Friday, April 11, 2014

Reading asgmts for next week, 4/14, 4/16 and 4/15, 4/17, with reading questions based on 3 articles

For next week's discussions of World War Z, please read the following:

For Mon., 4/14, pp. 187-269

For Wed., 4/16, pp. 270-342



For each session, please select at least 1 episode from the reading and be prepared to talk about it in relation to one of our running topics (see ZMatters blog Final assignment Option 2, 1-10).  

We also will consider the following issues raised in the 3 articles on World War Z and zombie apocalypse:


1.  Do you agree with Ahmad's argument that World War Z's zombie narrative articulates challenges to racism and to class privilege ("Gray is the New Black" 131)?  Cite examples from the novel.

2.  Do you agree with Rubin's assertion that the "Zombie War" as imagined in World War Z supports an idea of "regeneration through violence"?  Cite examples from the novel.  Consider the broader social and political implications of the concept.

3. Do you agree, following Rubin's and Stratton's arguments, that the zombie plague in World War Z resonates with the feared Others of 911 America, including "Terrorists" and immigrants?

4. Do you agree with Rubin's view that the "Zombie War" in World War Z replays the American "Frontier Myth" by which America imagines securing its national identity by way of extirpation or marginalization of a dangerous Other?  

5.  A broader question: is it possible to imagine an alternative track for society, a new world or a utopia, without postulating an enemy Other who must be destroyed?   Is regeneration by violence inherent, or is it, as Rubin argues, a pathological hangover of Western cultural formations and their holy wars and apocalypses?

6.  And to recall our original frame--what does World War Z do with the concept of work?  Old-school zombies were quasi-slaves ruled by masters; Romero zombies were mindless American consumers; what does the new-school World War Z zombie do to this scenario?  In the context of post-2000s late capitalism and its related economic and social tensions and crises, does Brooks' focus on work suggest different ideas and valuations about labor, bodies, and economics?

7.  Finally--in the post-2000s context of current daily-news horrors involving school shootings, military-base massacres, and high murder rates in major America cities, how does the zombie narrative play?  Does it implicitly endorse extreme violence as a valid solution to social tensions and problems?  Does it support an "us versus them" mentality that goes against ideas of acceptance, inclusion, and diversity?  Does it glorify violence and firearms even as the hypocrisies and failures of American politics and society are justly exposed and satirized?   
   

Thursday, April 10, 2014

Article on Zombies and Bare Life re Immigration and Post 911 Terror

From Somatechnics

The Trouble with Zombies: Bare Life, Muselma ¨nner and Displaced People

Jon Stratton

This article is about the relationship between zombies and displaced people, most obviously those categorised as refugees, asylum seekers and illegal immigrants. It is founded on a realisation that the underlying characteristics of zombies are similar to those attributed to displaced people – people, predominantly from non-Western states, striving for entry into Western states. Underlying both the zombie and the displaced person is the idea of ‘bare life’ as elaborated by Giorgio Agamben. I will be arguing that what audiences find most frightening in the zombie idea is not the resurrection from death but that state of living death which is the fate of the zombie. Indeed, in some films that are identified as a part of the zombie genre, such as the recent 28 Days Later (2003), the person doesn’t even die before turning into what is now being described as a zombie. In this case, if the key to the identification of a zombie is the interstitial state of being between life and death then, I will argue, the zombie takes on the characteristic of bare life. Bare life is difficult to define because it has two aspects. The first is, for want of a better word, social. Setting up his discussion of the relationship between bare life and aesthetics, Anthony Downey writes that:
Lives lived on the margins of social, political, cultural, economic and geographical borders are lives half lived. Denied access to legal, economic and political redress, these lives exist in a limbo-like state that is largely preoccupied with acquiring and sustaining the essentials of life. The refugee, the political prisoner, the disappeared, the victim of torture, the dispossessed – all have been excluded, to different degrees,
from the fraternity of the social sphere, appeal to the safety net of the nation-state and recourse to international law. They have been outlawed, so to speak, placed beyond recourse to law and yet still in a precarious relationship to law itself. (2009: 109)

Members of all these groups, including displaced people, can be thought of as experiencing bare life in its modern form. The second aspect that bare life describes is the existential state of a person placed in this circumstance. Following Agamben, I will argue that the typifying existential state is that to which many Jews were reduced in the concentration and death camps of Nazi Germany; a person in this condition was called in many camps a Muselmann. This state, often described as a living death, closely resembles that of the zombie. The difference being that zombies, living after death, are portrayed as fundamentally threatening to the living while the Muselma ¨nner lived only until their transformation into the dead was complete. The point here is twofold. First, that, excluded from the rights and privileges of the modern state, those displaced people are positioned legally as bare life. Second, in this legal limbo, these people can be treated in a way that enables them to become associated with a condition mythically exemplified in the zombie. The consequence is that not only can the zombie texts of films and other media be read as reproducing this connection, drawing on present-day anxieties to increase the terror produced by these texts, but displaced people are characterised using the same terminology that describes the threat that zombies generate in zombie apocalypse texts.

This article begins from the recognition that during the 2000s there has been a tremendous increase in the number of films released featuring zombies. At the same time, zombies have started appearing in other media. A video game series called Resident Evil, which includes biologically mutated flesh-eating undead, founded a genre now called ‘survival horror’. Released originally for Sony PlayStation in 1996, by September 30th, 2004, the various forms of the game had sold over 25 million units (‘Capcom’s million-selling series’ 2004). In 2002 it spawned a film also called Resident Evil. The film became the fourteenth highest grossing ‘R’ rated film in the United States that year and the fiftieth highest grossing film globally (‘Resident Evil’ n.d.). There are now two sequels. In 2009, Quirk Books released Pride and Prejudice and Zombies, a mash-up in which author Seth Grahame-Smith introduced zombies into Jane Austen’s 1813 romance novel. The book became an instant success. In April it had reached the third spot on the New York Times bestseller list and by the end of the year it had sold over 700,000 copies (Merritt 2009). Such was the success of the revisioned novel that Quirk Books were inspired to commission a prequel, Steve Hockensmith’s Pride and Prejudice and Zombies: Dawn of the Dreadfuls. During the same period, since the 1990s, there has been an increasing anxiety in Western countries over the numbers of displaced people attempting to gain entry across their borders. The reasons for this are many but not my main concern here. Certainly there has been an overall increase in refugee numbers. One set of figures released by the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR) tell us that where in 1960 there were 1,656,669 people classified as refugees, in 2006 this had climbed to 9,877, 703.1 However, most of these refugees are situated in countries outside the developed West. Similarly, between 1980 and 2000 there has been a significant increase in asylum seeker applications in Europe, from around 150,000 to around 450,000 with a spike up to 700,000 in the early 1990s and in Australia and New Zealand from virtually nothing in the mid-1980s to around 5000 a year. In North America the figure increased significantly in the mid-1990s to nearly 200,000 and then declined to around 50,000 by 2000.2 Anxieties over border protection in all countries but, perhaps, especially in the West, were heightened in the wake of the 2001 attacks on the World Trade Center in New York The link between these anxieties and concerns over displaced people attempting to gain entry to Western countries was made in, for example, Children of Men, released in 2006 and set in 2027. Directed by Alfonso Cuaro´n, who also co-wrote the screenplay, the backdrop to the film’s ostensible concern with global infertility is a Great Britain in which the increase in unsanctioned immigration is such that asylum seekers are placed in cages on London’s streets and Bexhill-on-Sea, on the south coast, has been turned into a massive detention camp (see Stratton 2009).

In many of the recent zombie texts, the zombie threat can be read in terms of the fears of many members of Western countries about being overwhelmed by displaced people. What might be the justification for this connection between zombies and displaced people? The recent renaissance in zombie films lifts off from the revision of zombies in Western popular culture that is traced to George A. Romero’s now classic 1968 film, Night of the Living Dead. This film began what is now colloquially called the zombie apocalypse trope in which entire communities, whole countries, and even the world, are subject to destruction by increasing numbers of zombies that appear from nowhere, often originating as a consequence of radiation from
outer space – if any rationale for their existence is proffered. In these films the zombie presence is qualitatively different from the earlier zombie trope, derived from claims about the existence of zombies in Haiti, in which witches or evil scientists turned individuals into zombies as a means of controlling them. Nevertheless, the foundational idea of the zombie as a dead person resurrected to a state that remains nearer death than life is a constant.

The Popularity of Zombies

Through the first decade of the twenty-first century there has been a great increase in the cultural presence of zombies. In January 2006, Steven Wells, in an article in The Guardian, wrote that, ‘there were zombies everywhere in 2005’ (quoted in Bishop 2009: 19). That same year, in March, Warren St. John in the New York Times commented that: ‘In films, books and video games, the undead are once again on the march, elbowing past werewolves, vampires, swamp things and mummies to become the post-millennial ghoul of the moment’ (quoted in Bishop 2009: 19). What St. John’s remark signals is something quite important, that it is not just that there has been an increase in visibility of zombies as a consequence of their appearance in an increased number of texts but that this increase outstrips other conventional horror characters such as werewolves and vampires. Agamben has discussed the werewolf and I shall return to this creature later. As Simon Pegg, the writer of, and actor in, Shaun of the Dead,a British zombie film released in 2004, remarks: ‘As monsters from the id, zombies win out over vampires and werewolves when it comes to the title of Most Potent Metaphorical Monster’ (Pegg 2008). Zombies have become the most important mythic monster at the present time. Peter Dendle, in an astute discussion of the zombie phenomenon writes about ‘the resurgence of zombie movie popularity in the early 2000s’ (2007: 54). For him, this ‘has been linked with the events of September 11, 2001’ (2007: 54). Making a different claim to Pegg’s, but one that is still generalising, Dendle goes on to argue that, apocalypticism has always been ingrained into the archetypal psyche of any society defining itself – as all human endeavours must – in the context of history and time. The possibility of wide-scale destruction and devastation which 9-11 brought once again into the communal consciousness found a ready narrative expression in the zombie apocalypses which over thirty years had honed images of desperation subsistence and amoral survivalism to a fine edge. (2007: 54)

Following Dendle, Kyle Bishop makes a similar point: ‘Although the conventions of the zombie genre remain largely unchanged, the movies’ relevance has become all the more clear – a post-9/11 audience cannot help but perceive the characteristics of zombie cinema through the filter of terrorist threats and apocalyptic reality’ (2009: 24). As we shall see, there is certainly a link between zombies and a terrorist threat that is claimed to be of Islamic origin. And, it can be argued, as both Dendle and Bishop have done, that 9/11 had a considerable impact on the American national imaginary and that this is expressed in the way that Americans make, and read, zombie films. However, films made outside the United States, and even a recent American zombie film such as Romero’s Land of the Dead, released in 2005, evidence a quite different anxiety. To understand this, we need to begin with a discussion of what constitutes a zombie. Dendle argues that:
The essence of the ‘zombie’ at the most abstract level is supplanted, stolen, or effaced consciousness; it casts allegorically the appropriation of one person’s will by another. It is no coincidence that the creature flourished in the twentieth century, a century whose broad intellectual trends were preoccupied with alienation. (2007: 47–8)

