
New Books in American Studies Julian Schmid, "Marvel, DC and US Security: The Superhero Genre and Foreign Policy in the Twenty-first Century" (Edinburgh UP, 2025)
Dec 12, 2025
Dr. Julian Schmid, an expert in popular culture and international relations, dives into the fascinating intersection of superheroes and U.S. foreign policy. He traces how the genre has evolved post-9/11 to reflect national security narratives. Schmid discusses how characters like Captain America embody political discourse, while films critique contemporary issues and even mirror election battles. He also raises concerns about the trend of superheroes retreating into personal narratives, questioning their future relevance in addressing global crises.
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Personal Origin Of The Project
- Julian Schmid describes first encountering the surge in superhero cinema after witnessing 9/11 on television.
- That moment motivated his study of how the war on terror and superhero resurgence interlinked across media.
Culture Starts Violent Imaginaries
- Schmid argues cultural texts help reveal where violent imaginaries begin before physical conflict occurs.
- He links popular culture and politics as mutually constitutive in forming security discourses.
The Enduring Individualist Myth
- Schmid traces a continuous US myth of the individual hero from 1776 through World War II into modern superheroes.
- He argues American national myths foreground individual violent acts as central to communal identity.

