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Matthew Costello, Saint Xavier University, author of Secret Identity Crisis: Comic Books and the Unmasking of Cold War America (2009)
Superheroes and Excess is a collection of bold, multi-disciplinary essays, each grappling with a variety of topics (gender, race, genre, media and more). Academically rigorous, and at times playful, Brassett and Reynolds set out to explore all facets of the superhero through philosophies of excess. Framed as an important creative drive, this use of excess allows the collection to stand as an expedition; a journey (or even an adventure) into the superhero genre and its extravagances. Themselves reluctant to claim the collection produces any definite and final answers; the contributors nonetheless provide compelling interpretations that any superhero scholar will need to wade into to further their own understanding of both the superhero figure and genre.
Esther De Dauw, Newman University, Birmingham, author of Hot Pants and Spandex Suits: Gender Representation in American Superhero Comic Books (2020)
Superheroes and Excess: A Philosophical Adventure is a wonderful new dive into the world of superhero comics. The field of comics studies has no doubt had a few good battles with philosophy but this volume gives us an expansive and comprehensible insight into the very functioning of superhero narratives. They argue, "Everything within the superhero genre tends towards the condition of excess" and this includes "the wider participatory super-culture." The notion of excess is a great fit. It touches the core of what makes the genre function and thrive, then occasionally collapse, but also rejuvenate. The articles, which deal with a wide range of comics, though mainly American, are well synchronized and together offer a great deal more than the sum of their individual parts. Much of this is thanks to the editors framing narrative, or framing analyses, which allow some refreshing creativity and experimentation as well as scholarly rigour.
Adnan Mahmutovic, Stockholm University, author of Visions of the Future in Comics (2017)
Superheroes and Excess offers an illuminating and generative contribution to the growing scholarly literature on superheroes in comics and film. Brassett, Reynolds, and their coauthors are to be congratulated for having many fresh things to say about Captain America, the Fantastic Four, Image Comics, Jack Kirby, the X-Men, Wonder Woman, and other key players in the superhero omniverse. Anyone with an interest in the nexus of philosophy and popular culture will want to know about this book.
Kent Worcester, Marymount Manhattan College, co-editor of A Comics Studies Reader (2008) and The Superhero Reader (2013)
In recognizing the creative power of excess, this collection boldly performs its own excessive difference from existing superhero scholarship. Provocative and thoroughly engaging, these essays compel a serious reconsideration of the power of excess as a philosophical way of being by way of a genre that we cannot think of in the same way ever again.
Matt Yockey, University of Toledo, editor of Make Ours Marvel: Media Convergence and A Comics Universe (2017)