Dendle is here extrapolating from a history that refers back to the zombie as a characteristic of Haitian voodoo. In doing so he elides the recognition that the zombies of the zombie apocalypse films after Romero’s Night of the Living Dead are often not created by someone. They do not have will but they are not in somebody’s control. Indeed, this is one of things that make them so frightening; their existence is entirely alien. We shall see that this is one way that the zombie as terrorist threat functions. That is, while in the American, and indeed Western, imaginary, terrorists are thought to be controlled by some evil master, usually personified as Osama bin Laden, they are also thought to be a mindless threat coming from outside the West, from outside any Western country. Dendle traces the American popular cultural interest in zombies to the American occupation of Haiti between 1915 and 1934. He writes that:

Ghosts and revenants are known world-wide, but few are so consistently associated with economy and labour as the shambling corpse of Haitian vodun, brought back from the dead to toil in the fields and factories by miserly land-owners or by spiteful houngan or bokor priests ...The zombie, a soulless hulk mindlessly working at the bidding of another, thus records a residual communal memory of slavery: of living a life without dignity and meaning, of going through the motions. (Dendle 2007: 47)

Dendle links the rise of American interest in zombies to the Great Depression and the crisis of labour. It is an important point. In post- Night of the Living Dead zombie apocalypse films, the link between the zombie and slavery, and by extension the worker in a capitalist economy, has been repressed. In the films where the zombies can be read as displaced people, this connection is reappearing. Joan Dayan, an anthropologist, has recently provided this description of the zombie: ‘Born out of the experience of slavery and the sea passage from Africa to the New World, the zombi3 tells the story of colonization: the reduction of human into thing for the ends of capital. For the Haitian no fate is to be more feared’ (1997: 33). Dayan goes on to explain that, in the present day:

In a contemporary Caribbean of development American style, the zombi phenomenon obviously goes beyond the machinations of the local boco. As Depestre puts it, ‘This fantastic process of reification and assimilation means the total loss of my identity, the psychological annihilation of my being, my zombification.’ And Lae ¨nnec Hurbon explains how the zombi stories produce and capitalize on an internalization of slavery and passivity, making the victims of an oppressive social system the cause: ‘The phantasm of the zombi ...does nothing but attest to the fulfilment of a system that moves the victim to internalize his condition.’ (1997: 33)

Dayan’s purpose is to explain how, in the present Haitian context, the zombie functions as an explanation for the destruction of Haitian culture by American colonialism disguised as development. The mindless zombie, labouring for another, becomes a way of understanding the impact of American capital on Haiti and the Caribbean more generally. Jean Comaroff and John Comaroff make a similar point about the rise in zombie stories in South Africa. They write that:

There can be no denying the latter-day preoccupation with zombies in rural South Africa. Their existence, far from being the subject of elusive tales from the backwoods, of fantastic fables from the veld, is widely taken for granted. As a simple matter of fact. In recent times, respectable local newspapers have carried banner headlines like ‘Zombie Back from the Dead’ illustrating their stories with conventional, high-realist photographs. (Comaroff and Comaroff 2002: 786)

The Comaroffs argue that the zombie narrative is a useful way for people who do not understand the complexities of international, neoliberal capitalism to account for how some people seemingly get rich very quickly without doing any visible work: they create zombies who work for them and do not have to be paid. Looking over the history of zombies in Africa, the Comaroffs write that: ‘Zombies themselves seem to be born, at least in the first instance, of colonial encounters, of the precipitous engagement of local worlds with imperial economies that seek to exert control over the essential means of producing value, means like land and labor, space and time’ (2002: 795). In other words, at a conceptual level, zombies are a local response of the colonised to the impact of colonial capitalism, a way of understanding how those capitalist practices produce wealth for some and immiseration for others.

Zombies, Bare Life and Muslims

Comaroff and Comaroff write that:

The fear of being reduced to ghost labor, of being abducted to feed the fortunes of a depraved stranger, occurs alongside another kind of specter: a growing mass, a shadowy alien-nation, of immigrant black workers from elsewhere on the continent. Like zombies, they are nightmare citizens, their rootlessness threatening to siphon off the remaining, rapidly diminishing prosperity of the indigenous population. (2002: 789)

The Comaroffs are describing how poor, black South Africans experience the displaced people arriving in South Africa through its porous land border. One of the established themes of zombie apocalypse films is the siege – the scene where the humans seek sanctuary somewhere and find themselves surrounded and besieged by increasing numbers of zombies striving to get in. At this point I turn to Romero’s first film, the film that transformed the zombie genre: Night of the Living Dead. The film offers little more than the siege theme. Seven people find themselves trapped in a house and attempt to protect themselves from zombie attack as gradually each, except one, is killed by the zombies, or in the case of the young daughter, becomes a zombie, eating her father and killing her mother.4 What, ultimately, was so shocking about this film was its nihilism. The man who survives the zombie attack is himself killed in the mistaken belief that he is a zombie. The first thing to know about this low-budget, black and white film is that Romero never envisaged it as a zombie film. He thought of the creatures as ghouls. As he has said: ‘I never called them zombies, I called them “flesheaters” or “ghouls” – back then, zombies were those boys in the Caribbean who were doing wetwork for Lugosi – I never thought of them as zombies’ (quoted in Rocchi 2008). Ghouls are demons that entered Western popular culture from the Arab world in the nineteenth century. They are supposed to haunt graveyards and feed on the flesh of corpses. Indeed, Romero’s original title for the film was Night of the Flesh Eaters. The title was changed by someone at the Walter Reade Organization, the film’s distributors, because of objections that it was too similar to a film called The Flesh Eaters, released in 1964. I will write about the importance of the new title later. Here, it is necessary to realise how the change of name, which was not Romero’s doing, contributed to the change in the type of creature that audiences thought was being depicted. When the film was released, these were still understood to be ghouls. Roger Ebert, for example, in a review published in Readers’ Digest in January 1967, in which he discussed his shock at the horrifying nature of the film, wrote about the creatures as ghouls.

It is unclear when the creatures became zombies but this probably took place around the end of the 1970s. When Romero’s sequel, Dawn of the Dead was released in the United States in 1978, he was still thinking of the creatures as ghouls. When the film was released in Italy it was called Zombi, and Lucio Fulci’s notorious Zombi 2 was given that title as if it was somehow related to the Romero film. In the United States, when it was released in 1980, Fulci’s film was titled Zombie. At the same time, Variety, in a negative review of Dawn of the Dead, published in January 1979, that rivalled the paper’s earlier review of Night of the Living Dead, described the creatures as ‘carnivorous corpses’ (‘Dawn of the Dead’ 1979). In many European countries, such as Italy, Greece, West Germany and France, the film carried a title associating it with zombies. What seems to have justified the changed perception of Romero’s creatures is that they were resurrected corpses. The shift from ghouls to zombies brought a different set of connotations into play. Romero’s father was a Cuban migrant. His mother was from Lithuania. Romero tells this story about his father who always denied he was Cuban and claimed his family was from Spain: ‘I grew up in New York with a Spanish dad right in the days of West Side Story, where you know the Puerto Rican gangs and shit? My dad telling me Puerto Ricans are shit. I have a Latino dad who’s telling me that Puerto Ricans are shit (laughs). I mean this is a very confusing situation’ (Romero in interview with Lee Kerr, quoted in Casares 2009). Commenting on this autobiography, Cindy Casares writes: ‘Perhaps this confusion is what led Romero to express his angst through monsters’ (2009). Seemingly glossing Romero, she goes on: ‘he got the idea for a low-budget horror film with an apocalyptic theme about the invasion of a new kind of monster – a monster that was tearing the world as we knew it apart because the audience didn’t know who was one and who wasn’t’ (2009).

Could these monsters be migrants transforming America’s racial structure? Eric Hamako notes that: ‘George Romero has raised – and critiqued – the idea of Latino immigration and zombies-as-Latinos, in at least two of his films.’5 Of course, the audience could tell who was a monster and who was not. However, the white men hunting down the zombies in Night of the Living Dead seem unable to make the differentiation. The man who is mistaken for a zombie and shot dead is African American. Reading this in terms of American race relations, a possible interpretation, can distract from reading the zombies as non-white migrants. These invading monsters were even more threatening than a black American who had taken charge and successfully defended the besieged house; these were mindless, living dead.

To understand the foundation of the new configuration of the zombie trope we need to think about Giorgio Agamben’s idea of bare life. Bare life is key to understanding the functioning of the modern state. Indeed, the presence of bare life within the state is foundational to its form. Agamben begins by distinguishing two complementary ways of thinking about life as they are used by Aristotle. These are zoe ¯ and bios. Zoe ¯ is a term that unites species-being and embodiment. Bios can be translated as ‘form of life’. It can be used to think about how zoe ¯ is lived. Agamben writes that: ‘In the classical world ...simple natural life is excluded from the polis in the strict sense and remains confined – as merely reproductive life – to the sphere of the oikos, “home”’ (1998: 2). ‘Simple natural life’ is a translation of zoe ¯. This is not bare life. Bare life is the constituting feature of political life. As Agamben describes it: ‘No simple natural life, but life exposed to death (bare life or sacred life) is the originary political element’ (1998: 88, emphasis in original). Sacred life is a reference to a particular Roman legal idea. Agamben uses it as a way of defining not only bare life but also sovereignty: ‘The sovereign sphere is the sphere in which it is permitted to kill without committing homicide and without celebrating a sacrifice, and sacred life – that is, life that may be killed but not sacrificed – is the life that has been captured in this sphere’ (1998: 83, emphasis in original). Bare life is a description of life in a political context. If zoe ¯ is simple natural life, bare life is what gives meaning to sovereignty. However, this life is revealed in its exclusion from pre-modern political life: ‘The sovereign and homo sacer are joined in the figure of an action that, excepting itself from both human and divine law, from both nomos and physis, nevertheless delimits what is, in a certain sense, the first properly political space of the West distinct from both the religious and the profane sphere, from both the natural order and the regular judicial order’ (Agamben 1998: 84). Homo sacer, and its equivalents in other pre-modern political orders, is the person who does not have the protection of the sovereign. It is not the state that has the right to kill this person reduced to bare life but anybody. This person exists on the borderline of the polis, both included and excluded – their inclusion making their exclusion possible. Death marks the limit of sovereignty.

