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Contributors: One Single Tribe

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Ben Almassi teaches philosophy at Governors State University and lives in Chicago, where just once he would love to flip an 18-wheeler lengthwise or pull out into a line of school buses to complete the perfect bank heist. Alas, these things only happen in Chicago in The Dark Knight. If they could move to Wakanda, he and his family would probably fit best with the Jabari – his naturalist spouse could explore the mountains and he could feed interrupting CIA operatives to his daughter. (Just kidding! We are vegetarians.)

Steve Bein is Associate Professor of Philosophy at the University of Dayton. He is a regular contributor to volumes on popular culture and philosophy, with chapters on Batman, Wonder Woman, LEGO, Star Trek, Blade Runner, and Mr. Rogers. He’s also a novelist, and his sci-fi short stories make the occasional appearance in science fiction courses across the United States. His books include Purifying Zen (2011), Compassion and Moral Guidance (2012), and the Fated Blades trilogy. Steve has traveled extensively through southern Africa but never made it as far north as Wakanda.

Armond Boudreaux is an Associate Professor of English at East Georgia State College. His publications include The Way Out and The Two Riders (the first two books in his sci-fi thriller series Forbidden Minds); contributions to Disney and Philosophy and Doctor Strange and Philosophy; as well as Titans: How Superheroes Can Help Us Make Sense of a Polarized World. It is not unusual for him to spend his spare time in the faculty lounge trying to convince his colleagues that the best way to choose a department chair is through ritual combat.

Timothy E. Brown is an Assistant Professor of Bioethics and Humanities at the University of Washington School of Medicine. His academic interests bring together the ethics of biotechnology, Black/Latinx feminist philosophy, and aesthetics. His research explores on how different disabled people experience the world through technologies that stimulate their brains and spinal cords. Tim is also a geek of many trades – from creating yo-yo tricks to making sci-fi sounds with esoteric synthesizers.

Gerald Browning is a husband, father, writer, and martial artist who teaches English and Literature for Muskegon Community College and Grand Valley State University. He enjoys reading philosophy and history. He cross-trains in multiple martial arts – serving as a sparring partner for T’Challa and Okoye – and has published in other popular culture and philosophy books. An avid writer of horror fiction, his first horror novel is titled, Demon in My Head.

Julio C. Covarrubias-Cabeza is Visiting Assistant Professor of Philosophy at Hobart and Williams Smith Colleges. After learning to ride a rhinoceros during an internship with W’Kabi and the Border Tribe, Julio received his PhD in philosophy at the University of Washington, and was Arnold L. Mitchem Fellow at Marquette University, where he finished writing his dissertation reconceptualizing the concept of genocide for settler/slaver empires like the United States. His work focuses on questions that emerge from thinking at the nexus of critical race theory, critical Indigenous studies, and Latin American and Latina/o/x philosophy. He sees these traditions as different manifestations of anti-colonial thought, his goal being to put them into conversation in new ways.

Paul A. Dottin, PhD, is a China Affiliated Scholar at The Johns Hopkins University – Nanjing University Center for Chinese and American Studies in China. After apprenticing with Nakia at the Wakandan International Outreach Centre, Paul now conducts research on China–Africa social and cultural relations, American social movements, and African-Chinese comparative philosophy. Paul was also an Alain L. Locke Visiting Scholar in Philosophy at Purdue University.

Ian J. Drake is Associate Professor of Jurisprudence at Montclair State University in New Jersey. He obtained his PhD in American history from the University of Maryland at College Park. Prior to earning his PhD, Drake practiced insurance defense law – and was very busy after the Avengers trashed New York and Sokovia (and don’t even mention the snap). His research and teaching interests include American legal and constitutional history and the history of animal rights law. Drake is also a host of the New Books in Law podcast on the New Books Network. When Drake is not engrossed in a book, he’s likely discussing the finer points of Marvel characters with his son, Owen.

