Jessica Jones, Scarred Superhero
Essays on Gender, Trauma and Addiction in the Netflix Series
$29.95
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About the Book
Jessica Jones barged onto our screens in November 2015, courtesy of Marvel and Netflix, presenting a hard-drinking protagonist who wrestles with her own inner (and outer) demons. Gaining enhanced abilities as a teenager, she eschews the “super costume” and is far more concerned with the problems of daily life. But when Jessica falls under the control of a villain, her life changes forever. Based on the comic book Alias, the show won a large following and critical acclaim for its unflinching look at subjects like abuse, trauma, PTSD, rape culture, alcoholism, drug addiction, victims’ plight and family conflicts. This collection of new essays offers insight into the show’s complex themes and story lines.
About the Author(s)
Bibliographic Details
Edited by Tim Rayborn and Abigail Keyes
Foreword by Robert G. Weiner
Format: softcover (6 x 9)
Pages: 247
Bibliographic Info: 2 photos, notes, bibliography, index
Copyright Date: 2018
pISBN: 978-1-4766-6684-6
eISBN: 978-1-4766-3157-8
Imprint: McFarland
Table of Contents
Foreword: The Not Quite Super Jessica Jones (Robert G. Weiner) 1
Introduction (Tim Rayborn and Abigail Keyes) 5
“Even you can break”: Jessica Jones as Femme Fatale (Daniel Binns) 13
Elite and Famous: Subverting Gender in the Marvel Universe with Jessica Jones (Nicholas William Moll) 28
“AKA Occasionally I give a damn”: Mirrored Archetypes and Gender Power in Jessica Jones (Aleah Kiley and Zak Roman) 44
Jessica Jones: Gender and the Marvel Phenomenon (Lillian Céspedes González) 64
AKA Marvel Does Darkness: Jessica Jones, Rape Allegories and the Netflix Approach to Superheroes (CarrieLynn D. Reinhard and Christopher J. Olson) 83
Sobriety Blows: Whiskey, Trauma and Coping in Netflix’s
Jessica Jones (Janis Breckenridge) 105
Jessica Jones, Women and Alcohol Use Disorders (Sharon Packer) 121
Jessica Jones’s Feminism: AKA Alias Gets a Fixed-It (Melissa C. Johnson) 133
The Haunted Hero: The Performance of Trauma in Jessica Jones (Melissa Wehler) 145
Integrity, Family and Consent: The Ontological Angst of Jessica Jones (Brian Fuller and Emily D. Edwards) 161
From the Hellmouth to Hell’s Kitchen: Analyzing Aesthetics of Women Survivors and Spaces in Buffy the Vampire Slayer and Jessica Jones (Courtney Lee Weida) 189
Battling Bluebeard, Fighting for Hope: The Heroine’s Journey (Valerie Estelle Frankel) 203
“Is that real or is it just in my head?” “Both”: Chronotopal Representations of Patriarchal Villainy and the Feminist Antihero in Marvel’s Jessica Jones (Justin Wigard) 221
About the Contributors 235
Index 237
Book Reviews & Awards
Winner, Susan Koppelman Award for the Best Anthology, Multi-Authored, or Edited Book in Feminist Studies—Popular Culture Association