Agamben goes on to make another point which will be important later in my argument: ‘Contrary to our modern habit of representing the political realm in terms of citizens’ rights, free will, and social contracts, from the point of view of sovereignty only bare life is authentically political’ (1998: 106, emphasis in original). Here, Agamben is extending the idea of bare life into the practice of the modern state. But more of this shortly. Agamben illustrates his point that bare life exists on the margin of the pre-modern state with a discussion of the werewolf. He explains that: ‘Germanic and Anglo-Saxon sources underline the bandit’s liminal status by defining him as a wolf-man’ (Agamben 1998: 105). The bandit was the medieval equivalent of homo sacer. Agamben continues:

What had to remain in the collective unconscious as a monstrous hybrid of human and animal, divided between the forest and the city – the werewolf – is, therefore, in its origin the figure of the man who has been banned from the city. That such a man is defined as a wolf ...is decisive here. The life of the bandit, like that of the sacred man, is not a piece of animal nature without any relation to the city. It is, rather, a threshold of indistinction and of passage between animal and man, physis and nomos, exclusion and inclusion: the life of the bandit is the life of loup garou, the werewolf, who is precisely neither man nor beast, and who dwells paradoxically within both while belonging to neither. (1998: 105, emphasis in original)

Agamben is implicitly reworking Claude Le´vi-Strauss’ idea that myths ultimately mediate between culture and society. Here, the werewolf was a way that members of pre-modern political orders could understand the relationship between existence in a political order and the natural world, that is, the place of bare life. We should also note, and it is something to which we shall return, that being excluded from the polis diminishes a person’s humanity. They exist between human and animal. The werewolf, like the bandit, is essentially predatory, threatening the existence of the polis while living off it. It both requires the polis but threatens its destruction. In the modern world the position of bare life changed fundamentally. In doing so, the power of the werewolf myth dissipated. What I want to suggest is that, equating with the werewolf in the pre-modern world, the zombie has become the emblematic figure for bare life in the modern world. Agamben argues that, ‘the entry of zoe ¯ into the sphere of the polis – the politicization of bare life as such – constitutes the decisive event of modernity and signals a radical transformation of the political- philosophical categories of classical thought’ (1998: 4). As we have seen, zoe ¯ is not bare life but its presence within the arena of the political transforms it into bare life.

Elsewhere, referring to Michel Foucault’s work, Agamben provides a more extensive insight into this crucial political shift:

In its traditional form, which is that of territorial sovereignty, power defines itself essentially as the right over life and death; it concerns life only indirectly, as the abstention of the right to kill. This is why Foucault characterizes sovereignty through the formula to make die and to let live. When, starting with the seventeenth century and the birth of the science of police, care for the life and health of subjects began to occupy an increasing place in the mechanisms and calculations of states, sovereign power is progressively transformed into what Foucault calls ‘biopower’. (1999: 82)

At this point, bare life, which previously existed on the margin of political orders, now begins its move to becoming the basis of political practice; to quote Agamben, ‘in modernity life is more and more clearly placed at the center of State politics (which now becomes in Foucault’s term, biopolitics) ...in our age all citizens can be said, in a specific but extremely real sense, to appear virtually as homines sacri’ (1998: 111). Agamben does not mean that anybody is allowed to kill the citizen of such a state. Rather, the lives of everybody within the state are governed by the power of the sovereign; everybody exists not as potentially bare life but as bare life with a reprieve. The consequence is itself horrifying: ‘It is almost as if, starting from a certain point, every decisive political event were double-sided: the spaces, the liberties and the rights won by individuals in their conflicts with central powers always simultaneously prepared a tacit but increasing inscription of individuals’ lives within the state order, thus offering a new and more dreadful foundation for the very sovereign power from which they wanted to liberate themselves’ (Agamben 1998: 121).

Bare life has become increasingly cloaked with the panoply of citizenship and rights but this is simply a disguise for what is really at stake in modern politics, bare life itself. We now need to make a brief detour. Gil Anidjar has written a history of the development of the discursive construction of Muslims in the modern West. His interest is in how the Muslim world has come to be understood in the political terms of despotism and total subjection. He explains that it was Montesquieu, following Jean Bodin, who first introduced the idea of despotism as a political form. Anidjar details this:

The invention of despotism ...involves the translation of a domestic term into a political one – the despotes was the head of the household, not a political figure. Yet this inventive gesture was structurally linked to another no less potent, if perhaps less visible invention: the ‘apathy’ and the ‘faithful resignation’ of the despot’s subjects. What emerged at this momentous historical point in the writings of Montesquieu and others was also the invention of absolute subjection, its rapid and unceasing translation ...religion and politics as the conflictual union of incomparables. (2003: 125)

Anidjar quotes from Montesquieu’s De l’esprit des lois, published late in his life in 1748: ‘“The flood tide of Mahommedans brought despotism with it,” and despotic government “is most agreeable” to the Mahommedan religion’ (2003: 126). Glossing Montesquieu, Anidjar writes that: ‘Such subjection, like blind fatalism, excludes reason and excludes one from reason’ (2003: 127). Anidjar notes that Montesquieu describes despotism, and its associated absolute subjection, as an absurdity. We might think it not so much an absurdity as a fantastic description of the dark side of the modern politics that Agamben outlines. Despotism and mindless submission represent the possibility of modern politics once bare life has been made its foundation. Montesquieu, and later thinkers from Kant to Hegel and onwards, image this awful phantasm as the political life of the orientalised Other, Muslims. Anidjar takes one more step. His interest is in how a certain type in the concentration and death camps of Nazi Germany came to be called Muselma ¨nner, Jews who become identified as Muslims. The immediate question is why these victims of the camps were named Muslims. In an insightful and complex discussion that does not concern us here, Anidjar suggests that: ‘As figures of absolute subjection, the Muslims can no doubt represent a degree zero of power, the sheer absence of a political displaced by a (negative) theology’ (2003: 145). The Jews in the camps who had lost their ability to think, lost their will, appeared like the fantastic absurdity of Muslims under a despotic religio-political regime.

Muselma ¨nner and Zombies

We now need to consider these Muslims, Muselma ¨nner. The locus classicus for the Muselmann is Primo Levi’s account in his first book called in its original Italian, Se questo e ` un uomo and published in England as If This Is a Man and in the United States as Survival in Auschwitz:

To sink is the easiest of matters; it is enough to carry out all the orders one receives, to eat only the ration, to observe the discipline of the work and the camp. Experience showed that only exceptionally could one survive more than three months in this way. All the mussulmans who finished in the gas chambers have the same story, or more exactly, have no story; they followed the slope down to the bottom, like streams that run down to the sea. On their entry into the camp, through basic incapacity, or by misfortune, or through some banal accident, they are overcome before they can adapt themselves; they are beaten by time, they do not begin to learn German, to disentangle the infernal knot of laws and prohibitions until their body is already in decay, and nothing can save them from selections or from death by exhaustion. Their life is short but their number is endless; they, the Muselma ¨nner, the drowned, form the backbone of the camp, an anonymous mass, continually renewed and always identical, of non-men who march and labor in silence, the divine spark dead within them, already too empty to really suffer. One hesitates to call them living: one hesitates to call their death death, in the face of which they have no fear, as they are too tired to understand. (1996: 83)

We can add to this description from an account published by Agamben in Remnants of Auschwitz:
The other inmates avoided Muselma ¨nner. There could be no common subject of conversation between them, since Muselma ¨nner only fantasized and spoke about food ...‘I can still see them returning back from work in lines of five. The first line of five would march according to the rhythm of the orchestra, but the next line would already be incapable of keeping up with them. The five behind them would lean against each other; and in the last lines the four strongest would carry the weakest one by his arms and legs, since he was dying’. (Bronislaw Goscinki quoted in Agamben 1999: 169–70)

These descriptions of Muselma ¨nner make them appear remarkably similar to the creatures invented by Romero, the ones that by the end of the 1970s were beginning to be called zombies. I do not want to suggest that Romero had read Levi. Rather, Romero was tapping into an anxiety about those excluded from the protection of the modern state, those reduced to bare life. Like Romero’s creatures, Muselma ¨nner have no will, they stagger along, they are interested in only one thing, food, and they do not speak. In a similar fashion, the zombie attribute is a groan. Here we can think about Elaine Scarry’s comment on the experience of severe pain: ‘Physical pain does not simply resist language but actively destroys it, bringing about an immediate reversion to a state anterior to language, to the sounds and cries a human being makes makes before language is learnt’ (1985: 4).

The zombie is a creature without language, which Western thought has considered a founding characteristic of human society. The zombie groan can be read as the expression of the pain of bare life, of the living dead. It is instructive that, when the title of Romero’s film was changed, the new title included the words ‘living dead’. Since then, this has become the characteristic description of zombies. It is also a term often used to describe the Muselma ¨nner. Aldo Carpi may have been the first person to actually have applied the term ‘living dead’ to the Muselma ¨nner in his Diario di Gusen, the diary he kept of his time in that concentration camp, first published in 1971. In the translation given in Remnants of Auschwitz: ‘I remember that while we were going down the stairs leading to the baths, they had us accompanied by a group of Muselma ¨nner, as we later called them – mummy-men, the living dead’ (Agamben 1999: 41).

In the title of Romero’s film, ‘living dead’ is an inspired shorthand for Levi’s: ‘One hesitates to call them living: one hesitates to call their death death’. The translation, Survival in Auschwitz, had been published in the United States in 1961. However, JoAnn Cannon tells us, ‘it seems hardly to have been noticed when it first appeared’ but Holocaust literature ‘began to be read as a sub- genre in the mid-sixties’ (1992: 33). It is possible that someone in the Walter Reade Organization made the connection. But perhaps not. By the late 1960s there was a growing awareness of what was beginning to be termed the Holocaust in the United States. The scene towards the end of Night of the Living Dead where we watch on television as the sheriff and his men hunt down and destroy zombies, and kill the African-American survivor, can be read in the context of the stories of the Nazi Einsatzgruppen, the SS death squads whose role was to search out and murder Jews, gypsies and others who were unwanted in the conquered territories.

