
From Patriot to Nomad (feat. Jacob Dallas)
On today's episode, Jacob Dallas (The Socialist Shelf) joins Jackal and Josiah to talk about Captain America and the way he evolved from a symbol of proud patriotic anti-fascism in the 1940s, to disenchanted liberal in the 70s, to heartbroken hero in the 2000s.
Pre-order Jacob's novel, They Called Her Rebel, here: https://www.collectiveinkbooks.com/roundfire-books/our-books/they-called-her-rebel
Pre-order Jacob's novel, They Called Her Rebel, here: https://www.collectiveinkbooks.com/roundfire-books/our-books/they-called-her-rebel
- Check out The Socialist Shelf: https://www.socialistshelf.com/
- Follow The Socialist Shelf on Bluesky: https://bsky.app/profile/socialistshelf.bsky.social
- Become a Fruitless Patron here: https://www.patreon.com/user?u=11922141
- Check out Fruitless on YouTube
- Find more of Josiah’s work: https://linktr.ee/josiahwsutton
- Follow Josiah on Twitter @josiahwsutton
References
- Captain America Comics #1 (1940) by Joe Simon & Jack Kirby.
- Avengers #4 (1963) by Stan Lee & Jack Kirby.
- Captain America Vol. 1, #117-119 (1968) by Stan Lee & Gene Colan.
- Captain America Vol. 1, #169-176 (1974) by Steve Englehart & Sal Buscema.
- Captain America Vol. 1, #180 (1974) by Steve Englehart & Sal Buscema.
- Captain America Vol. 1, #250 (1980) by Roger Stern & John Byrne.
- Captain America Vol. 5, #8-9 (2005) by Ed Brubaker.
- Captain America Vol. 5, #11-14 (2005) by Ed Brubaker.
Audio credits
- Sentimental - Dan Darmawan
- Yesterday - bloom.
- 'Merican - Descendents