Juan M. Floyd-Thomas is Associate Professor of African American Religious History at Vanderbilt University where he teaches on theories and methods of religious studies as well as religion and popular culture. While Juan earned a few academic degrees from fancy educational institutions (Rutgers, Temple, and University of Pennsylvania), his true preparation for the task at hand began as a geeky latch-key kid in NJ whose hard-working single mother introduced him to the wonderful world of comic books at 11 years old. Although he started out pretty agnostic about comic book fandom, he quickly decided to give his allegiance to Marvel! Much like T’Challa, he maintains a pretty busy schedule as a teacher, author, spouse, and parent thanks to a steady diet of the purple Heart-Shaped Herb (a.k.a. coffee). Meanwhile, he happily lives in a household with his lovely wife and adorable daughter who are the bravest, most beautiful, and brilliant women warriors this side of the Dora Milaje.

Alessio Gerola, not able to enjoy an education like the children of royalty, made the poor life decision to study philosophy at the University of Trento in Italy. As the world was not yet aware of Wakanda at the time, he specialized in philosophy of technology at the University of Twente in the Netherlands. An avid wanderer of fictional worlds, he is always trying to imagine what the world would look like from a different perspective. He opted to spend lockdown in Wakanda as flights were cheap at the time, and has not regretted it ever since. He’s now trying to apply for a PhD at Golden City University under the supervision of Wakandan philosopher Changamire, but visa issues are slowing down the process. In the meantime, he’s been working as a school teacher.

Michael J. Gormley is an ecocritic by way of wilderness survival training and a pop culture literary critic by way of never shutting up about Star Wars. His literary criticism focuses on the biotic relationship between an organism and environment as expressed in its tracks, on this planet, the Moon, and on Mars. Generally, he prefers his realities fictional and sees little difference between the literary and real images of tracks and most other things. At conferences and in the classroom, he has entwined these ecocritical notions with Thanos in Avengers: Infinity War to reflect on reactions to climate change in the environmental humanities. Gormley published his article “The Living Force: An Ecological Reading of How the Force Regards His Adherents” in 2019, and his first book, working title The End of the Anthropocene, is currently being made better by his editor(s) at Rowman & Littlefield for inclusion in their Ecocritical Theory and Practice line. If you notice an insistence on natural spaces in the chapter he co-authored here, he is to blame and is not sorry. Further unapologetic, Gormley is the loud one in the office he shares with co-author Benjamin Wendorf.

Stephen C.W. Graves serves the University of Missouri in the Department of Black Studies. He specializes in political theory, Black politics, and American government, and is an expert on Wakandan politics. Dr. Graves is the author of A Crisis of Leadership and the Role of Citizens in Black America: Leaders of the New School, a theoretical examination of the concepts of the citizen, citizenship, and leadership. Prior to receiving his PhD from Howard University, Stephen received his master’s degree in political science from the University of Nevada, Reno. Dr. Graves is also a highly sought-after speaker and mentor who has led professional development workshops and lectured at numerous college campuses, high schools, and institutions.

Christine Hobden wrote her contribution to this volume while lecturing philosophy at the University of Fort Hare in the Eastern Cape Province of South Africa. She has since moved inland to Wits School of Governance in Johannesburg where she lectures in ethics and public governance. Unsure if this Earth is really Earth-616 or Earth-1610, she hasn’t written on the Marvel Universe too often, but hopes to do so more often in the future after the excellent experience of engaging with Black Panther and its relationship to African philosophy (and because the editors of this volume were really cool).

Sofia Huerter is an instructor at Colorado Technical University, as well as a doctoral candidate in philosophy at the University of Washington, where they work on issues at the intersection of animal ethics and epistemology, generally from a feminist perspective. In addition to their research, Sofia has worked extensively to bring philosophy to underserved populations, through their work with the Freedom Education Project of the Puget Sound, which creates pathways to education for women, as well as trans-identified and gender non-comforming individuals, in prison, and also through the Simpson Center for the Humanities as a Mellon Fellow. During The Blip, Sofia interned at the Wakandan International Outreach Centre in Oakland.

Thanayi M. Jackson is an American historian and lifelong student of punx, drunx, freaks, and geeks, revolutionary jocks and hippies, hip hop intellectuals, and heavy metal queens. Born and raised in San José, California, she spent most of her days trying to escape capitalism as a disciple of Rock before a Griot banished her to the discipline of History where a great odyssey through the University of Maryland transformed her into a semi-mild-mannered professor. Jackson has held positions at San José State University, Berea College, and is currently Assistant Professor of History at California Polytechnic State University, San Luis Obispo. A fangirl of the Reconstruction period, her work examines transitions from slavery to freedom and all things Black Power. Jackson abides by a punk rock pedagogy whereby anything can be learned, everything can be deconstructed, and nothing can be lost.