However, the scene also has a general resonance with those reduced to bare life including displaced people, people denied the protection of the state. We must not forget the literal meaning of the Muselmann, that is, the Muslim.  I have discussed the background to the use of the term in the camps, the association of Muslims with total, mindless submission. This link also works the other way round. In the post-9/11 American fear of Islamic terrorists, Muslims can get figured as zombies. Referencing the historical association of Muslims with submission, and with the Muselmann, a contributor to an Internet discussion board using the name ‘buttub’ wonders about the increase in zombie films in the 2000s. S/he tells us that, ‘the theory that most interests me, and that strikes me as likely most responsible for zombie mania, is that our culture’s zombie fascination stems from widespread fear of Muslim terrorists’ (buttub 2009). Hamako makes the same point:
[The] Orientalist characterization of Muslims is not different ...from the characterization of modern zombies. The modern zombie expresses Orientalist fears of violent ‘Islamic’ (and perhaps soon, ‘Confucian’) opposition to modernity and secularism.7

Where Dendle and Bishop focus on the apocalypse aspect of the zombie apocalypse motif, buttub and Hamako identify the continuity with the discursive construction of the Muslim. The emphasis on apocalypse does not account for why the apocalyptic vehicle should be zombies. The orientalist connection of zombies with Muslims does. The zombie apocalypse, then, becomes a meaningful way to represent the so-called Islamic terrorist threat to the United States. Awful as the Muselma ¨nner state is, it is by no means unique. Alexander Esquemelin was a Dutchman who was indentured with the French West Indies Company and shipped to Tortuga, an island off the coast of Haiti, in the seventeenth century. He wrote a book called Bucaniers of America:

Esquemelin deplores the condition of the many men kidnapped in Europe as ‘servants’ and sold as slaves. These bonded men, he asserts, are used worse than African slaves; for their masters, with only three years to get their money’s worth, often extracted that value at the price of the worker’s life. Pressed beyond the limits of human endurance, they literally take leave of their senses: ‘These miserable kidnap’d people, are frequently subject to a certain disease, which in those parts, is called Coma; being a total privation of the senses. And this distemper is judged to proceed from their hard usage.’ Experienced as a coma in the days when Haiti was called Hispaniola, this state of death-in-life induced by the [quoting Joan Dayan] ‘reduction of human into thing for the ends of capital’ is now called zombification. The zombie, like the comatose indentured servant, is a being whose identity and will are slaughtered in service to the exactions of unfree labor. (Mackie 2009: 135)

We find here a more direct connection between the condition of the Muselmann removed from the protection of the state and, as bare life, reduced to the barest condition of the experience of life, and the classical idea of zombies. Agamben reinforces the Muselmann’s threshold state. He writes: ‘That one cannot truly speak of “living beings” is confirmed by all witnesses. Ame´ry and Bettleheim define them as “walking corpses”’ (1999: 64). Agamben provides this reading:

It is ...possible to understand the decisive function of the camps in the system of Nazi biopolitics. They are not merely the places of death and extermination; they are also, and above all, the site of the production of the Muselmann, the final biopolitical substance to be isolated in the biological continuum. Beyond the Muselmann lies only the gas chamber. (1999: 85)

We can now understand what is so terrifying about the zombie. It is not that the zombie reminds us of our own forthcoming demise but that the zombie is the mythic expression of bare life in the modern world. The zombie apocalypse is the fantastic representation of the modern state being overwhelmed by the bare life which underpins its existence; the bare life that is lived by those people excluded from the privileges of citizenship and rights. This includes those displaced people who, for many reasons, seek entry to Western states. In the neoliberal world, where inclusion has been supplanted by exclusion, or in Agamben’s terms where the state of exception is becoming the norm, those attempting to gain entry to the state are a part of a continuity with those within the state – all are treated as bare life to a greater or less extent, all have the possibility of being reduced to the condition of Muselma ¨nner.

Zombification and the Modern State

Displaced people, that is those officially classified as illegal immigrants, asylum seekers, refugees and the like, are bare life striving to enter states where they will be given protection. Those states experience them as an unregulated threat to life within the border. As Aihwa Ong writes: ‘In camps of the disenfranchised or displaced, bare life becomes the ground for political claims, if not for citizenship, then for the right to survive’ (2006: 500). At the same time, in the modern state, bare life is the basis for the treatment even of citizens of the state. The zombie is the mythic expression of bare life striving to enter the state but, in addition, the zombie is the condition that awaits all of us from whom the state withdraws protection. The zombies besieging the places of sanctuary in zombie apocalypse films can be read as displaced people seeking recognition from the countries of the West. I should add that, in the modern state, the discourse of race can function to mark the limits of who might be reduced to bare life. Michel Foucault argues that:

It is indeed the emergence of this biopower that inscribes it in the mechanisms of the State. It is at this moment that racism is inscribed as the basic mechanism of power, as it is exercised in modern States. As a result, the modern State can scarcely function without becoming involved with racism at some point, within certain limits and subject to certain conditions. (2003: 254)

I have already quoted Agamben linking the new centrality of bare life in the modern state to the historical elaboration of biopower as a political technology for the management of populations founded in what Foucault describes as ‘the fundamental biological fact that human beings are a species’ (2007: 1). Race can be used to exclude people from the benefits of state membership, and zombies can be read as racially Other. In the Canadian film, Fido (2006), some tamed zombies are used as domestics. Constructed as racially Other, indeed similar to the way that African-American slaves were identified, these zombies may be thought of as bare life given the most menial and unprotected forms of labour. We are told that the surviving zombies in the British film Shaun of the Dead (2004) meet a similar fate. Similarly, the displaced people attempting to enter Western states are also racialised as Other and, indeed, achieving entry either legally or illegally they very often occupy the most menial domestic roles.

But, the zombies are also an image of what we, members of the modern state, might become. In the modern state bare life founds the political order. In the neoliberal version of that state, where rights are dependent on what people within the border of the state can offer to the economic wellbeing of the state, the degree to which one is reprieved from bare life depends on one’s economic worth. In this way, within the state, labour returns as an inverse measure of zombification. Bare life is the prospect for those the state considers of little or no economic worth and withdraws its protection. In zombie films it is the local population who are turned into zombies and become the threat to the remaining citizens. While, as I have argued, these zombies can be read as threatening, racially Othered, displaced people, they can also be read as the citizens of the state whom that state no longer finds economically useful. In many recent zombie films one of the more shocking elements is how ordinary the zombies look. They often have little in the way of physical transformation. Any member of the neoliberal state might find themselves turned into a zombie.

This is also an aspect of the horror engendered in recent zombie films. In the American television series, The Walking Dead, which began in 2010, Rick Grimes, a deputy sheriff, wakes up from a coma to find that almost everybody in the United States has become a zombie. Neoliberal America has imploded in a zombie apocalypse. Bare life, as I have explained, has a dual meaning. In the first place it refers to the lack of legal protection by the state. Without that protection the person reduced to bare life can become transformed into the second understanding of bare life: the liminal condition of death in life, coma. Indeed such a person can become one of the living dead. This is the existential condition represented in the zombie. The equation of the zombie and the displaced person occurs through the construction of bare life in both aspects of the term. The new fascination with zombie apocalypse texts can be understood in relation to, but is not limited to, the increasing anxiety of members of Western states founded in the threat that these states feel is posed by displaced people. Both manifestations of bare life are described using the same discursive terms. The fear of what is perceived to be an external threat from the racialised, zombie Other helps those who live in Western states to repress the awareness of how easily their own existence can become reduced to bare life.

Acknowledgements I would like to thank Joke Hermes, Suvendrini Perera, Joseph Pugliese and Holly Randell-Moon for their comments on earlier versions of this article. A companion piece to this essay, titled ‘Zombie Trouble: Zombie Texts, Bare Life and Displaced People’ is set to appear in the European Journal of Cultural Studies vol 14, no 3, 2011.

Notes 1. See UNHCR excel spread sheet, ‘Total refugee population by country of asylum 1960–2009, & Total refugee population by origin 1960–2009’ (n.d.). 2. See UNHCR Report, ‘The state of the world’s refugees’ (2000).

