The Dark Knight’s Dystopian Vision: Batman, Risk, and American National Identity

This essay argues that Frank Miller’s Batman: The Dark Knight Returns (1986) and Batman: The Dark Knight Strikes Again (2001-02) are grounded in a specific type of anticipatory consciousness that we read as risk consciousness. With their sustained and systematic confrontation of risk discourses, the...

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Main Authors: Jeanne Cortiel, Laura Oehme
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: European Association for American Studies 2015-08-01
Series:European Journal of American Studies
Subjects:
Online Access:http://journals.openedition.org/ejas/10916
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spelling doaj-8ad2d11844914d0792293d13f84368802020-11-25T02:18:42ZengEuropean Association for American StudiesEuropean Journal of American Studies1991-93362015-08-0110210.4000/ejas.10916The Dark Knight’s Dystopian Vision: Batman, Risk, and American National IdentityJeanne CortielLaura OehmeThis essay argues that Frank Miller’s Batman: The Dark Knight Returns (1986) and Batman: The Dark Knight Strikes Again (2001-02) are grounded in a specific type of anticipatory consciousness that we read as risk consciousness. With their sustained and systematic confrontation of risk discourses, the two graphic narratives can be seen as key examples of what we call risk fiction, that is fictional engagements with and expressions of global risks that are the products of late modernity. Our focus on risk is based on Ulrich Beck’s articulation of “reflexive modernity” and reveals the specific ways in which Miller’s Dark Knight series signals a transition in American national, racial and gender identities since the 1980s. It is our contention here that Miller’s The Dark Knight Returns begins a deliberate engagement with how the sense of global risk shapes social cohesion at the height of the cold war, and The Dark Knight Strikes Again brings this engagement to the twenty-first century. We identify three levels of risk representation in the two graphic narratives: apocalyptic riskscapes, individual risk-taking as edgework, and the staging of global risk in the media.http://journals.openedition.org/ejas/109169/11anticipationapocalypsecomicscrisisdystopia
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Jeanne Cortiel
Laura Oehme
spellingShingle Jeanne Cortiel
Laura Oehme
The Dark Knight’s Dystopian Vision: Batman, Risk, and American National Identity
European Journal of American Studies
9/11
anticipation
apocalypse
comics
crisis
dystopia
author_facet Jeanne Cortiel
Laura Oehme
author_sort Jeanne Cortiel
title The Dark Knight’s Dystopian Vision: Batman, Risk, and American National Identity
title_short The Dark Knight’s Dystopian Vision: Batman, Risk, and American National Identity
title_full The Dark Knight’s Dystopian Vision: Batman, Risk, and American National Identity
title_fullStr The Dark Knight’s Dystopian Vision: Batman, Risk, and American National Identity
title_full_unstemmed The Dark Knight’s Dystopian Vision: Batman, Risk, and American National Identity
title_sort dark knight’s dystopian vision: batman, risk, and american national identity
publisher European Association for American Studies
series European Journal of American Studies
issn 1991-9336
publishDate 2015-08-01
description This essay argues that Frank Miller’s Batman: The Dark Knight Returns (1986) and Batman: The Dark Knight Strikes Again (2001-02) are grounded in a specific type of anticipatory consciousness that we read as risk consciousness. With their sustained and systematic confrontation of risk discourses, the two graphic narratives can be seen as key examples of what we call risk fiction, that is fictional engagements with and expressions of global risks that are the products of late modernity. Our focus on risk is based on Ulrich Beck’s articulation of “reflexive modernity” and reveals the specific ways in which Miller’s Dark Knight series signals a transition in American national, racial and gender identities since the 1980s. It is our contention here that Miller’s The Dark Knight Returns begins a deliberate engagement with how the sense of global risk shapes social cohesion at the height of the cold war, and The Dark Knight Strikes Again brings this engagement to the twenty-first century. We identify three levels of risk representation in the two graphic narratives: apocalyptic riskscapes, individual risk-taking as edgework, and the staging of global risk in the media.
topic 9/11
anticipation
apocalypse
comics
crisis
dystopia
url http://journals.openedition.org/ejas/10916
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