Tag Archives: superheroes

Superheroes Do Hanukkah

Over at the Brooklyn Comic Shop site, owner Joshua H. Stulman shares a few candle-kindling moments from Hanukkah in comics:

In truth it is still rare to find Jewish comic characters in comics and even harder to find mainstream comic stories about Chanukah. Although I must say that both Marvel and D.C. have been pretty good about including a one page Chanukah pin up in their holiday annuals since the 1990’s.

Jack Kirby's family Hanukkah card

This does, tangentially, raise the question whether Batwoman, as portrayed by Ruby Rose on CW crossover shows FlashGreen Arrow, and Supergirl, will be overtly depicted as Jewish on television, too.

Chanukah In Comics!

Teaching Gospel Texts and Mimesis with Superhero Stories

John W. Fadden, Ph.D.[The following entry is written by John Fadden, PhD., an adjunct lecturer across Western New York and frequent contributor to the Society of Biblical Literature. It is presented here with his permission.]

I teach an undergraduate introduction to the New Testament course that is mostly filled with students taking the course to fulfill requirements of the college’s core curriculum. I assume most students do not have a background in the cultural contexts of the writers of the New Testament, nor that most students have any connection to, or have read the New Testament. Yet, I also expect that because the New Testament is the “Bible,” students, including non-Christians, have certain expectations about the Gospels as historical documents that provide accurate portrayals of Jesus’s life. Most of the students have never thought about the literary practices in the cultural context that would have influenced the gospel writers.

In the spring semester, I added a new activity to the course in hopes of pushing students to think about the Gospels as imitating the classical epics by introducing them to Dennis MacDonald’s mimetic theory. While a lot of MacDonald’s scholarship is beyond the undergraduate non-major reading level, his Mythologizing Jesus: From Jewish Teacher to Epic Hero (Rowman & Littlefield, 2005) provides a popular audience access to his scholarship. Since I assumed that my students have a limited background in the classics (and no knowledge of Greek), I wanted to come up with a way to have them engage with MacDonald’s ideas, but using stories familiar to their own cultural settings from the superhero genre. The initial goal was for students to imitate a superhero scene to create a pericope about Jesus. To add a degree of difficulty (and to fit within the course’s core curriculum requirements) students also had to make it fit into the first century context (so no saving an airplane from crashing). The course also has a public speaking / presentation requirement, so the student’s final creation was delivered in front of their classmates.

JESSICA JONES: "AKA Smile"The activity required multiple engagements with the topic. First, I assigned the students read parts of MacDonald’s book to introduce them to his theory. I also asked students to pick a superhero story from a movie, TV show, or comic book that they could write in a 10-15 verse story (suggesting students think about MacDonald’s work as they chose it). In the next class session, we discussed the reading from MacDonald. I demonstrated how they might imitate their contemporary superhero story when writing a story about Jesus using the concluding scene from Jessica Jones season 1, episode 12 as an example. (I figured it was old enough I wouldn’t be guilty of spoilers, but I discovered few students had watched it; so I might recommend adding a few minutes into the class to show a clip of whatever story you are imitating in your demonstration.) I also showed them how the imitator might leave clues for her audience to be able to recognize the source story (for example, playing with a notable name like Kilgrave could signal to those familiar with Jessica Jones that there was a connection). I gave the students a week to write their imitation of a superhero story as a pericope about Jesus.

Continue reading Teaching Gospel Texts and Mimesis with Superhero Stories

CFP: Religion and the Marvel Universe (9/15/18)

Editor: Gregory Stevenson (gstevenson@rc.edu)

Theology and Pop Culture is currently seeking contributions for a potential edited volume from Rowman and Littlefield on the intersection of theology and the Marvel Universe. Essays may focus on comic books/graphic novels, film, and television/streaming series. Essays should be written for academics, but avoid “jargon” to be accessible for the layperson.

MARVEL logo

Potential ideas include but are not limited to:

Greek mythology and the Marvel superhero; Catholicism and the character of Daredevil; Ms. Marvel and the rise of the Muslim superhero; Ghost Rider and the deal with the devil; Spider-Man and moral theology; Luke Cage and liberation theology; Black Panther and African theology; Iron Fist and the conflict between capitalism and spiritualism; violence and redemption in The Punisher; religious tolerance and intolerance in The X-Men; the depiction of cults in Marvel’s Runaways; Dr. Strange and the conflict between faith and science; christology in Marvel; Iron Man and Tony Stark’s quest for redemption; Marvel’s cosmic beings; Thor and Norse theology; Captain America and the role of faith; apocalyptic themes in Marvel stories; Cloak and Dagger and the metaphor of light and darkness (this list could go on indefinitely so feel free to propose any relevant topic)

Submission Guidelines:

  1. Please submit an abstract between 300-700 words with CV or resumé, including a list of any previous publications, to Gregory Stevenson at gstevenson@rc.edu by September 15, 2018
  2. Submission deadline for drafts of accepted papers is April 30, 2019 (if a particular essay needs to incorporate the fourth Avengers film, a later submission date can be negotiated)

Superman as Jewish Assimilation, not Exodus

The talented Noah Berlatsky recently wrote a piece for The Forward where he challenges many of the semi-religious attributes assigned to Superman — in particular, the closeness of the hero’s link to Judaism.