3. Joan Dayan uses the term zombi in preference to zombie. ‘Zombi’ is a French usage. Dayan links the term to Jean Zombi who, as she writes in Haiti, History and the Gods, ‘In 1804, during Dessalines’ massacre of the whites ...earned a reputation for brutality’ (1998: 36). Dayan goes on to write that: ‘Variously reconstituted, and adaptable to varying events, Zombi crystallizes the crossing not only of spirit and man in vodou practices but the intertwining of black and yellow, African and Creole in the struggle for independence’ (1998: 36). Dayan argues that the Haitian usage of zombi to describe the undead originates in Jean Zombi’s name. 4. While not relevant to my argument here, the power of this scene can be understood in terms of the female version of the Oedipus complex or, as Carl Jung called it, the Electra complex. 5. See Eric Hamako’s posted response to Kim Paffenroth in Paffenroth (2009). 6. An excellent discussion of the relationship between Muselmann and Muslim, couched in the context of the incarceration of Muslims at Guanta´namo Bay, can be found in Joseph Pugliese (2009). 7. See Eric Hamako’s posted response to Kim Paffenroth in Paffenroth (2009).
References 28 Days Later, film, directed by Danny Boyle. USA: 20th Century Fox Home Entertainment, 2003. Agamben, Giorgio (1998), Homo Sacer: Sovereign Power and Bare Life, trans. D. Heller- Roazen, Stanford, CA: Stanford University Press. Agamben, Giorgio (1999), Remnants of Auschwitz: The Witness and The Archive, trans. D. Heller-Roazen, New York: Zone Books. Anidjar, Gil (2003), The Jew, the Arab: A History of the Enemy, Stanford, CA: Stanford University Press. Bishop, Kyle (2009), ‘Dead man still walking: Explaining the zombie renaissance’, Journal of Popular Film & Television, 37:1, pp. 16–25. buttub (2009), ‘Notes on zombies’, Ghost Island, 16 July, http://ghostisland. wordpress.com/2009/07/16/notes-on-zombies/ Cannon, JoAnn (1992), ‘Canon-formation and reception in contemporary Italy: The case of Primo Levi’, Italica, 69:1, pp. 30–44. ‘Capcom’s million-selling series, Resident Evil, expanding to the Nintendo GameCube and Sony PlayStation2!’ (2004), CAPCOM, 4 November, http://www.capcom.co.jp/ ir/english/news/html/e041101.html Casares, Cindy (2009), ‘George Romero: The Cuban American who created zombies as we know them’, GUANABEE, 1 November, http://guanabee.com/2009/11/ george-romero-the-cuban-american-who-created-zombies-as-we-know-them/ Children of Men, film, directed by Alfonso Cuaro´n. UK: Universal Home Entertainment, 2007. Comaroff, Jean and John L. Comaroff (2002), ‘Alien nation: Zombies, immigrants, and millennial capitalism’, South Atlantic Quarterly, 101:4, pp. 779–805. ‘Dawn of the Dead’ (1979), Variety, January, http://www.variety.com/review/ VE1117790260.html?categoryid=31&cs=1&query=Dawn+of+the+Dead Dawn of the Dead, film, directed by George A. Romero. Australia: Umbrella Entertainment, 2004. Dayan, Joan (1997), ‘Vodoun, or the voice of the gods’, in M. Fernandez Olmos and L. Paravisini-Gebert (ed.), Sacred Possessions: Vodou, Santeria, Obeah, and the Caribbean, New Brunswick, NJ: Rutgers University Press, pp. 13–36.
Dayan, Joan (1998), Haiti, History and the Gods, Berkeley: University of California Press. Dendle, Peter (2007), ‘The zombie as barometer of cultural anxiety’, in N. Scott (ed.), Monsters and the Monstrous: Myths and Metaphors of Enduring Evil, Amsterdam: Rodpi, pp. 45–57. Downey, Anthony (2009), ‘Zones of indistinction: Giorgio Agamben’s “bare life” and the politics of aesthetics’, Third Text, 23:2, pp. 109–25. Ebert, Roger (1967), ‘The Night of the Living Dead’, rogerebert.com, 5 January, http://rogerebert.suntimes.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/19670105/REVIEWS/ 701050301/1023 Fido, film, directed by Andrew Currie. Australia: Sony Pictures Home Entertainment, 2008. Foucault, Michel (2003), ‘Society Must Be Defended’: Lectures at the College de France, 1975–1976, ed. M. Bertani, A. Fontana and F. Ewald, trans. D. Macey, London: Penguin. Foucault, Michel (2007), Security, Territory, Population: Lectures at the College de France, 1977–1978, ed. M. Senellart, F. Ewald and A. Fontana, trans. G. Burchell, Basingstoke, NY: Palgrave Macmillan. Grahame-Smith, Seth (2009), Pride and Prejudice and Zombies, Philadelphia: Quirk Books. Hockensmith, Steve (2010), Pride and Prejudice and Zombies: Dawn of the Dreadfuls, Philadelphia: Quirk Books. Levi, Primo (1996), Survival in Auschwitz: The Nazi Assault on Humanity, trans. S. Woolf, New York: Touchstone. Mackie, Erin (2009), Rakes, Highwaymen, and Pirates: The Making of the Modern Gentleman in the Eighteenth Century, Baltimore: John Hopkins University Press. Merritt, Stephanie (2009), ‘Pride and Prejudice and Zombies by Jane Austen and Seth Grahame-Smith’, The Guardian, 6 December, http://www.guardian.co.uk/books/ 2009/dec/06/pride-prejudice-zombies-grahame-smith Night of the Living Dead, film, directed by George A. Romero. Australia: Rajon Vision, 2004. Ong, Aihwa (2006), ‘Mutations in citizenship’, Theory, Culture & Society, 23:2–3, pp. 499–505. Paffenroth, Kim (2009), ‘Dawn of the Dead (1978): Zombies and human nature’, In Media Res: A Media Commons Project, 30 September, http://mediacommons. futureofthebook.org/imr/2009/08/27/dawn-dead-1978-zombies-and-human-nature Pegg, Simon (2008), ‘The dead and the quick’, The Guardian, 4 November, http:// www.guardian.co.uk/media/2008/nov/04/television-simon-pegg-dead-set Pugliese, Joseph (2009), ‘Apostrophe of empire: Guantanamo Bay, Disneyland’, borderlands, 8:3, pp. 1–26, http://www.borderlands.net.au/vol8no32009/pugliese apostrophe.pdf ‘Resident Evil’ (n.d.), Box Office Mojo, http://www.boxofficemojo.com/movies/?id= residentevil.htm Resident Evil, film, directed by Paul W.S. Anderson. USA: Columbia TriStar Home Entertainment, 2003. Rocchi, James (2008), ‘Interview: ‘Diary of the Dead’ director George A. Romero’, moviefone, 16 February, http://www.cinematical.com/2008/02/16/interview-diary-of- the-dead-director-george-a-romero/ Scarry, Elaine (1985), The Body in Pain: The Making and Unmaking of the World, New York: Oxford University Press.
Shaun of the Dead, film, directed by Edgar Wright. UK: Universal Home Entertainment, 2004. Stratton, Jon (2009), ‘‘Welcome to paradise’: Asylum seekers, neoliberalism, nostalgia and Lucky Miles’, Continuum: Journal of Media & Cultural Studies, 23:5, pp. 629–45. The Flesh Eaters, film, directed by Jack Curtis. USA: Dark Sky Films, 2005. ‘The state of the world’s refugees 2000: Fifty years of humanitarian action – chapter 7: Asylum in the industrialized world’ (2000), UNHCR The State of the World’s Refugees, 1 January, http://www.unhcr.org/cgi-bin/texis/vtx/search?page=search&docid= 3ebf9bb10&query=asylum seekers 1960. The Walking Dead, television series, created by Frank Darabont. non-USA: Fox International Channels, 2010. ‘Total refugee population by country of asylum, 1960–2009, & Total refugee population by origin, 1960–2009’ (n.d.), UNHCR Statistical Online Population Database, United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR), http://www.unhcr.org/pages/ 4a0174156.html
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References 28 Days Later, film, directed by Danny Boyle. USA: 20th Century Fox Home Entertainment, 2003. Agamben, Giorgio (1998), Homo Sacer: Sovereign Power and Bare Life, trans. D. Heller- Roazen, Stanford, CA: Stanford University Press. Agamben, Giorgio (1999), Remnants of Auschwitz: The Witness and The Archive, trans. D. Heller-Roazen, New York: Zone Books. Anidjar, Gil (2003), The Jew, the Arab: A History of the Enemy, Stanford, CA: Stanford University Press. Bishop, Kyle (2009), ‘Dead man still walking: Explaining the zombie renaissance’, Journal of Popular Film & Television, 37:1, pp. 16–25. buttub (2009), ‘Notes on zombies’, Ghost Island, 16 July, http://ghostisland. wordpress.com/2009/07/16/notes-on-zombies/ Cannon, JoAnn (1992), ‘Canon-formation and reception in contemporary Italy: The case of Primo Levi’, Italica, 69:1, pp. 30–44. ‘Capcom’s million-selling series, Resident Evil, expanding to the Nintendo GameCube and Sony PlayStation2!’ (2004), CAPCOM, 4 November, http://www.capcom.co.jp/ ir/english/news/html/e041101.html Casares, Cindy (2009), ‘George Romero: The Cuban American who created zombies as we know them’, GUANABEE, 1 November, http://guanabee.com/2009/11/ george-romero-the-cuban-american-who-created-zombies-as-we-know-them/ Children of Men, film, directed by Alfonso Cuaro´n. UK: Universal Home Entertainment, 2007. Comaroff, Jean and John L. Comaroff (2002), ‘Alien nation: Zombies, immigrants, and millennial capitalism’, South Atlantic Quarterly, 101:4, pp. 779–805. ‘Dawn of the Dead’ (1979), Variety, January, http://www.variety.com/review/ VE1117790260.html?categoryid=31&cs=1&query=Dawn+of+the+Dead Dawn of the Dead, film, directed by George A. Romero. Australia: Umbrella Entertainment, 2004. Dayan, Joan (1997), ‘Vodoun, or the voice of the gods’, in M. Fernandez Olmos and L. Paravisini-Gebert (ed.), Sacred Possessions: Vodou, Santeria, Obeah, and the Caribbean, New Brunswick, NJ: Rutgers University Press, pp. 13–36.aa
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Dayan, Joan (1998), Haiti, History and the Gods, Berkeley: University of California Press. Dendle, Peter (2007), ‘The zombie as barometer of cultural anxiety’, in N. Scott (ed.), Monsters and the Monstrous: Myths and Metaphors of Enduring Evil, Amsterdam: Rodpi, pp. 45–57. Downey, Anthony (2009), ‘Zones of indistinction: Giorgio Agamben’s “bare life” and the politics of aesthetics’, Third Text, 23:2, pp. 109–25. Ebert, Roger (1967), ‘The Night of the Living Dead’, rogerebert.com, 5 January, http://rogerebert.suntimes.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/19670105/REVIEWS/ 701050301/1023 Fido, film, directed by Andrew Currie. Australia: Sony Pictures Home Entertainment, 2008. Foucault, Michel (2003), ‘Society Must Be Defended’: Lectures at the College de France, 1975–1976, ed. M. Bertani, A. Fontana and F. Ewald, trans. D. Macey, London: Penguin. Foucault, Michel (2007), Security, Territory, Population: Lectures at the College de France, 1977–1978, ed. M. Senellart, F. Ewald and A. Fontana, trans. G. Burchell, Basingstoke, NY: Palgrave Macmillan. Grahame-Smith, Seth (2009), Pride and Prejudice and Zombies, Philadelphia: Quirk Books. Hockensmith, Steve (2010), Pride and Prejudice and Zombies: Dawn of the Dreadfuls, Philadelphia: Quirk Books. Levi, Primo (1996), Survival in Auschwitz: The Nazi Assault on Humanity, trans. S. Woolf, New York: Touchstone. Mackie, Erin (2009), Rakes, Highwaymen, and Pirates: The Making of the Modern Gentleman in the Eighteenth Century, Baltimore: John Hopkins University Press. Merritt, Stephanie (2009), ‘Pride and Prejudice and Zombies by Jane Austen and Seth Grahame-Smith’, The Guardian, 6 December, http://www.guardian.co.uk/books/ 2009/dec/06/pride-prejudice-zombies-grahame-smith Night of the Living Dead, film, directed by George A. Romero. Australia: Rajon Vision, 2004. Ong, Aihwa (2006), ‘Mutations in citizenship’, Theory, Culture & Society, 23:2–3, pp. 499–505. Paffenroth, Kim (2009), ‘Dawn of the Dead (1978): Zombies and human nature’, In Media Res: A Media Commons Project, 30 September, http://mediacommons. futureofthebook.org/imr/2009/08/27/dawn-dead-1978-zombies-and-human-nature Pegg, Simon (2008), ‘The dead and the quick’, The Guardian, 4 November, http:// www.guardian.co.uk/media/2008/nov/04/television-simon-pegg-dead-set Pugliese, Joseph (2009), ‘Apostrophe of empire: Guantanamo Bay, Disneyland’, borderlands, 8:3, pp. 1–26, http://www.borderlands.net.au/vol8no32009/pugliese apostrophe.pdf ‘Resident Evil’ (n.d.), Box Office Mojo, http://www.boxofficemojo.com/movies/?id= residentevil.htm Resident Evil, film, directed by Paul W.S. Anderson. USA: Columbia TriStar Home Entertainment, 2003. Rocchi, James (2008), ‘Interview: ‘Diary of the Dead’ director George A. Romero’, moviefone, 16 February, http://www.cinematical.com/2008/02/16/interview-diary-of- the-dead-director-george-a-romero/ Scarry, Elaine (1985), The Body in Pain: The Making and Unmaking of the World, New York: Oxford University Press.
The Trouble with Zombies

Link to Ebrary article on World War Z, Race, and Class, "Gray is the New Black"

Link to Ebrary article on World War Z, Race and Class, look in table of contents for "Gray is the New Black."

Link to Gayle Rubin article on World War Z, the Frontier Myth, and Apocalypse/Terror

Wednesday, April 2, 2014

World War Z reading asgmt: please read Chs. 1-5, up to Around the World, and Above, for Mon, Tues, 4/7, 4/8

For Monday and Tuesday meetings, please read Chapters 1-5, up to Around the World, and Above in Max Brooks, World War Z

For discussion in class:

The zombie figure--how is it designed here, how does it compare to others we have examined?

Zombie "spaces"--what are some characteristic settings, places, or spaces in this zombie narrative? Comparison to others, fit with May's concepts (inside/outside, the empty outside, the battle in blank space, zombie migrants)?  The shattered window-glass, the dark tunnel, the forest/wood, the institutional corridor/hallway?  Social attitudes and anxieties in the mix re zombie spaces?  City and suburb; America and the world; lower, middle, and upper classes; race and ethnicity?

