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Living with the Living Dead
Living with the Living Dead: The Wisdom of the Zombie Apocalypse | Greg Garrett
3 posts | 2 read
When humankind faces what it perceives as a threat to its very existence, a macabre thing happens in art, literature, and culture: corpses begin to stand up and walk around. The dead walked in the fourteenth century, when the Black Death and other catastrophes roiled Europe. They walked in images from World War I, when a generation died horribly in the trenches. They walked in art inspired by the Holocaust and by the atomic attacks on Japan. Now, in the early twenty-first century, the dead walk in stories of the zombie apocalypse, some of the most ubiquitous narratives of post-9/11 Western culture. Zombies appear in popular movies and television shows, comics and graphic novels, fiction, games, art, and in material culture including pinball machines, zombie runs, and lottery tickets. The zombie apocalypse, Greg Garrett shows us, has become an archetypal narrative for the contemporary world, in part because zombies can stand in for any of a variety of global threats, from terrorism to Ebola, from economic uncertainty to ecological destruction. But this zombie narrative also brings us emotional and spiritual comfort. These apocalyptic stories, in which the world has been turned upside down and protagonists face the prospect of an imminent and grisly death, can also offer us wisdom about living in a community, present us with real-world ethical solutions, and invite us into conversation about the value and costs of survival. We may indeed be living with the living dead these days, but through the stories we consume and the games we play, we are paradoxically learning what it means to be fully alive.
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Thatbooknerd
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In these stories of the apocalypse, happy endings are possible. That doesn‘t mean that people haven‘t died, or that horrible things haven‘t been done. But what it does mean is that those humans who populate the world and maybe the world itself are different, better, even, because of what has been endured. It means that in the great battle between life and death, the only war that matters, we continue to choose life, life in all its ⬇️

Thatbooknerd complications, with all its pain, with all its suffering, with all its unfairness. The message of these stories of the Zombie Apocalypse is that in a world marked by fear and violence—a world very much like our own—we can still choose to live, and choose how to live. And in that choosing, you can make a difference. You will not be overcome. Light up the darkness. 2mo
Singout A hopeful thought to go to sleep with. 2mo
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Dwayne_Shugert
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I love Greg Garrett's books and this one was no different. A scholarly look at why the zombie apocalypse is so popular and so deep in our collective psyche. Fascinating look into what makes these stories tick.

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JacintaMCarter
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Riveted_Reader_Melissa Looks like fun! 9y
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