Karen Joan Kohoutek is an independent scholar and poet, who has published about weird fiction and cult films in various journals and literary websites. Recent subjects include the female protagonists of Robert E. Howard’s Conan stories, the writers August Strindberg and Charles Brockden Brown, and Doris Wishman’s cult film oddity Nude on the Moon. She has also published a novella, The Jack-o-Lantern Box, and the reference book Ici Repose: A Guide to St. Louis Cemetery No. 2, Square 3, about the historic New Orleans cemetery. She lives in Fargo, North Dakota.

Ruby Komic is a pop-culture-overthinker from Melbourne, Australia. In 2021, she completed her master of arts in philosophy, at the University of Melbourne. Her thesis and writing centers around social epistemology, justice issues, and the imagination. Her future work will aim to break down the barriers of accessibility between academic philosophy and mainstream culture. When she’s not thinking and writing, Ruby goes on walkabouts to get in some practice time with her Dora Milaje spear.

Dean A. Kowalski is a Professor of Philosophy and Chair of the Arts & Humanities department in the College of General Studies at the University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee. He regularly teaches philosophy of religion, Asian philosophy, and ethics. He is the author of Joss Whedon as Philosopher (2017), Classic Questions and Contemporary Film, 2nd edition (2016), and Moral Theory at the Movies (2012). He is the editor of The Big Bang Theory and Philosophy (2012), The Philosophy of The X-Files, revised edition (2009), and Steven Spielberg and Philosophy (2008); he is the co-editor of The Philosophy of Joss Whedon (2011). Dean’s younger sister once called him “genius,” but he’s pretty sure she was being sarcastic, like Shuri.

Deana G. Lewis is a scholar and organizer whose work focuses on Black women and girls who have experienced state violence and how their experiences have often been left out of discourses on incarceration. Deana is a member of Love & Protect, a collective supporting women and gender nonbinary people who are criminalized by interpersonal violence. She is also a founding member of the Just Practice Collaborative, whose purpose is to build communities’ capacities to compassionately respond to intimate partner violence and sexual assault without relying primarily on state-based systems. As a plant lover, Deana is on the eternal pursuit for a Heart-Shaped Herb or two.

If Greg Littmann had a Black Panther suit, he wouldn’t do any more administrative work and nobody would be able to make him. He’d still be an Associate Professor of Philosophy at Southern Illinois University Edwardsville, whether they wanted him to be or not, but anytime someone tried to get him to do some administration, he’d just jump right over them and keep walking. He’d still teach subjects including metaphysics, epistemology, and philosophy through popular literature and film, but he’d return the graded exams any time he damn well liked. He’d still publish in a wide variety of areas, including philosophy of logic, evolutionary epistemology, and the philosophy of professional philosophy. He’d also still write chapters for books like this that relate philosophy to popular culture, like the ones he’s written for volumes on The Big Bang Theory, Black Mirror, Doctor Who, Game of Thrones, The Good Place, It’s Always Sunny in Philadelphia, and numerous others. But there would be no word limits. Not when Greg has panther claws.

Matthew B. Lloyd was created in 1970 in comics published in Charlotte, NC. He would later appear with an art history MA in University of Louisville Comics. He currently appears on a podcast on the Comics in Motion Network, Classic Comics with Matthew B. Lloyd. He can also regularly be found writing reviews and editorials at www.dccomicsnews.com when he’s not appearing in Restaurant Manager Comics. He has previously co-authored an essay with Ian J. Drake in Politics in Gotham: The Batman Universe and Political Thought.

Edwardo Pérez was raised by the Puma deity on an alternate Earth (where the Mayans ruled the entire planet) to be Jaguar Paw, the Mayan equivalent of Wakanda’s Black Panther. But after The Blip, Edwardo appeared on Earth-616 disguised as an unassuming (though smartly dressed) Professor of English and prolific writer, contributing essays and blogs to the Blackwell Philosophy and Pop Culture Series. Stripped of his Jaguar power, but endowed with rhetorical prowess, Edwardo instructs students in the ancient art of persuasion and the modern ways of critical theory at Tarrant County College Northeast. But, on the off chance that Doctor Strange is able to transport Edwardo back to his home world (where he could regain his Jaguar Paw powers), Edwardo keeps his claws sharpened, ready to aid anyone in the multiverse who needs help.