The zombie-apocalypse narrative--is WWZ a story of continuing beyond the end, a survivor-narrative engaging the American Frontier myth and fantasies of escaping history?  What post-2000s American social attitudes and anxieties can we relate to this story/myth?

The global: as positive connectivity, or as negative exposure to infection, dangerous others?  Local versus global?

Literary technique--what features of the method of storytelling make this book a good read (if it is)? How does the method of telling the story connect to the concept of the global and other social issues?

What are the resonances of the title phrase World War?  What image of the military emerges in the novel?

Social critique and commentary?  Along with points highlighted above, in what ways can we read World War Z as satire, commentary, and warning in relation to post 2000s American society?








Monday, March 31, 2014

Final Paper due Due 5/2/14, 11:59 P.M; send in Word file attachment to gmajer@stevenson.edu.

Spring 2014 English 281 Final Essay
Due 5/2/14, 11:59 P.M; send in Word file attachment to gmajer@stevenson.edu.
Drafts read up to 4/30/14.
1500 words minimum; 2000 words maximum.
Times New Roman 12 font, double spaced.
All quotes and citations use MLA or APA format.

Two Options; choose one.


Option 1


As with the midterm, use a 3-part structure to develop analysis of the zombie-figure and zombie-narrative from course readings and viewings (and additional cases if you would like to incorporate these).  The best structure is to move through the essay case by case, covering the 3 parts for one case, then moving on to the next, and so on through your cases.   Note that you are allowed to uses cases/texts/films from outside the course readings/films as long as they are clearly on topic.

Advice: Use 1 or 2 cases (or maybe 3) and go into more depth for each, being generous with quotations and examples from the text or film.   Also, be equally generous with explanations, placed before and after quotations and examples and making absolutely clear what they mean and how they support your point.

Your intro paragraph should not be a long account of what you will be doing.  Just announce that you are going to explore your given texts/films in light of the 3 parts and that will be enough.

Simply:

For each example/case, use the 3 parts as follows:

1. Horror-engineering, employing Carroll's 9 horror-effects as relevant (if you like, you also can include refs to Freud, Kristeva, Lacan, or Zizek and other theory we have discussed).

2.  Social attitudes--ideas, fears, stereotypes, phobias, fantasies of various kinds registering social attitudes.  Be sure to have a sense of the historical-cultural context of your example (research online can help you, say, with things like 1930s America).  You can use any of the critical articles we have read to help you with these; you also may do further research and incorporate other sources (but they must be peer-reviewed articles from standard scholarly sources and may not be blogs, popular treatments, etc.  Searching MLA or Academic Search Complete, note and check off the box for "Peer Reviewed.")

toward nation/empire
toward race or ethnicity
toward social class
toward family and community
toward feminine, masculine, and gay/queer gender roles/identities
toward capitalism, labor, and economics
toward modern"biopower" and the human/"posthuman"
and toward other specific aspects of the text/film historical-social context (2000s 9/11 terrorism, war, bioterror, economic crisis, globalization, Millennial-generation anxieties.)

3.  Possible social critique, commentary, satire--highlighting of social inequities, failures, hypocrisies, double-standards, rigid roles, "normative" categorizations.  Also sometimes alternative or utopian potentials beyond dominant social-political structures and systems.  Again, you can use any of the critical articles we have read to help you with these; you also may do further research and incorporate other sources (but they must be peer-reviewed articles from standard scholarly sources and may not be blogs, popular treatments, etc.  Searching MLA or Academic Search Complete, note and check off the box for "Peer Reviewed.")


Option 2


Use one of the following thesis statements or develop your own in consultation with me (the latter must be approved ahead of time).  You can use any of the critical articles we have read to help you with these; you also may do further research and incorporate other sources (but they must be peer-reviewed articles from standard scholarly sources and may not be blogs, popular treatments, etc.  Searching MLA or Academic Search Complete, note and check off the box for "Peer Reviewed.")

Develop your essay with 1 or 2 (or maybe 3) cases explored in depth, providing a generous amount of quotations and examples.  Be generous as well in explaining each quotation and example, making absolutely clear how it supports your point.  Such explanations come before the quotation/example to set it up and come after it to make sure the point is clear to the reader.  

Also, remember the classic strategy of tagging your main point in each paragraph using a topic sentence at the beginning of the paragraph.  And remember the similar strategy of using subtopic statements within the paragraph to keep the main point of your paragraph clearly in view as you move through quotations and examples.  Reiterate, repeat--these are the tried-and-true strategies of exposition and argument.

Note that an account of horror-engineering a la Carroll is not required with this model but is not excluded--your call.  


Theses--choose only one:

1. The zombie narrative plays out anxieties and ambivalences about 21st century biopower—an unsettling sense that governments, corporations, medicine and bioscience claim to act in favor of life but at the same time are a danger to it.  (Birch-Bayley, among other articles.) 

2. The zombie narrative registers ambivalent social attitudes toward war and the traumas of war in post-9/11 America.  (The Birch-Bayley article works here.)

3. The zombie narrative projects a carnivalesque satire of American late-capitalist consumer society.  (Shaviro's article, among others, makes this point.)

4. The zombie narrative pursues a meditation on issues of race in contemporary American society, projecting in dramatic form a range of attitudes from racist phobias to progressive inclusiveness and valuing of diversity. (McAllister'a article works here.)

5. The zombie narrative betrays deep ambivalences about the normative family in American society, sometimes privileging the nuclear family as last refuge in an apocalyptic world, sometimes representing the family as a space of patriarchal confinement and pathological power relationships.  (Shaviro's article, among others.)

6. The zombie narrative breaks out space in ambiguous, unsettling ways, highlighting social phobias involving "us and them," that is, the assorted "others" of post-2000 Western societies (non-European, immigrant, poor), while at the same time making social boundaries appear permeable and open to change. (The Jeff May article works here.)   

7. The zombie apocalypse often elaborates a survivor's narrativeanalogous to the classic American "frontier myth" where the “frontier wilderness...forces migrants to give up their Old World ways and offers them the chance to become a new kind of people, individuals responsible for their own fate and fortune and free to define who they are” (Katerberg 1), even as the survivor narrative shows a continuing struggle with the problems of the pre-apocalypse world left behind. (This is a good thesis for World War Z.)


8. Dramatizing social bonds and roles in extreme, perilous scenarios, zombie survivor-narratives often test in particular the roles and powers of women in the post-apocalypse world, encompassing a range of attitudes from those that are clearly feminist to those that resist or dismiss feminist perspectives on power and equality. (TWD, others)


9. Post-2000 zombie narratives often suggest an ambivalence about the "global," with the positives of worldwide connectivity offset by the negatives of global plagues and even the global media that broadcast the news appearing to augment the terror of the global. (Birch-Bayley, others; World War Z.)


10. Post-2000 zombie narratives often register social anxieties about military power and its role in a post 9-11 world, suggesting a range of positive, negative, and ambivalent attitudes about the military.


  

