Zombies and Sexuality - Essays On Desire and The Walking Dead
Zombies and Sexuality - Essays On Desire and The Walking Dead
Zombies and Sexuality - Essays On Desire and The Walking Dead
2014030916
Table of Contents
Introduction: Zombie Sex
Steve Jones and Shaka McGlotten
19
36
52
73
88
106
123
vi
Table of Contents
140
159
180
Bibliography
199
213
Index
215
Introduction
Zombie Sex
Steve Jones and Shaka McGlotten
How would you respond to the onset of a zombie apocalypse? Given
only moments to live and faced with the prospect of shambling endlessly
through the world as one of the mindless undead, what activity would
top your bucket list? Luckily for the unimaginative procrastinators
among us, zombie narratives offer various helpful suggestions. For example, in Zombies vs. Strippers (2012), ecdysiast Jasmine elects to give
infected strip-club bouncer Marvin a nal lapdance. Whether or not
this sounds appealing, Zombies vs. Strippers also presents a warning:
our desires are worth reecting on in detail, since they might not play
out exactly as we hope they might. Moreover, as we move into undeath,
our desires may also mutate in unbidden and unforeseen ways. Marvin
and Jasmines misinterpreted exchanges exemplify such slippage. When
Marvin moans about his bodily failure (I can barely see. Im so stiff ),
Jasmine thinks that he is talk[ing] dirty. As Marvin posits that he is so
close (to death), Jasmine assures him, Its okay baby, you can come.
Amorousness and mortality meld. That amalgam nds its fullest expression when Marvin nally turns. Jasmine thinks it is sweet when Marvin
declares that he values Jasmine for her braaaaains rather than her
looks, but she does not bargain on Marvin proving it by immediately
biting her face off. The next time the couple are depicted, Jasmine (now
faceless and topless) continues to dry-hump the fully zombied Marvin.
In this instance, living sexual desire and the zombies carnal longings
are indistinguishable from one another. The motto of this particular
story may be that love transcends even death. Maybe Jasmine and Mar1
Introduction
vins tryst signals that once enamed, our passions are unstoppable
forces. Alternatively, these gyrating sacs of viscera might underscore
that even grotesque ghouls need a little lovin.
Whatever conclusion one reaches, the unpalatable combination of
zombies and sex is provocative, triggering a multitude of questions about
the nature of desire, sex, sexuality, and the politics of our sexual behaviors. Colleagues and friends varied responses to our proposal for this
volume attest to how stimulating (intellectually or otherwise) the idea
of zombie sex is. Their reactions ranged from polite curiosity to surprise,
from disgust to shock. Yes, zombies and sex. Is the juxtaposition really
so surprising? Zombies are increasingly ubiquitous cultural gures most
commonly associated with a decaying half-life and a mindless appetite
for human esh (and/or brains). Sex is even more ubiquitous, manifesting as erotic attachments and practices that are variously reproductive,
fun, banal, troubling, and carnal. Whatever form sex takes, it is central
to virtually every human life and form of sociality. What is perhaps more
shocking than the combination of zombies and sex is how infrequently
this juxtaposition has been addressed in extant scholarship, not least
since our book proposal resonated with so many: we received nearly 50
abstracts in response to our call for papers. We were surprised by the
range of cultural textspornographic, straight, and queerthat our
contributors drew upon, by the multifarious ways in which zombies and
sex have been brought together in zombie texts, and by the latent sexual
themes zombie narratives explore. Zombies crystallize fears and desires
related to contagion and consumption, to the body and sociality, to
autonomy and enslavement. They represent a raried drive that underpins our conscious desires: to consume. In zombie narratives, this drive
impels contagious forms of contact, sweeping up new bodies as it builds.
The result is that human sociality is fundamentally altered, taking form
as a collective comprised of individuals seeking connection with one
another, or a swarm of bodies devoid of individual subjectivity, for example. The essays in this book explore what happens in the wake of these
encounters, when sex and undeath are brought together.
Zombie Sex
Survival of the Dead [2009]), and they have also found success in genre
mashups, where horror merges with comedy (Zombieland [2009]; Juan
of the Dead [2011]; Cockneys vs. Zombies [2012]). Zombies even make
appearances in family fare like 2012s animated ParaNorman. They have
spread beyond lm into stage musicals (Fleshed Out [2012]; Musical of
the Living Dead [2012]); videogames (Dead Island [2011]; Left 4 Dead
[20082009]); and comics (Chaos Campus [2007present]; Marvel
Zombies [2005present]). That same ethos of amalgamation is evident
in transmedia manifestations of the zombie myth, such as videogame/
lm adaptations (Resident Evil [1996present/2002present]; House of
the Dead [1997/2003]), literature/lm crossovers (Warm Bodies
[2012/2013]); World War Z [2006/2013]), and television/graphic novel
adaptations (The Walking Dead [2003present/2010present]). The
mixed-media remake Night of the Living Dead: Reanimated (2009) and
the literary mash-up Pride and Prejudice and Zombies (2009) further
exemplify the zombies transmedia circulation. Indeed, as Max Thornton
observes in his contribution to this volume, the zombie offers a bridge
between an iconic object of print media (the Christian Bible) and contemporary Internet meme culture.
The zombies ubiquity also underscores its theoretical applications.
As monsters that straddle the gulf between life and death, zombies disturb established ontological and epistemological categories, as well as
hegemonic norms. Those disruptions are frequently associated with an
assortment of social anxieties: about viral contagion, biological warfare,
neoliberal and totalitarian securitization, environmental collapse, and
capitalist end-times. Unsurprisingly, our contributors evoke some of
these themes, either implicitly or explicitly; Emma Vossens analysis of
The Walking Dead concentrates on the apprehension and anticipation that
follow in the wake of global economic crisis. In this regard, Vossens essay
reiterates that in the horror genre zombies commonly symbolize apprehension over social precariousness and radical change. Zombies expose
the abject physiology beneath human skin, either because they rip into living tissue, or because their esh is falling apart. Zombies also reveal what
bodies are capable of, and what they can endure. Yet the zombies presence
outside of horror signals that the undead are not limited to reecting collective fears. As Vossens essay elucidates, the zombie renaissance offers
a multitude of new insights into the zombies capacity to reect our erotic
and even political desires. Contemporary zombie narratives also expose
an array of truths about our shared global present, especially those that
are tied to automation, disposability, and new collectivities.
Introduction
Necro-Sociality
Importantly these various approaches are all rooted in concepts of
socialitythe relationships and forms of reproduction that organize
associations between people, social systems, and non-human others.
Zombies are social monsters, and their monstrosity is a reection of
our own. Lone zombies are ineffective, comical rather than frightening. En masse, however, the zombie swarm is terrifying. Zombies reproduce sociality itself as a kind of latent zymotic disease that threatens
humanitys existence. This trait, what we might call the zombies necrosociality, illustrates ways in which zombies metaphorically capture anxieties about identity, embodiment, and agency that resonate with contemporary and historical social contexts. As Marcus Harmes observes
in his contribution to this volume, one important context that has been
largely under-theorized in zombie scholarship to date is Victorian social
attitudes towards dead bodies. Drawing on the quasi- necrophilic
imagery of European zombie-horror set in the nineteenth century,
Harmes exposes the fetishistic, sexual overtones of cultic Victorian
mourning practices.
A tandem socio-historical context has received far more attention
in zombie studies; numerous thinkers have drawn upon the zombies
origins in Haitian folklore to understand histories of racism and racial-
Zombie Sex
ized labor (Moreman and Rushton; