- Title Pages
- Nourishing Minds and Bodies with Indigenous Comics: A Foreword
- Graphic Indigeneity: Terra America and Terra Australasia
- “We the North”: Interrogating Indigenous Appropriation as Canadian Identity in Mainstream American Comics
- Jack Jackson, Native Representation, and Underground Comix
- “Goin’ Native!”: Depictions of the First Peoples from “Down Under”
- Representations of Indigenous Australians in Marvel Comics
- The Wisdom of the Phantom: The Secret Life of Australia’s Indigenous Superhero
- Outsmarting the Lords of Death: An Amerindian Cognitive Script in Comics
- Memory in Pieces: Chola Power’s Origin Story and the Quest for Memory in Peru
- Visualizing an Alternative Mesoamerican Archive: Daniel Parada’s Comic Series Zotz in Historical Perspective
- Critical Impulses in Daniel Parada’s Zotz: A Case Study in Indigenous Comics
- The Battle for Recollection: Maya Historietas as Art for Remembering War
- Turey El Taíno and La Borinqueña: Puerto Rican Nationalist and Ethnic Resistance in Puerto Rican Comics Dealing with Taíno Cultural Heritage
- Securing Stones in the Sky: Word-Drawn Recreations of Oral Trickster Tales
- Super Indians and the Indigenous Comics Renaissance
- Seeing Histories, Building Futurities: Multimodal Decolonization and Conciliation in Indigenous Comics from Canada
- Deep Time and Vast Place: Visualizing Land/Water Relations across Time and Space in Moonshot: The Indigenous Comics Collection
- Deer Woman Re-Generations: Re-Activating First Beings and Re-Arming Sisterhoods of Survivance in Deer Woman: An Anthology
- Indigeneity, Intermediality, and the Haunted Present of Will I See?
- Afterlives: A Coda
- Contributors
- Index
Representations of Indigenous Australians in Marvel Comics
Representations of Indigenous Australians in Marvel Comics
- Chapter:
- (p.75) Representations of Indigenous Australians in Marvel Comics
- Source:
- Graphic Indigeneity
- Author(s):
- Dennin Ellis
- Publisher:
- University Press of Mississippi
Dennin Ellis focuses on the distillation and reconstruction of Aboriginal characters in the Outback Era of the Uncanny X-Men series. By focusing his scholarly lens on characters like Gateway, Talisman, and the Reavers, he analyzes how Marvel missed an opportunity to wake readers to the violence of colonization and imperialism in committing acts of genocide against Indigenous Australians.
Keywords: Aboriginal characters, Outback Era, Uncanny X-Men, Gateway, Talisman
University Press of Mississippi requires a subscription or purchase to access the full text of books within the service. Public users can however freely search the site and view the abstracts and keywords for each book and chapter.
Please, subscribe or login to access full text content.
If you think you should have access to this title, please contact your librarian.
To troubleshoot, please check our FAQs , and if you can't find the answer there, please contact us.
- Title Pages
- Nourishing Minds and Bodies with Indigenous Comics: A Foreword
- Graphic Indigeneity: Terra America and Terra Australasia
- “We the North”: Interrogating Indigenous Appropriation as Canadian Identity in Mainstream American Comics
- Jack Jackson, Native Representation, and Underground Comix
- “Goin’ Native!”: Depictions of the First Peoples from “Down Under”
- Representations of Indigenous Australians in Marvel Comics
- The Wisdom of the Phantom: The Secret Life of Australia’s Indigenous Superhero
- Outsmarting the Lords of Death: An Amerindian Cognitive Script in Comics
- Memory in Pieces: Chola Power’s Origin Story and the Quest for Memory in Peru
- Visualizing an Alternative Mesoamerican Archive: Daniel Parada’s Comic Series Zotz in Historical Perspective
- Critical Impulses in Daniel Parada’s Zotz: A Case Study in Indigenous Comics
- The Battle for Recollection: Maya Historietas as Art for Remembering War
- Turey El Taíno and La Borinqueña: Puerto Rican Nationalist and Ethnic Resistance in Puerto Rican Comics Dealing with Taíno Cultural Heritage
- Securing Stones in the Sky: Word-Drawn Recreations of Oral Trickster Tales
- Super Indians and the Indigenous Comics Renaissance
- Seeing Histories, Building Futurities: Multimodal Decolonization and Conciliation in Indigenous Comics from Canada
- Deep Time and Vast Place: Visualizing Land/Water Relations across Time and Space in Moonshot: The Indigenous Comics Collection
- Deer Woman Re-Generations: Re-Activating First Beings and Re-Arming Sisterhoods of Survivance in Deer Woman: An Anthology
- Indigeneity, Intermediality, and the Haunted Present of Will I See?
- Afterlives: A Coda
- Contributors
- Index