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Hip-Hop and Comics

Hip-Hop and Comics

Edited by Sheena C. Howard, Justin D Burton, Brea M. Heidelberg
Foreword by Patrick A. Reed
Afterword by Spenser Nellis, Riggs Morales, and Amy Chu
Hardcover : 9781496857910, 224 pages, 33 b&w illustrations, April 2026
Paperback : 9781496861849, 224 pages, 33 b&w illustrations, April 2026
Expected to ship: 2026-04-15
Expected to ship: 2026-04-15

Table of contents

Foreword by Patrick A. Reed
Introduction
Sheena C. Howard, Justin D Burton, and Brea M. Heidelberg

Artistic Innovation and Resistance
Chapter 1: Eric Orr and the First Hip-Hop Comic Book: Situating Rappin’ Max Robot
Sheena C. Howard
Chapter 2: DMC’s Legacy: Meaning-Making, Hip-Hop, and Comics
Sheena C. Howard
Chapter 3: Crafting an Alternate Reality Through Grassroots Comics and Rap Music in India
Jayanti Datta
Chapter 4: Wall (S)crawlers: Comics, Graffiti, and the Aesthetic, Political, and Rhetorical Resonances of Public Visual Arts
Michael B. Norton Dando

Marvel Comics and Hip-Hop
Chapter 5: “Sweet Christmas”: Luke Cage and Pulp Authenticity
Matthew Teutsch
Chapter 6: Dynamic Duo: Marvel Comics and Hip-Hop Culture’s Innovations in Storytelling
Stephen J. Tyson Jr.
Chapter 7: When Worlds Collide: Hip-Hop Music and Superhero Movies
Laith Zuraikat
Chapter 8: From Mic to Mask: Unveiling Hip-Hop’s Impact on Black Masculinity in Marvel Superheroes
John P. Craig

Cultural Expression, Impact, and Identity
Chapter 9: Masked Marauders
Michael Sales
Chapter 10: To Murder the Hunger: The Boondocks, the Exorcism and/or Beating of Tom DuBois, and an Appeal to Black Male Solidarity
george white jr.
Chapter 11: “I’m Michael Jordan, I’m Not Malcolm X”: Performing Black Masculinity in The Boys
Collin M. Bright, Kathryn Hobson, Lea Beka, and Daniel Silver
Chapter 12: Remembering Daniel Dumile: “The Classic Conception of Death” Through Dr. Victor Von Doom née MF DOOM
Johnny Jones
Chapter 13: Hearing Comics in Hip-Hop: Leikeli47 as Black Feminist Superhero
Brea M. Heidelberg and Justin D Burton
Afterword
The Darryl Makes Comics Team (Spenser Nellis, Amy Chu, and Riggs Morales)
About the Contributors
Index

An innovative collection of essays that explore the intersections between two powerful creative movements

Description

Contributions by Lea Beka, Collin M. Bright, Justin D Burton, Amy Chu, John P. Craig, Michael B. Norton Dando, Jayanti Datta, Brea M. Heidelberg, Kathryn Hobson, Sheena C. Howard, Johnny Jones, Riggs Morales, Spenser Nellis, Patrick A. Reed, Michael Sales, Daniel Silver, Matthew Teutsch, Stephen J. Tyson Jr., george white jr., and Laith Zuraikat
Hip-Hop and Comics is a groundbreaking volume that explores the deep and dynamic intersections between two of the most influential cultural movements of the past fifty years. Edited by Sheena C. Howard, Justin D Burton, and Brea M. Heidelberg, this book provides an in-depth examination of the artistic, historical, and cultural relationships between hip-hop and comics. Both art forms evolved into global phenomena, shaping storytelling, identity, and social commentary in profound ways. Through a collection of insightful chapters, this volume critically analyzes how hip-hop and comics have influenced each other, from early underground movements to their present-day impact on mainstream culture.

Structured in three thematic sections—Artistic Innovation and Resistance; Marvel Comics and Hip-Hop; and Cultural Expression, Impact, and Identity—this book investigates key historical moments, artistic influences, and the creative exchange between these two mediums. It also examines the visual aesthetics of hip-hop as reflected in comic book art, the role of graffiti as a bridge between these worlds, and the ways in which hip-hop narratives and identities have been expressed through superhero and underground comics.

With contributions from leading voices in hip-hop studies, comics scholarship, and media analysis, this is a pioneering text that bridges academic and popular audiences. By bringing together historical research, critical analysis, and firsthand accounts, Hip-Hop and Comics cements its place as a definitive exploration of the powerful synergy between these two art forms.