Zombie fads peak when society unhappy
2013-03-11 18:01
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Columbia - In the popular American TV series The Walking
Dead, humans struggle to escape from a pack of zombies hungry for flesh.
Prank alerts have warned of a zombie apocalypse on radio
stations in some US states.
And across the country, zombie wannabes in tattered
clothes occasionally fill local parks, gurgling moans of the undead.
Are these just unhealthy obsessions with death and decay?
To Clemson University professor, Sarah Lauro, the
phenomenon isn't harmful or a random fad, but part of a historical trend that
mirrors a level of cultural dissatisfaction and economic upheaval.
Lauro, who teaches English at Clemson, studied zombies
while working on her doctoral degree at the University of California at Davis.
Lauro said she keeps track of zombie movies, TV shows and
video games, but her research focuses primarily on the concept of the
"zombie walk”, a mass gathering of people who, dressed in the clothes and
make-up of the undead, stagger about and dance.
It's a fascination that, for Lauro, seems unnatural.
Uninterested in violent movies or games, Lauro finds
herself now taking part in both in an attempt to further understand what makes
zombie-lovers tick.
"I hate violence," she said. "I can't
stand gore. So it's a labour, but I do it."
The zombie mob originated in 2003 in Toronto, Canada,
Lauro said, and popularity escalated dramatically in the US in 2005, alongside
a rise in dissatisfaction with the war in Iraq.
"It was a way that the population was getting to
exercise the fact that they felt like they hadn't been listened to by the Bush
administration," Lauro said.
"Nobody really wanted that war, and yet we were
going to war anyway."
The mid- to late 2000s also saw an uptick in overall
zombie popularity, perhaps prompted in part by the release of post-apocalyptic
movies including Dawn of the Dead and 28 Days Later.
As of last year, Lauro said, zombie walks had been
documented in 20 countries.
The largest gathering drew more than 4 000 participants
at the New Jersey Zombie Walk in Asbury Park, New Jersey, in October 2010,
according to the Guinness World Records.
"We are more interested in the zombie at times when
as a culture we feel disempowered," Lauro said.
"If you were to ask the participants, I don't think
that all of them are very cognizant of what they're saying when they put on the
zombie makeup and participate," she said.
"To me, it's such an obvious allegory. We feel like,
in one way, we're dead."
- AP