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Steve Ditko (1927-2018) is one of the most important contributors
to American comic books. As the cocreator of Spider-Man and sole
creator of Doctor Strange, Ditko made an indelible mark on American
popular culture. Mysterious Travelers: Steve Ditko and the Search
for a New Liberal Identity resets the conversation about his heady
and powerful work. Always inward facing, Ditko's narratives
employed superhero and supernatural fantasy in the service of
self-examination, and with characters like the Question, Mr. A, and
Static, Ditko turned ordinary superhero comics into philosophic
treatises. Many of Ditko's philosophy-driven comics show a clear
debt to ideas found in Ayn Rand's Objectivism. Unfortunately,
readers often reduce Ditko's work to a mouthpiece for Rand's
vision. Mysterious Travelers unsettles this notion. In this book,
Zack Kruse argues that Ditko's philosophy draws on a complicated
network of ideas that is best understood as mystic liberalism.
Although Ditko is not the originator of mystic liberalism, his
comics provide a unique window into how such an ideology operates
in popular media. Examining selections of Ditko's output from 1953
to 1986, Kruse demonstrates how Ditko's comics provide insight into
a unique strand of American thought that has had a lasting impact.
Steve Ditko (1927-2018) is one of the most important contributors
to American comic books. As the cocreator of Spider-Man and sole
creator of Doctor Strange, Ditko made an indelible mark on American
popular culture. Mysterious Travelers: Steve Ditko and the Search
for a New Liberal Identity resets the conversation about his heady
and powerful work. Always inward facing, Ditko's narratives
employed superhero and supernatural fantasy in the service of
self-examination, and with characters like the Question, Mr. A, and
Static, Ditko turned ordinary superhero comics into philosophic
treatises. Many of Ditko's philosophy-driven comics show a clear
debt to ideas found in Ayn Rand's Objectivism. Unfortunately,
readers often reduce Ditko's work to a mouthpiece for Rand's
vision. Mysterious Travelers unsettles this notion. In this book,
Zack Kruse argues that Ditko's philosophy draws on a complicated
network of ideas that is best understood as mystic liberalism.
Although Ditko is not the originator of mystic liberalism, his
comics provide a unique window into how such an ideology operates
in popular media. Examining selections of Ditko's output from 1953
to 1986, Kruse demonstrates how Ditko's comics provide insight into
a unique strand of American thought that has had a lasting impact.
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