Brooker's first major
monograph,
Batman Unmasked: Analyzing a Cultural Icon, was published in 2001. The book is a series of essays on the comic book superhero Batman, an expansion of Brooker's PhD thesis. The essays are each centred on a different period of Batman's history, drawing out the key elements that differ from period to period, as well as those that remain constant. Entertainment Weekly describes
Batman Unmasked as "cutting through the mumbo jumbo...to deliver incisive analysis and very sharp reporting." Brooker engages with the major dialogues surrounding the topic, including the question of Batman's role as a patriotic figure, questions of his sexuality and the role of
Batman as a viable queer text, to the point where
Popmatters refers to it as "less an analysis of the Batman than a repudiation of a number of other texts that support DC's "official" reading of the character". Brooker went on to publish
Using the Force: Creativity, Community and Star Wars Fans in 2002, ''Alice's Adventures: Lewis Carroll in Popular Culture
in 2005 and The Blade Runner Experience: The Legacy of a Science Fiction Classic
in 2006. More recently, he has written the BFI Film Classics edition Star Wars
, which received positive reviews in Empire
magazine and The Guardian''. Between August 2011 and March 2012, Brooker was a regular film, television and culture commentator for the
Times Higher Education magazine. His reviews and articles during this period included
The Girl with the Dragon Tattoo (2011),
We Need To Talk About Kevin (2011),
One Day (2011),
J.Edgar (2012), the
Twilight series (2008–2012),
Dr. Who (2005–present) and the
X Factor. With the release of Christopher Nolan's third Batman film, The Dark Knight Rises, and the publication of his book
Hunting the Dark Knight: Twenty-First Century Batman, Brooker published several high-profile articles on the character, including contributions to SFX,
The Huffington Post,
Newsweek,
The Guardian, Total Film and
The Independent. His work was also quoted in
The New York Post.
Hunting the Dark Knight was well received by SFX magazine: 'Taking multi-faceted tilts at a multi-faceted character, Brooker elicits oodles of thinkers, critics and fans as back-up for his ideas. He also packs a loaded Bat-belt of theories and themes, roving from 'queer' slants to 'paratexts' to pizza tie-ins and beyond... Brooker's enthused rigour is infectious.' In early 2013 Brooker teamed up with Suze Shore and Dr. Sarah Zaidan to create an online comic book series entitled
My So Called Secret Identity. The comic has been critically acclaimed and celebrated by
The Guardian,
Times Higher Education, and
Ms Magazine due to its reimagining of women in comics through the main character, Cat, who is average in every way except for being "really, really goddamn smart." Despite the high praise for
My So Called Secret Identity, Shore, Zaidan, and Brooker have chosen to measure the success of the comic by responses "from individuals who have connected with Cat and her story, and told us how much it means to them, to the extent that it's even inspired them, changed their approach to life and given them more confidence." In addition to paving the way for more realistic and empowering representations of women in comics, the team behind
My So Called Secret Identity have also taken steps to support women in a very practical way:
My So Called Secret Identity is a crowd funded project which gives a portion of the funds raised to women's refuge charity A Way Out ''My So Called Secret Identity's'' success has led to both Brooker and Zaidan being invited to contribute to the British Library's
Comics Unmasked exhibition. Brooker and Zaidan will join comics' greats
Warren Ellis and
Grant Morrison as panellists in the
(Super)Hero with 1000 Faces panel on 16 June 2014 to discuss the importance of superheroes to the comics medium.
My So Called Secret Identity has also been noticed by the London fashion magazine
Stylist, who ran a feature--"Comic Books: Not Just for the Boys"—that highlighted
My So Called Secret Identity and included brand new MSCSI content. In November 2013, following "Magic Words: An Evening With Alan Moore", Brooker criticised Moore's short film
An Act of Faith on
Twitter for its representation of sexualised violence. He also raised concerns about Kevin O'Neill's suggestion that the "
Golliwog" from League of Extraordinary Gentlemen: The Black Dossier, is "an incredibly powerful black character", and Moore's description of former Prime Minister Gordon Brown as a "bipolar Cyclops". Moore responded to Brooker and other critics in a lengthy interview in which Moore referred to Brooker as "a Batman scholar." Brooker responded online on
Sequart Organization.
Dave Sim reflected upon the controversy, suggesting that although he feels that it is difficult to find fault with Alan Moore's "bottom line", he "can't see why Dr. Brooker shouldn't vent about" the content of Moore's work. ==Appearances in the media==