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White, Mark D., ed. Watchmen and Philosophy: A Rorschach Test. Blackwell Philosophy and Pop Culture. Hoboken: Wiley, 2009. 
Added by: joachim (20/12/2009, 01:39)   Last edited by: joachim (30/08/2016, 13:23)
Resource type: Book
Language: en: English
BibTeX citation key: White2009
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Categories: General
Keywords: "Watchmen", Collection of essays, Gibbons. Dave, Moore. Alan, Philosophy, United Kingdom
Creators: White
Publisher: Wiley (Hoboken)
Views: 19/557
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Abstract
Alan Moore’s Watchmen is set in 1985 and chronicles the alternative history of the United States where the US edges dangerously closer to nuclear war with the Soviet Union. Within this world exists a group of crime busters, who don elaborate costumes to conceal their identity and fight crime, and an intricate plot to kill and discredit these “superheroes.”
Alan Moore’s Watchmen popularized the graphic novel format, has been named one of Time magazine’s top 100 novels, and is now being made into a highly anticipated movie adaptation. This latest book in the popular Blackwell Philosophy and Pop Culture series peers into Moore’s deeply philosophical work to parse and deconstruct the ethical issues raised by Watchmen’s costumed adventurers, their actions, and their world. From nuclear destruction to utopia, from governmental authority to human morality and social responsibility, it answers questions fans have had for years about Watchmen’s ethical quandaries, themes, and characters.

Table of Contents

Acknowledgments: They Left It Entirely in My Hands (ix)
Introduction: A Rorschach Test (1)

I. THE POLITICS OF POWER: WHO WATCHES THE WATCHMEN?
1. Christopher Robichaud: The Superman Exists, and He’s American: Morality in the Face of Absolute Power (5)
2. Jacob M. Held: Can We Steer This Rudderless World? Kant, Rorschach, Retributivism, and Honor (19)
3. Tony Spanakos: Super-Vigilantes and the Keene Act (33)
4. J. Keeping: Superheroes and Supermen: Finding Nietzsche’s Übermensch in Watchmen (47)

II. THE VEIDT PLAN: WATCHMEN AND ETHICS
5. J. Robert Loftis: Means, Ends, and the Critique of Pure Superheroes (63)
6. Mark D. White: The Virtues of Nite Owl’s Potbelly (79)
7. Alex Nuttall: Rorschach: When Telling the Truth Is Wrong (91)

III. THE METAPHYSICS OF DR. MANHATTAN
8. James DiGiovanna: Dr. Manhattan, I Presume? (103)
9. Christopher M. Drohan: A Timely Encounter: Dr. Manhattan and Henri Bergson (115)
10. Arthur Ward: Free Will and Foreknowledge: Does Jon Really Know What Laurie Will Do Next, and Can She Do Otherwise? (125)
11. Andrew Terjesen: I’m Just a Puppet Who Can See the Strings: Dr. Manhattan as a Stoic Sage (137)

IV. THIS IS NOT YOUR FATHER’S COMIC BOOK
12. Aaron Meskin: “Why Don’t You Go Read a Book or Something?” Watchmen as Literature (157)
13. Sarah Donovan and Nick Richardson: Watchwomen (173)
14. Robert Arp: Hooded Justice and Captain Metropolis: The Ambiguously Gay Duo (185)
15. Taneli Kukkonen: What’s So Goddamned Funny? The Comedian and Rorschach on Life’s Way (197)

Contributors: Who Writes about the Watchmen? (215)
Index: After the Masquerade (221)


Added by: joachim  Last edited by: joachim
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