ABSTRACT

A detailed study of the history and long-lasting influence of Marvel Comics, this book explores the ways Marvel’s truly unique comic book world reflects real world issues and controversies alongside believable, psychologically-motivated characters.

The book examines a decades-long dual focus on both tight-knit continuity and real-world fidelity that makes the Marvel Universe a unique entity amongst imaginary worlds. Although there have been many books and articles that analyze each of these aspects of the Marvel Universe, the unique focus of this book is on how those two aspects have interwoven over the course of Marvel’s history, and the ways in which both have been used as storytelling engines that have fueled the entire imaginary world of Marvel Comics.

Andrew J. Friedenthal has crafted a groundbreaking, engaging, and thoughtful examination of how this particular story world combines intricate world-building with responsiveness to real world events, which will be of interest to scholars and enthusiasts of not just comics studies, but also the fields of transmedia studies and imaginary worlds.

chapter |14 pages

Introduction

chapter 1|20 pages

Building a “Real World”

Marvel in the 1960s

chapter 2|20 pages

War on the Streets

Marvel, Vietnam, and Street Vigilantes

chapter 3|23 pages

The Marvel Multitude

The Era of Crossovers

chapter 4|21 pages

Terror and Paranoia

Marvel Realism in the Twenty-first Century

chapter |13 pages

Conclusion