An essential guide to our current post-truth universe. Anyone interested in the ways that meaning has been retconned and rebooted across contemporary facts and fiction must consult Gavaler and Goldberg.

Will Brooker, Professor of Film and Cultural Studies, Kingston University, UK and author of Never-Ending Watchmen.

As a warning to keep our eyes open, <i>Revising Reality</i> calls on us not to question reality — that which is metaphysically fixed — but rather its epistemology.

Hyperallergic

Scholar-author Chris Gavaler takes us through the history of superhero comics in a way that is accessible for any reader, and academically considered enough for any erudite. Gavaler traces the genre from the beginning, commenting on how comic books and graphic novels reflected the culture and events around them, including war and eugenics.

Praise for Superhero Comics authored by Chris Gavaler, JD DeHart, Reading and Literature Resources

Se alle

This would make the perfect textbook for a class on the history of comics. It’s great for comic fans who want to go beyond the pages of the latest DC or Marvel adventure to understand and appreciate how these stories evolved and what were their origins.

Praise for Superhero Comics authored by Chris Gavaler, Artistic Bent

This lively and timely book engages an impressive breadth of topics in defense of a remarkable thesis: that practices like retconning and rebooting, which find their home in storytelling, are powerful tools for understanding science, history, and much more besides.

Sam Cowling, Associate Professor of Philosophy, Denison University, USA

The past is fixed what happened happened. But our descriptions of that past are in constant flux, creating branching networks of contradictory accounts more complex than any fictional franchise. Revising Reality uses pop culture and media concepts of revision to untangle our real-world histories – with startlingly revelatory results.

Novels, comics, films, and TV shows can continue previous events (sequels), reinterpret events (retcons), or restart events (remakes), and audiences can ignore any of these revisions (rejects). Drawing on these four kinds of revision derived from franchises such as Star Wars, Harry Potter, The Lord of the Rings, and Marvel comics, Chris Gavaler and Nat Goldberg make sense of the stories we tell about a remarkable range of actual events, including scientific discoveries, Supreme Court cases, historical moments, folk heroes, and even trans names and human memory.

They ask: –

What happened to the original, green-scaled dinosaurs after scientists decided dinosaurs had multi-colored feathers?

When overturning Roe v. Wade, did the Supreme Court end the right to abortion, or did the Court claim that the right of the previous half century never existed?

Since Ronald Reagan increased taxes, expanded government, and championed amnesty for undocumented immigrants, who is the Ronald Reagan whom today’s conservatives champion as a model president?

When a trans person comes out as trans, has their gender changed or has their gender remained consistent?

Are our memories accounts of real events or some kind (or kinds) of revision? And if our memories are in flux, what does that say about our memory-dependent identities?

Revising Reality answers these and so many more questions, providing surprising new tools for explaining the world and our relationship to it.

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Introduction: the Histories of History
Sequels
Remakes
Retcons
Rejects
Moving Forward

1. Rejecting Possibilities
Unforced
Exorcised
Unearthed
Mandated
TERFed
Gated
Re-versed
Barred

2. Rewriting History
Storying Origins
Revering Paul
Amending Men
Trumping Thomas
Queering Authors
Canceling Culture
Hiding History

3. Making America
Resolving Winners
Remaking America (Great Again)
Reckoning Reagan
Criticizing the Common Core
Objecting to Obamacare
Revising Racism
Criticizing Critical Race Theory
Taking Tenure

4. Retconning Law
Ridged Klingons v. Ridgeless Klingons
Ministers and Genomes v. Winnie the Pooh
Buses v. Cars and Cocaine Trafficking
Judicial Retcons v. Legal Sequels
Metaphysics v. Epistemology
Cannons v. Stun Guns
People v. People
SCOTUS v. Disregarding Citizens

5. Knowing Science
Planets and Dwarves
Lizards and Birds
Hobbits and Hoaxes
Counseling and Cognition
Ulcers and Ivermectin
Paradigms and Shifts

6. Naming Change
A Knight and a Lord
A Caliph and a Prince
Two Marriages and a Divorce
Two Women
A Baby and Dear Abby
A Star, a King, and a Kennedy
A Building and an Institution
A Man, a Person, and a Corporation
A Person and an Alias

7. Changing Minds
Encoring Yesterdays
Categorizing Villains
Theorizing Characters
Alternating Worlds
Justifying Cartoonists
Combating Memories
Forgetting Selves
Continuing People
Philosophizing Brains

Bibliography

Index

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An exploration of the artistic and pop culture concepts of sequels, remakes, retcons, and rejects, this book applies them to the ways in which we understand, reinterpret and revise real-world history and current events.
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Uses storytelling tropes employed in popular media and literature to understand the constantly changing landscape of culture, society, politics and history

Produktdetaljer

ISBN
9781350439610
Publisert
2024-05-30
Utgiver
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Høyde
234 mm
Bredde
156 mm
Aldersnivå
U, P, 05, 06
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Innbundet
Antall sider
232

Biografisk notat

Chris Gavaler is Associate Professor of English at Washington and Lee University, USA. He is the author of On the Origin of Superheroes (2015), Superhero Comics (Bloomsbury 2017), Superhero Thought Experiments (with Nathaniel Goldberg, 2019), Creating Comics (with Leigh Ann Beavers, Bloomsbury 2020), Revising Fiction, Fact, and Faith: A Philosophical Account (with Nathaniel Goldberg, 2021), and The Comics Form (Bloomsbury 2022).

Nat Goldberg is Professor of Philosophy at Washington and Lee University, USA. He is the author of Kantian Conceptual Geography (2014), Superhero Thought Experiments (with Chris Gavaler, 2019) and Revising Fiction, Fact, and Faith: A Philosophical Account (with Chris Gavaler, 2022).