Mark D. White's latest book at the intersection of comic books and philosophy is Ethics of the Fantastic Four. In it, he discusses... well, the ethics of the Fantastic Four. He's not looking at individual decisions, but at the cumulative overall approach each character takes that helps to define who they are. He devotes an entire chapter to each of the four primary members, as well as one for Dr. Doom and another for Galactus and the Silver Surfer. He of course offers an introduction to some broad ethical frameworks to work from, and he does have a sort of case study by way of Marvel's Civil War event.
The challenge with this type of overview of fictional characters with decades of continuity is that every character has been worked on by hundreds of creators, even if you limit yourself to a single outlet. White entirely avoids extra complications by strictly focusing on the primary comics continuity, and skipping other media as well as alternate reality versions. But even so, we're still talking about hundreds of creators across thousands of comics.
That's what wound up impressing me most about the book overall. White really did an impressive amount of research, pulling out references to what I would consider obscure stories and incidents to both serve as strong examples or emphasize points he's already made. He very much could've written much the same book with half of the references but by calling out odd, one-off stories on a regular/consistent basis, he really emphasizes that he's not cherry picking examples to prove a point but letting the collective body of all the comics to drive his thesis.
The chapter that perhaps raised my eyebrow the most of was the case study on Civil War, mainly because I felt Reed Richards was written wildly out of chatacter for that story and used more as a plot contrivance than letting the chatacter direct his story. White does spend time prefacing the analysis by looking at an earlier story in which Reed comes to the exact same problem from the polar opposite (and more character driven) position, but he doesn't try to reconcile the two viewpoints or offer how one might change positions so radically. I don't know that one necessarily can rationalize that (I know I've never been able to) but he does at least point out the discrepancy. I don't know if he chose that as his case study in order that he might try to sort it out, or if he just wanted to highlight the most significant disconnect, of if he just wanted to play on the timing of it being the twentieth anniversary of that storyline.
My background with the Fantastic Four is much stronger than my background in philosophy, but White does an excellent job of making both topics extremely accessible. He cites plenty of sources if he mentions an incident or story that you might want to follow up on, and I found his end notes to be as enlightening as the main text.
Ethics of the Fantastic Four came out last year from Ockham Publishing and should be available through your favorite book shop. it retails for $12.99 US.








