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OverviewThe zombie has shuffled with dead-eyed, remorseless menace from its beginnings in obscure folklore and primitive superstition to become the dominant image of the undead today. In contemporary visions of global apocalypse, such as the films 28 Days Later, I Am Legend and World War Z and the phenomenally successful TV series The Walking Dead, the zombie has reached its apotheosis. Zombies have infected the cinema of nearly every nation, from France to Australia, Argentina and Brazil to China and Japan. This absorbing history tracks zombies from their emergence in nineteenth-century writings about the Caribbean, through their slow transmission and mutation into the popular pulp fictions of America in the 1920s and '30s, to the arrival of the cinematic zombie, and reveals how after 1945 the walking dead swarmed into comics, pulp novels, B-movie cinema, horror fiction and video games. Full Product DetailsAuthor: Roger LuckhurstPublisher: Reaktion Books Imprint: Reaktion Books Dimensions: Width: 21.60cm , Height: 1.60cm , Length: 13.80cm Weight: 0.422kg ISBN: 9781780235288ISBN 10: 1780235283 Pages: 224 Publication Date: 01 August 2015 Audience: General/trade , General Format: Hardback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: Temporarily unavailable The supplier advises that this item is temporarily unavailable. It will be ordered for you and placed on backorder. Once it does come back in stock, we will ship it out to you. Table of ContentsContents Note on Usage Introduction Chapter 1: From Zombi to Zombie: Lafcadio Hearn and William Seabrook Chapter 2: Phantom Haiti Chapter 3: The Pulp Zombie Emerges Chapter 4: The First Movie Cycle: White Zombie to Zombies on Broadway Chapter 5: Felicia Felix-Mentor: The 'Real' Zombie Chapter 6: After 1945: Zombie Massification Chapter 7: The Zombie Apocalypse: Romero's Reboot and Italian Horrors Chapter 8: Going Global References Select Bibliography Acknowledgements Photo AcknowledgementsReviewsFrom their emergence in the 1920s Western imagination to their position today as the go-to trope for a generation 'flatlined by the alienating tedium of modern life, ' zombies have proved remarkably flexible metaphors. They have come to embody the Other, the economic zeitgeist, and even ourselves. This entertaining study begins in Haiti, with 19th-century America's fears about vodou. --Sunday Telegraph As Roger Luckhurst declares in his alternately solemn and zany book. . . . the zombie's history is a delayed but gruesomely satisfactory revenge, another version of the archetypal Freudian plot that narrates the return of the repressed. --Observer A short review cannot do full justice to this book. I urge you to read it and, for those who have never read Roger Luckhurst before, seek out many of his other writings. What he does brilliantly is weave culture, politics, and history into a singular tapestry that leaves scope for thought and discussion. The history of zombies is, in his hands, demonstrably worthy of our attention and time. --Hong Kong Review of Books Luckhurst tells the sinuous tale of the life of the zombie with evident glee in a book that is academically valid but fun to read. --Independent Luckhurst is characteristically acute on many of these recent iterations, reading modern zombiedom with his usual swashbuckling confidence. . . . Never does he allow the familiarity of the more modern material to overshadow the beginnings of the phenomenon. No matter how it is diluted, parodied, or misunderstood, the rage of the zombie's origin, of these 'ambulatory dead, ' endures still, as a kind of haunting. --Times Literary Supplement As we discover in Roger Luckhurst's always entertaining history of the walking dead, this evolution in the zombie's homicidal efficacy has been mirrored by a rapid evolution in their cultural significance. . . . Such irreverence and range is characteristic of Luckhurst, who mixes pop cultural connoisseurship with scholarly rigour to great effect. . . . His style is engaging, his commentary lucid, and his message clear: they're coming to get you, however fast you run. --Daily Telegraph Luckhurst's breadth is immense and he has managed to corral a huge subject into a very helpful primer for anyone interested in the latest monster on the block. --Los Angeles Review of Books Gory and highly informative. . . . an entertaining history of those who continue to walk among us, even after death. --PopMatters Straddling the gap between popular and scholarly writing, Roger Luckhurst's masterly study sets out a rich and fascinating chronological account of the zombie's history. --Review 31 Luckhurst offers a mindful exploration of mindless violence. He is thoroughly well informed, and his writing proves lively and critically astute. It's hard to imagine a significantly better book on the zombie phenomenon. --London Review of Books Such irreverence and range is characteristic of Luckhurst, who mixes pop cultural connoisseurship with scholarly rigour to great effect . . . his style is engaging, his commentary lucid, and his message clear: they're coming to get you, however fast you run. --Daily Telegraph No matter how lurid and pulpy, popular culture is Luckhurst s meat and drink, and he s a connoisseur. He interprets historical shifts and nuance with scrupulous attention to detail and a lucid grasp of the larger picture; in this succinct yet rich study, the case he makes for zombies political and psychological significance is compelling, disturbing, and consistently lively. --Marina Warner, author of Once Upon a Time: A Short History of Fairy Tale Author InformationRoger Luckhurst lives in a post-war utopian social housing estate in inner London and teaches at Birkbeck College, where he is Professor of Modern Literature in the School of Arts. He is the author of Zombies (Reaktion, 2015), and wrote the BFI Classics on Alien and The Shining. Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |
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