Charles F. Peterson is a Blerd from the hidden Black land of 1970s/80s Gary, IN. His Blerd consciousness was awakened by pages of The Uncanny X-Men, #127, vol. 1. He went on to receive degrees in philosophy from Morehouse College (BA), and philosophy, interpretation and culture from Binghamton University (MA, PhD). He writes in the areas of Africana political theory, cultural theory, and aesthetics. He is the author of DuBois, Fanon, Cabral: The Margins of Elite Anti-Colonial Leadership (2007) and the forthcoming Beyond Civil Disobedience: Social Nullification and Black Citizenship (2021). He is currently an Associate Professor of Africana studies at Oberlin College.

Kevin J. Porter has been an avid fan of superhero comics, graphic novels, television programs, movies, and collectibles for over 40 years. After all this time, he still keeps by his bedside a fresh stack of single issues or trade paperback collections that he reads nearly every evening, sometimes staying up much later than he should even though he really ought to know better by now. After coming to the painful realization that he just wasn’t going to be the next Stan Lee or Frank Miller, Kevin pursued his true calling as an academic and is currently Associate Professor and Department Chair of English at the University of Texas at Arlington. This chapter marks his first contribution to a volume in the Blackwell Philosophy and Pop Culture Series.

Jolynna Sinanan has spent the past two decades watching movies when she should have been reading philosophy, reading philosophy when she could have been watching movies, and writing about neither. She is a researcher in media and anthropology and her fieldwork in Trinidad (which earned her a War Dog tattoo) is the subject of the books Webcam and Visualising Facebook (with Daniel Miller) and Social Media in Trinidad, where there are short sections on Breaking Bad and Paranormal Activity and an image of Iron Man in social media in Trinidad.

Ryan Solinsky is a spinal cord injury medicine physician and scientist at Spaulding Rehabilitation Hospital and an Assistant Professor at Harvard Medical School. He lives so engrossed in the small field of spinal cord injury medicine that he can watch a Marvel movie and immediately start to think about neural connections and their correlations to societal undertones. He and co-author Dr. Wendorf grew up in the same small northern Wisconsin town and played on the same hockey line together.

Benjamin D. Wendorf, PhD, is a former Zamboni driver, now Associate Professor of History at Quinsigamond Community College and a lecturer at Clark University, specializing in Africa and the African Diaspora. He has published on neo-African religions in the Americas and is working on a manuscript on African Diaspora railway labor for Ohio University Press. In a previous life, he was an author and editor of NHL statistical analyses, and co-founder of the NHL research website Hockey Graphs. If you are concerned about the double life he has been living, understand that both things can be done wearing the same outfit. Ben is the quiet one in the office he shares with Michael J. Gormley.

Mark D. White is Chair of the Department of Philosophy at the College of Staten Island/CUNY, where he teaches courses in philosophy, economics, and law. He has edited or co-edited seven volumes in the Blackwell Philosophy and Pop Culture Series, including ones on Iron Man, Doctor Strange, and the Avengers; contributed chapters to many more; and authored books on Captain America, Batman, and Civil War. As of this writing, he is still waiting to hear back about his application to the Agents of Wakanda.

J. Lenore Wright is the Director of the Academy for Teaching and Learning (ATL) and Associate Professor of Interdisciplinary Studies & Philosophy at Baylor University. Wright’s scholarly interests include theories and modes of self-representation and feminist philosophy. She is the author of two books: Athena to Barbie: Bodies, Archetypes, and Women’s Search for Self (2021) and The Philosopher’s ‘I’: Autobiography and the Search for the Self (2006). She serves as an expert reviewer for the International Journal of Feminist Approaches to Bioethics and a regular reviewer for Feminist Philosophy Quarterly. Wright is the co-editor of Called to Teach: Excellence, Commitment, and Community in Christian Higher Education (2020), and she is an academic consultant for the International Organization for Student Success, publisher of the College Portfolio for Success. Wright received Baylor’s Outstanding Professor Award in 2008/9 for distinctive teaching.

Black Panther and Philosophy

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