Tuesday, March 18, 2014

article on 28 days later

Nicole Birch-Bayley


Terror in Horror Genres: The Global Media and the Millennial Zombie

Journal of Popular Culture, 00223840, December 1, 2012, Vol. 45, Issue 6

OUR FASCINATION WITH ZOMBIES, ACCORDING TO GEORGE ROMERO, director of some of the most prominent zombie films to date, has become "idiomatic," something almost natural. "It's become a sort of pop culture," says Romero (Murray para. 7). However, in the past decade, following the turn of the millennium, and occurring in sequence with the September 11th attacks on the United States in 2001, various forms of popular culture changed as a result of the shift in the global media. In lieu of this cultural revolution, zombie films came to reflect the worst-case fears of an apprehensive media culture, entertaining the same anxieties about world events, in this case, a fear of terrorism and epidemic in the zombie form.1 Various zombie films came to be seen as a medium for western culture's "crisis mentality," a kind of vernacular expressing the concerns of a culture waiting for the next terrorist attack, the next outbreak of violence or the next pandemic (Norris, Kern and Just 28). Although there have been films that predate millennial zombie films which address similar anxieties, it was not until the apparent shift in the global media that zombie films became explicitly concerned with a "crisis" culture.2
The "Evolution" and "Revolution" of the Zombie
Early zombie films had once possessed the ability to translate cultural and political immediacy into a means of entertainment, but the tensions of these films were never as explicit as they are now. The apprehensions present in early zombie films were subtly built on the premise of emergent imperialism, capitalism, and cultural racism or ethnocentrism (Williams 6).3 These themes remained implicit undertones, messages felt but unsaid in print, television, and film media.4 As zombie films evolved over the years, their objectives changed; in many cases, the politics of the time period disappeared from zombie films altogether. Many zombie films dating from the early 1980s to late 1990s, even into the early 2000s, were seen as politically docile, melodramatic, even comical.5 Certainly not all zombie filmmakers recognized or explored the cultural, cinematic shift that took place at the turn of the millennium, but for some, the transformation was utterly manifest. In the case of millennial zombie films, the political and social tensions were ever present. These films very often consisted of societies and populations that proved ill equipped to cope with the overwhelming spread of violence and disease; the human crisis became directly linked to authentic global concerns, such as wars on terrorism, political revolutions, inadequate governments, weapons of mass destruction, viral epidemics or even pandemics, which continue to be referenced in the contemporary media. Millennial zombie films were often experienced like the global media itself, as the events of a zombie outbreak were encountered through news frames, including news clips and newspapers that would often "simplify, prioritize, and structure the narrative flow of events" (Norris, Kern and Just 10). These news frames provided basic facts surrounding the event itself, which were often fragmented, and the way in which these events were interpreted by official sources in the government (including the press, political leaders, the military and law enforcement, and intelligence services) often proved insufficient, contributing to the crisis itself (Norris, Kern and Just 13). This stylistic shift in zombie film suggests that the way in which society interprets social and political tensions, such as global anxieties over terrorism and disease, had changed since the turn of the millennium; viewers now watched zombie films experiencing an intensity that was not only the product of a millennial manifestation of popular culture but also the result of a changing global media.
"We are meant to be frightened by horror film," says Clarens, "and fear, no matter how diluted or sublimated, is still a powerful instrument and the most intense reaction to an experience, aesthetic or otherwise" (xi). Zombie films are able to function at a very basic level, instilling fear and anxiety in their viewers. Although there is a clear stylistic distinction between millennial and classic horror films, what is most significant is that what used to make us afraid in horror films has now changed. Zombie films first began with exotic and supernatural themes, such as Haitian voodoo, an expression of a different kind of fear, equipped with a mild social commentary.6 Major historical events played an important role in Depression-era and wartime zombie movies, as the zombie arguably served as a cinematic mechanism for raising awareness of racial and equality issues, including gender and the empowerment of women (Dendle 46). In a millennial examination of zombie evolution, the influence of print media and Internet culture has become of greater importance than mere social or political tensions from decades prior, which seem to differentiate the millennial zombie film from that of early films.7 As a part of a changing genre, horror films began to intensify as a result of a changing, unstable global climate; even today, their cinematic style still continues to change as quickly as the wars that are fought and the political leaders that are elected. However, it was not truly until the turn of the millennium, the transformation of the global media following 9/11, that zombie films were propelled forward into an entirely new phase of filmmaking.
Danny Boyle's "Zombie" Redefined
The clearest indication of this shift in zombie film came in 2002, as Danny Boyle introduced 28 Days Later, a film outlining the rapid spread of a violent virus that instilled "rage" in its carriers. But these zombies were different. As the zombie film had transformed, filmmakers began to broaden their view of what constituted a zombie. 28 Days Later was not a traditional "zombie" film; the dead did not rise from their breathless states, stiffened with rigor mortis, in order to slowly amble and pursue the living and eat their flesh. These were "zombies" as a part of a new definition, zombies that could run, even sprint, to attack you, to destroy everything in their path. Of course, the pattern of outbreak, the societal tensions and the reactions of viewers remained the same.
The film begins with various frames of global violence, of protests, riots and executions around the world. It is uncertain at first whether these are virus-related scenes (as the viewer anticipates this) or simply the result of global violence and terrorism. These scenes zoom out to television screens stationed above a test animal, an ape being exposed to "rage," whether it is to develop the virus or to cure it, it is unknown. There is the suggestion that this pervasive rage, this drug or disease of violence is something physically and psychologically induced upon the animal and subsequently, upon humanity. When a group of activists break into the Cambridge Primate Research Center to free a group of these caged animals, which they believe are being cruelly treated, the outbreak of the rage virus begins shortly after. They are first warned by one of the scientists that the chimps are infected with rage: "I know who you are. I know what you think you are doing… The chimps are infected … They're highly contagious," but the activists do not listen, believing that they are liberating victims of science. It is learned in these first few scenes that infection is in their blood and saliva; "one bite," the scientist warns, will lead to contagion. The infection happens in a matter of minutes; in fact, viewers can barely see what takes place. The room is dark, only somewhat lit and the scene seems so chaotic that there is simply no chance of reconciling what is assumed to be inevitable. As the activists set the animals free from their cages, the apes quickly attack and the subsequent result is widespread rage throughout the center and presumably throughout the city.8
Most of 28 Days Later tells of the aftermath following the initial outbreak in London, twenty-eight days after the fact. Just as viewers are unable to fully witness the first outbreak of the virus in the test center, they are unable to fully witness or grasp the larger outbreak that occurs in London; this almost seems to suggest that we as viewers of global crises are either forced to witness as outsiders or are struggling from within the conflict. Jim (Cillian Murphy) wakes up in a hospital bed, naked, with tubes in his arms, half-shaven hair and abandoned, to find that the city of London itself is empty and devastated by something, but he does not know what. He wanders the empty streets, full of newspapers, broken glass, and rubble from the assumed looting and rioting. Crossing the London Bridge, he nearly trips over piles of London Tower souvenirs and miniature British flags, symbolic in many ways of the fallen, abandoned city itself. Jim walks for what seems like forever, making his way into the downtown core of London, peering into windows, setting off car alarms, not finding any clear indication of what has happened. He finds a newspaper on the ground, with the headline, "Evacuation: Mass Exodus of British People Causes Global Chaos," followed by several fragmented bylines. "Blair declares state of emergency … Military ordered 'Shoot to Kill' … Government Check Points overrun … UN to build giant refugee camp … Chaos at all London airports." These bold, rather unsettling bylines seem in many ways familiar to viewers who may still feel ill at ease about recent global crises, such as 9/11 and subsequent terrorist attacks. He also passes a billboard full of missing person flyers, photographs and letters of personal pleas, another rather familiar image for American viewers. This is in many ways simply a long, drawn out, dramatic scene, keeping with the ambivalence of humanity and the aftermath of a global crisis; the purpose of this initial scene is to show that society has not only stopped functioning but that humanity has essentially ceased to be. The empty streets, the vacant homes, the total silence of London, suggests that society, as viewers once knew it, has disappeared and all that is left are the remnants of civilization. The significance of a film such as 28 Days Later is not necessarily in how it demonstrates an escalation of media or film violence, as viewers have certainly seen a variety of examples of this in post-millennial films; what is significant is how 28 Days Later acknowledges the change in viewer attitudes towards global crises, terrorism and epidemic. Boyle's cinematic style suggests a constant upheaval of humanity, as the characters in the film must combat not only extreme violence and aggression but also the feeling of isolation that accompanies an apocalyptic scenario. Millennial zombie films not only suggest that the nature of film violence has changed as a result of contemporary media triggers, but also how society must combat the aftermath of tragedy, how individuals must cope with the devastation of a world event. The film looks at a rather straightforward outbreak pattern, which is linked to the title of the film: "Day 1: Exposure--Day 3: Infection--Day 8: Epidemic--Day 15: Evacuation - Day 20: Devastation." Indeed, "the days are numbered," and Jim wakes up on the twenty-eighth day to find nothing or at least nothing he wants to find.
Having been aided by two survivors, Mark (Noah Huntley) and Selena (Naomie Harris), during a violent encounter with a group of "infected," Jim is told what has happened in London. Selena describes the outbreak:
It started as rioting. And right from the beginning you knew this was different. Because it was happening in small villages, market towns. And then it wasn't on TV anymore. It was in the street outside. It was coming through your windows. It was a virus. An infection. You didn't need doctors to tell you that. It was the blood. It was something in the blood. By the time they tried to evacuate the cities it was already too late. The infection was everywhere. The army blockades were overrun. And that's when the exodus started. The day before the TV and radio stopped reporting, there were reports of infection in Paris and New York. We didn't hear anything more after that.
"What about the government? What are they doing?" Jim asks. "There is no government," Selena responds. "Of course there's a government. There's always a government. They're in a bunker or a plane." "No there's no government," Mark answers, "No police. No army. No TV. No radio. No electricity." The outbreak and panic that take place in the film demonstrate how society virtually erupts in the midst of crisis. 28 Days Later became the first and most marked film to imitate global anxieties, both in the respect of terrorism and epidemic. The film's release also coincided with the 2002-2003 SARS outbreaks, so the threat of global disease was particularly relevant to media and film audiences. 28 Days Later is especially groundbreaking in the way it triggered a series of films to follow, which remarked on the growing concern over global epidemic. Full of images of isolation, of human violence, destruction and rioting, 28 Days Later suggests, like many other millennial zombie films, that societal structures and institutions, and the military, are ultimately ineffective in stopping the random disorder that occurs during a zombie outbreak or, very generally, in a global crisis. Danny Boyle ends the transitional period of zombie films, from the classic to the millennial film period, initiating a new phase in zombie films. People felt, after the SARS outbreaks, that there was no way of escaping the threats of disease or air born virus, and filmmakers, like Danny Boyle, certainly took advantage of the rather unique circumstances around the globe.
Millennial Adaptations and Sequels
Millennial zombie films in some cases have attempted to readdress the plots of past films and supplant them with contemporary cultural anxieties. In 2004, Zack Snyder introduced a remake of George Romero's 1978 classic Dawn of the Dead.9 Snyder's remake reflects much of Romero's original film, depicting a modern society of suburban sprawl and a twenty-first century shopping mall, honoring a similar critique of American capitalism and materialism.10 However, Snyder's remake does not abide by the same image of the zombie. In Snyder's film, the zombies are almost too alive, running, jumping, biting and screaming, unlike Romero's slow moving (traditionally blue) ghouls. Many of the scenes throughout Snyder's Dawn of the Dead appear to happen with astounding speed. Even the outbreak itself seems to have happened overnight, as Ana (Sarah Polley) leaves work at the hospital at night, observing suspicious injuries in the overloaded hospital waiting room, and awakes to find her neighborhood and city overrun with zombies. Snyder's remake suggests that like most contemporary zombie films, outbreak is unavoidable, simply because it happens too quickly. Snyder's Dawn of the Dead is the result of a changing genre, like many of the other millennial zombie films, where individuals are forced to run, even sprint to escape from zombies but in the end it is usually in vain. These highly hyperbolized zombies are a part of a film culture that suggests that since the media is often exaggerated, since newscasters feed images of violence and urgent threats on a regular basis, why not create zombies that mimic that same cultural urgency?11
