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E-raamat: Marveling Religion: Critical Discourses, Religion, and the Marvel Cinematic Universe

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Marveling Religion: Critical Discourses, Religion, and the Marvel Cinematic Universe is an edited volume that explores the intersection of religion and cinema through the lenses of critical discourse. The focus of the shared inquiry are various films comprising the first three phases of the Marvel Cinematic Universe (MCU) and corresponding Netflix series. The contributors explore various religious themes and how they intersect with culture through the canon on the MCU. The first part focuses on responses to the societal, governmental, and cultural context that solidified with clarity during the 2016 Presidential Election cycle in the United States and in the following administration. Additionally, it provides lenses and resources for engaging in productive public actions. Part two explores cultural resources of sustaining activism and resistance as well as some of the key issues at stake in public action. The third part centers on militarization and resistance to state violence. Taken in concert, these three sections work together to provide frames for understanding while also keeping us engaged in the concrete action to mobilize social change. The overarching aim of the volume is to promote critical discourse regarding the dynamics of activism and political resistance.
Preface: Marveling Religion: Visual Culture as a Common Tongue vii
Daniel White Hodge
Jennifer Baldwin
PART I TECHNOLOGY, VIOLENCE, AND SACRIFICE
1 "I See a Suit of Armor around the World": Tony Stark's Techno-Idolatry and Self-Sacrificial Love
3(16)
George A. Dunn
Jason T. Eberl
2 Mimesis, Conflict, and Sacrificial Crisis in Black Panther
19(14)
Matthew Brake
3 Bulletproof Love: Luke Cage, Race, and Religion
33(34)
Ken Derry
Daniel White Hodge
Laurel Zweissler
Stanley Talbert
Matthew J. Cressler
Jon Ivan Gill
PART II POWER, WORTH, AND SOCIETY
4 Old Gods in New Films: History, Culture, and Religion in Black Panther, Doctor Strange, and Thor: Ragnarok
67(20)
Rhiannon Grant
Jo Henderson-Merrygold
5 The Worthiness of Thor
87(14)
Adam Barkman
Bennet Soenen
6 "Who Are You?": Rene Girard, W. E. B. Du Bois, and Black Panther
101(12)
Ryan Smock
7 The Failure of a God: Thor, the Snap, and Post-Holocaust Political Theology
113(14)
Andrew T. Vink
8 Mysterio as Antichrist in Spider-Man: Far From Home
127(16)
George Tsakiridis
PART III DECONSTRUCTING NORMS, IMAGINING THE NEW
9 Science and the Marvel Cinematic Universe: Deconstructing the Boundary between Science, Technology, and Religion
143(16)
Lisa Stenmark
10 Religion, Science, and the Marvel Universe: Reimagining Human-Earth Relations
159(20)
Whitney Bauman
Imran Khan
11 "Open Your Eye": Psychedelics, Spirituality, and Trauma Resolution
179(18)
Jennifer Baldwin
PART IV FORMING IDENTITY
12 Marveling at Captain Danvers, Or, What Is So Super about Our Heroes? Contesting the Identity Politics of Self-Other
197(20)
John C. McDowell
13 The Supermuslim and the Marvel Cinematic Universe: A Complicated Trajectory of Fantasy and Agency
217(22)
Dilyana Mincheva
14 Bad Girls Turned Superwomen: A Critical Appraisal of the MCU Archetype for Superheroines
239(18)
Will Abney
Index 257(4)
About the Contributors 261
Jennifer Baldwin is director of Grounding Flight Wellness Center, Woodstock, Georgia. Her primary area of scholarship is the intersection of traumatology and systematic theology.

Daniel White Hodge is associate professor of intercultural communication and chair of the communication arts department at North Park University in Chicago, Illinois.