , Stephen Clouse (Contributor) , Catherine Craig (Contributor) , Aaron Kushner (Contributor) , S. Adam Seagrave (Contributor) , Trevor Shelley (Contributor) , Benjamin Slomski (Contributor)
A Hero in All of Us?
Heroism and American Political Thought as Seen on TV
Stephen Clouse (Anthology Editor) , Aaron Kushner (Anthology Editor) , Jacob Boros (Contributor) , Martin Claar (Contributor) , Stephen Clouse (Contributor) , Catherine Craig (Contributor) , Aaron Kushner (Contributor) , S. Adam Seagrave (Contributor) , Trevor Shelley (Contributor) , Benjamin Slomski (Contributor)
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Description
Is heroism possible for everyone? Should it be? What kinds of stories do we tell when we talk about heroes and what do these stories reveal about how we view ourselves? This book takes up these questions and more by reflecting on twenty-first century American television shows. Among the shows examined are Only Murders in the Building, Game of Thrones, The Good Lord Bird, The Boys, and Severance. What we find is an entertainment landscape unsure about what a hero is or even what qualifies as heroic. In a nation uncertain about heroism, we see a dramatic rise in the popularity of the anti-hero and even in worlds without heroes. This fragmented variety highlights how the American political mind is similarly fragmented in what it believes are its highest aspirations—and its deepest anxieties. It is this fragmentation that may help us understand why twenty-first century entertainment has elevated the heroic to the supernatural while simultaneously democratizing heroism to the point where anyone may become one. A Hero in All of Us?: Heroism and American Political Thought as Seen on TV explores this multifaceted landscape to better understand how Americans view their heroes and themselves.
Table of Contents
Part I: Heroes
Chapter 1: Letting the Devil Out: Anger, Mercy, and Justice in Marvel’s Daredevil By Martin Claar
Chapter 2: John Brown: American Hero By S. Adam Seagrave
Chapter 3: Heroes for a Democratic Age: Friendship in Only Murders in the Building By Catherine Craig
Part II: Anti-Heroes
Chapter 4: We Ain’t The Walking Dead By Aaron Kushner
Chapter 5: Defiant Jazz By Jacob Boros
Chapter 6: The (Larry) Davidic Anti-Hero: The Problem of Heroism in Sitcoms By Benjamin Slomski
Part III: Tyrants
Chapter 7: Five (un)Heroic Days at Memorial: Desire, Crisis, and Dubious Democratic Heroism By Trevor Shelley
Chapter 8: Madmen in a Boring World: The Boys and a World Without Heroes By Aaron Kushner
Chapter 9: There is No Justice Unless We Make It: Game of Thrones and Tyranny By Stephen Clouse
Conclusion By Stephen Clouse and Aaron Kushner
Product details
Published | Aug 26 2024 |
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Format | Ebook (PDF) |
Edition | 1st |
Extent | 214 |
ISBN | 9798216339212 |
Imprint | Lexington Books |
Series | Politics and Contemporary Television |
Publisher | Bloomsbury Publishing |
About the contributors
Reviews
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At a time when the comforting and comfortable end-of-history narrative is being upended by a rapid succession of threatened emergencies, crises, and conflicts, and as the twin temptations to totalitarianism and rebellion are on the rise, A Hero in All of Us? offers a much-needed reflection on the meaning and status of heroism in an era of liberal democracy in peril. Through philosophical treatments of contemporary popular culture, this volume pits many of our commitments, longings, and circumstances against each other, putting them to the test, exploring the tensions between egalitarianism and excellence, agency and vulnerability, pride and vanity, justice and revenge, dignity and suffering, duty and interest—further considering the difference between coming to someone’s assistance and assuming authority over them. Formidably applying their thoughts to the realm of the imagination, the combined insights of these intrepid scholars yield a valiant and valuable contribution to the analysis of power’s well-intended uses and regrettable abuses by those who stand apart by standing up and standing out.
Travis D. Smith, author of Superhero Ethics, associate professor of political science, Concordia University
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Every society needs heroes to help itself imagine how to act with excellence. And morally serious people in every society need to reflect on what their dominant culture is teaching them about heroism. A Hero in All of Us? is to be commended for helping us do just that by providing valuable analyses of some of the most popular shows shaping present day American culture.
Jonathan Ashbach, Oklahoma Baptist University
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A Hero in All of Us offers a lively and scholarly investigation into American conceptions of heroes, anti-heroes, and tyrants by analyzing a variety of different genres of contemporary television ranging from horror, science fiction, and superheroes to situation comedies and historical dramas. The variety of texts explored from a fairly common set of themes offers insights that will be of interest to students of American studies, popular culture, philosophy, and critical television studies and to anyone interested in how Americans conceive of justice, heroes, and heroism.
Matthew J. Costello