The truth is that Siegel and Shuster, like many Jewish Americans in the 1930s, had little investment in Jewish religion or in Jewish history. Brad Ricca wrote in “Superboys: The Amazing Adventures of Jerry Siegel and Joe Shuster” that Siegel and Shuster were both disinterested in the Jewish religion and culture of their “old world parents.”

This reading of Superman aligns much more closely with scholarship produced just two years ago by Martin Lund, entitled Re-Constructing the Man of Steel, than it does the work of The Forward‘s own Larry Tye or that of Harry Brod’s 2012 book Is Superman Jewish?

In many ways, Bertlatsky’s article counters another recent piece by The Forward, that of Marcy Oster’s “Making Superman Jewish Again” in February. This increasing intensity and variety of takes on the Man of Steel strongly suggest that his religious symbolism, particularly with a Jewish lens, remains a hot site of debate.

 

 

More Than You Ever Wanted to Know on Black Panther and Religion

Black Panther rules the box office worldwide and is a cultural phenomenon. As such, it’s being viewed from every possible angle and through every available lens. And, to paraphrase Ian Malcolm, the thinkpiecers were so preoccupied with whether they could, they didn’t stop to think if they should.

So, without comment, here is a short sampling of the various ways Black Panther, with its roots in comics, is being applied to the subject of religion, of religious intolerance, censorship, and interfaith relations. Your mileage may vary.

We’ve loosely grouped them below as Black Panther and…”

…Religion in General

What The Movie ‘Black Panther’ Teaches Us About Religion

‘Where Is Your God Now?’ 3 Religious Objects of Worship in ‘Black Panther’

http://dailycaller.com/2018/02/23/black-panther-is-a-quasi-religious-atonement-for-white-guilt/

…Judaism

Black Panther Is a Jewish Creation

Why ‘Black Panther’ might also be a milestone in black-Jewish relations

http://www.tabletmag.com/scroll/256186/black-panther-is-a-great-zionist-movie

The Defeat of Killmonger in ‘Black Panther’ Holds Lessons for Israel

…Spirituality

Black Panther’s Spirituality Pulls from Reality

Spiritual Reflections on the Black Panther Movie

https://aleteia.org/2018/02/17/is-the-hero-in-black-panther-secretly-spiritual/

African cosmologies: spiritual reflections on the ‘Black Panther’ movie

…Hinduism

http://www.freepressjournal.in/entertainment/black-panther-cbfc-muted-hanuman-reference-due-to-not-hurt-any-kind-of-religious-sentiments/1225555

CBFC Offended by ‘Hanuman’ in Black Panther Is Divine Stupidity

http://indianexpress.com/article/trending/trending-in-india/black-panther-fans-in-india-angry-over-beeping-out-hanuman-reference-twitter-reactions-5073987/

…Islam

Is the Black Panther Islamophobic?

Is Black Panther Islamophobic?

Is Black Panther Islamophobic? A Somali Canadian Perspective

Black Panther Shows Muslims Too Can Escape Tokenism

Black Panther Makes A Nod To The Boko Haram Kidnapping in Nigeria

…Christianity

What “Black Panther” Means for Christians

Four Lessons the Church Can Learns from Black Panther

Clergy’s View on Black Panther

http://www.jesusdaily.com/inspire/black-panther-movie-review-christian-perspective/

‘Black Panther’ and the Longing for Home

At Home in Wakanda

Do it For the Diaspora?: The Moral Question Behind Black Panther

https://crtvchurch.com/why-christians-need-to-see-marvels-black-panther/

https://aleteia.org/2018/02/23/black-panther-star-boldly-proclaims-i-fell-in-love-with-jesus/

Christian actress Sope Aluko says ‘Black Panther’ set felt ‘almost like church’


In several of these cases, the charge could be levied that groups ostensibly unrelated to Black Panther are ‘making it all about them,’ but, in others, there are some legitimate linkages to be made. It says something, though, when so many religious communities want to comment on or be reflected by a cinema blockbuster — almost as if it means more than superhero popcorn entertainment…