In 2007, Juan Carlos Fresnadillo introduced 28 Weeks Later, a sequel to Danny Boyle's 2002 film. The film outlines the American military operation to assist in the rehabilitation of London, following the outbreak of the quickly spreading rage virus. After only five years in between the two films, the zombies of Fresnadillo's sequel seem somehow more extreme than the first film; the zombies are more aggressive, and the scenes themselves happen with greater urgency and anxiety (with more blood being spit from the "infected" and more violent encounters between them and the survivors). The film centers on the same global climate as the first. Society in Britain and elsewhere has been virtually crippled by the outbreak of the "rage" virus. The film shows how the American military is ineffectual in its attempts to uphold order in what remains of London. Believing that the virus has been removed from the hot zone, the military allows refugees to return to London in small amounts. However, this proves disastrous, as the military fails to stop the "Code Red" situation, resorting to the shooting, bombing and gassing of infected areas where the infected are mixed with civilians. But the virus simply spreads further and the military is forced to firebomb "District One." Scarlet (Rose Burn) recognizes what the military must do to control the situation: "It all makes sense. They're executing Code Red. Step One: Kill the infected. Step Two: Containment. If containment fails, then Step Three: Extermination." 28 Weeks Later in many ways mirrors the pervading sense of futility in modern military intervention. Like the contemporary intercession in Iraq, the attempts of the American troops to assist in solving the problems of London and the rage virus merely result in antagonizing the situation. In these films, the spread of a zombie virus is inevitable and pandemic is ultimately unavoidable. What Fresnadillo centers on, and what Snyder too was focusing on, is not necessarily the fear of violence but the fear of society's inability to suppress violence, and in the end, society's inability to suppress a global crisis; it is the fear of the ineptitude of society, of social or governmental institutions that propels these films forward towards a contemporary form of media skepticism. 28 Days Later and 28 Weeks Later both seek to both uphold and condemn global anxieties, once more casting a light on the fears of terrorism and epidemic that spread globally like a disease.
Romero's Global Media Commentary
Also released in 2007, Diary of the Dead remains one of George Romero's lesser-known productions.12 Diary of the Dead is different from other millennial zombie films in terms of how it explicitly centers on the nature of the global media, providing a progressive commentary on the legitimacy and sincerity of film and television media. The first scene of the film takes place at an undisclosed emergency incident, which is being filmed by a local news station, Channel 10 News. In this opening scene, it is understood that an immigrant man has killed his wife and children, subsequently taking his own life. The paramedics are taking the bodies out of the apartment building, with the police standing by. But the bodies begin to move; the corpses make their way off the gurneys, and begin attacking the people in the surrounding scene, including the female news reporter that the cameraman from Channel 10 is accompanying. This initial scene is one of the first images available to the general public, according to Debra (Michelle Morgan). "We downloaded a lot of what we found on television off the net, off blogs, images and commentary over those first three days. Most of it was bullshit. None of it was useful," she explains in the opening scenes following the outbreak.
The rest of the film follows a group of students, who are interrupted while filming a class assignment. These students must cope with an emergency situation, understanding that societal institutions have undoubtedly failed, and that the media is likely misleading the public. The students must face what the news tells them versus what they can capture themselves on film. Jason Creed (Joshua Close) decides to shoot the whole ordeal, creating a documentary film called, "The Death of Death," in order to reveal the true nature of the crisis. The documentary is all about the global media mania, about spin doctrine and the reality of international crises. "None of us can claim to know the chaos of what we are experiencing," says the newscaster in the opening scenes of the film. Many of the students in the group themselves cannot seem to face the reality of the situation. When the students are interrupted while filming, they hear the news of the event on the radio, particularly one case of a drive-by shooting victim waking up on the autopsy table to attack the coroner. Tony (Shawn Roberts) utters, "Horseshit
…. The news is always horseshit. Always make things sound worse than they really are." According to Debra at this point in the film, "[i]t was all over the news, all over the web but no one really knew what was happening … I think that's what started the panic, not knowing the truth." The students are forced to travel across the state of Pennsylvania, to try and regain a sense of order, and reunite with their families (though they are met with little success). On route in their mobile home, the students watch the news channel relay information to the public about the government's handling of the situation:
Will you explain why the Department of Homeland Security suddenly raised its alert level to orange earlier this evening, even though there are no indications of a terrorist attack? … You're right. There's no indication of any terrorism. We believe these are simply isolated and unrelated phenomena, and we expect things to return to normal very soon.
"See, already starting to play this shit down," says Tony, continuing to deny the actuality of the events. The students are more concerned with the media's handling of the events than the events themselves. What is most important in this particular zombie film is the message that is being sent through media outlets, through film, through television, and through the internet. Debra (as the narrator) admits that, "it is interesting to see what we are capable of becoming. Up until that night, we had lived predictable lives. Now we would never be able to predict what might happen next. God had changed the rules on us. And surprisingly, we were playing along." Debra criticizes her boyfriend Jason of fixating on filming the experience but she is the one who eventually finishes the film's editing and distributes it through the net. She eventually submits to the same need, the need to film, to actualize the events so that others might learn from their mistakes. She says she is compelled, just like the man on Channel 10, compelled to shoot things that others find horrible or disturbing. Her boyfriend Jason is compelled to film the pandemic, and she is compelled to finish it. "What is it? What gets into our heads when we see something horrible?" Debra asks. "A horrible accident on the highway. Something keeps us from just driving on. Something holds us. But we don't stop to help. We stop to look." In the beginning of the film, she explains that,
We made a film, the one I'm going to show you now. Jason was the one who wanted to make it, like that cameraman from Channel 10 … I did the final cut… I've added music occasionally for effect, hoping to scare you. You see, in addition to trying to tell you the truth, I am hoping to scare you, so that maybe you'll wake up. Maybe you won't make any of the same mistakes that we made.
Certainly, the characters in the film warn against the anxieties of media culture but most importantly, they urge the necessity of distinguishing truth from fiction. As the outbreak worsens and spreads throughout the area, Debra notes that, "the mainstream had vanished, with all its power and money. Now it was just us, bloggers, hackers, kids. The more voices there are, the more spin there is. The truth becomes that much harder to find. In the end, it's all just noise." In contemporary society, many viewers have been conditioned to recognize what this media mania means, to hear the competing voices of reason in the global media and be forced to identify the soundest message. Following the 9/11 attacks and the subsequent national security crisis in North America, the global media erupted in a similar fashion, communicating hundreds of competing frames and different interpretations of events, and it was up to the media's respondents to uncover the truth for themselves. Furthermore, in an experience such as a zombie outbreak, there is the risk of becoming immune to the trauma and violence shown on the television screen, immune to the images shot through the camera lens. Many of these millennial zombie films call upon this very question: have we become immune to violence and global crisis, or do we simply react differently to it? "By now," Debra admits, "we'd become part of it, part of it 24/7. It's strange how, looking at things, seeing things through a lens, a glass, rose-colored or shaded black, you become immune. You're supposed to be affected but you're not." Just as viewers watch zombie films, caught in the state between fear and thrill, they often do not recognize their immunities to violence and terror; in many instances, they do not even recognize the correlation between reality and zombie fantasy. These zombie films become not necessarily worst-case scenarios for society but for individual viewers. Like other millennial zombie films, Diary of the Dead leaves off open-ended; film viewers do not know the fate of the few remaining characters, nor do they know the fate of humanity. Debra, Tony and their professor are held up in the panic room of their friend's mansion. When the door of the panic room shuts, after the zombies enter the house and surrounding property, nothing else is said of these three characters and their future. The film ends on a solemn note, as Debra explains how inhumane some humans can be, questioning whether or not the human race is really worth saving.
Conclusion
The zombie film has been used as a pervasive tool throughout the past century of film in order to moderate cultural and political themes through cinematic devices. It was not until the turn of the millennium and 9/11, however, that the zombie film truly began to fulfill different political and cultural objectives. According to Dendle,
[i]t is not without some justice… that the resurgence of zombie movie popularity in the early 2000s has been linked with the events of September 11, 2001… apocalypticism has always been engrained into the archetypal psyche of any society defining itself - as all mortal endeavors must - in the context of history and time. (54)
Throughout almost seventy-five years of film evolution, the zombie can be understood as tracking a range of cultural, political and economic anxieties in North American society. However, this understanding of zombie film culture seems to neglect the considerable impact that the turn of the millennium, 9/11 and globalization have played on the nature of the horror film genre. The genre became hyperbolized like the media itself and a significant and quite obvious change did occur in the horror film genre. It may be in theory that horror genres produce and sustain a violent and aggressive society, something that Clarens set out to challenge; however, in practice, these films are the direct result of an uncertain political climate and an evolving popular culture, both in the case of pre-millennial fears that had informed various science fiction and disaster narratives and in the change in film that occurred as the result of a millennial society. What is most striking about this particular age in film is not necessarily in how society has been variously paralleled or mimicked, but in how these films cast a light on the anxieties and antagonisms of the global media in the new millennium. The zombie has functioned in various ways, first as an implicit cultural undertone marking an era of imperialism and political upheaval, and then proceeding towards an age of cultural anxiety and media monopolies. Now the zombie's influence still continues to change, as contemporary zombie film adaptations have moved towards zombie satires and comedies.13 Throughout their remarkable history, zombie films have been a source of entertainment for viewers, and now, more than ever, perform as a site of the spectator for those who wish to partake in films of violence and terror. In the contemporary globalized world, zombie films have served as a cultural insignia, marking an age of restlessness, disorder and fear.
Notes
1. Norris, Kern and Just observe that, "[t]he events of 9/11 understandably brought a new feeling of vulnerability to many Americans, as security threats that were long familiar elsewhere around the world directly affected US citizens" (260).
2. The term "millennial" is used in this case to describe zombie films that were released following the turn of the millennium and reflect the cultural, technological shift in popular culture; this shift coincided with changes in special effects, subject matter and plot, and changes in political and social contexts. This shift also overlapped with the September 11th attacks on the United States. According to Norris, Kern and Just, "the events of 9/11 can best be understood as symbolizing a critical cultural shift in the predominant news frame used by the American mass media for understanding issues of national security, altering perceptions of risk at home and threats abroad" (Norris, Kern and Just 3-4).
3. See Halperin's White Zombie (1932) and Revolt of the Zombie (1936), and Yarbrough's King of the Zombies (1941).
4. According to Hess, "these films (e.g., Westerns, Horror and Sci-Fi) never deal directly with present social and political problems … all of them are set in the non-present. Westerns and horror films take place in the past--science fiction films, by definition, take place in a future time … the society in which the action takes place is very simple and does not function as a dramatic force in the film--it exists as a backdrop against which the few actors work out the central problem the film presents" (qtd. in Williams para. 1).
5. See Hoskins' Chopper Chicks in Zombie Town (1989) or Link's Zombie High (1987).
6. See Tourneur's I Walked With A Zombie (1943), which is set on the island of Saint Sebastian in the West Indies and explores the myths of voodoo in Caribbean culture.
7. Zombie film began to evolve as early as the late 1960s. The politics of zombie films during this time period were no longer as passive as before, beginning in some measure to mimic world events, including the Vietnam War, the Cold War and eventually the American Gulf Wars, but this was a lengthily process, an evolution rather than a revolution, as was seen at the turn of the millennium (Dendle 48).
8. The origin of the virus plays on the contemporary commentary against the corporate nature of the Western world, as companies get carried away in their profiteering pursuits, whether it is the development of new pharmaceuticals to hold a monopoly over or a scheme of military science, in hopes of creating a new indestructible weapon with which to wage war. However, there are other precedents for this, as film viewers have seen the military science mania of such films as The Incredible Hulk (Johnson 1978; Lee 2003), X-Men (2000) and Resident Evil (2002). What is important is how certain zombie films participate in a culture of skepticism, in a society in fear of terrorism, infectious disease and government conspiracy; these are all elements that intermingle in millennial zombie films in the transformation of the film genre.
9. For other remakes, see Miner's Day of the Dead (2008) or Broadstreet's Night of the Living Dead 3D (2006).
10. See Harper, "Zombies, Malls, and the Consumerism Debate: George Romero's Dawn of the Dead."
11. See Thussu and Freedman, War and the Media: Reporting Conflict 24/7 (2003).
12. Romero is most widely known for his first two films, Night of the Living Dead (1968) and Dawn of the Dead (1978). Also, see Romero's later released Day of the Dead (1985) and Land of the Dead (2005).
13. See Wright's Shaun of the Dead (2004), Currie's Fido (2006) or Fleischer's Zombieland (2009).
Works Cited
Anderson, Paul S., dir. Resident Evil. Constantin Film Produktion, 2002. Film.
Boyle, Danny, dir. 28 Days Later. Fox Searchlight Pictures, 2002. Film.
Broadstreet, Jeff, dir. Night of the Living Dead 3D. The Horrorworks, 2006. Film.
Clarens, Carlos. An Illustrated History of the Horror Film. New York: Capricorn Books, 1967. Print.
Currie, Andrew, dir. Fido. Lion Gate Films, 2006. Film.
Dendle, Peter. "The Zombie as Barometer of Cultural Anxiety." Monsters and the Monstrous: Myths and Metaphors of Enduring Evil. Ed. Niall Scott. New York: Rodopi, 2007. Print.
Fleischer, Ruben, dir. Zombieland. Columbia Pictures, 2009. Film.
Fresnadillo, Juan Carlos, dir. 28 Weeks Later. Fox Atomic, 2007. Film.
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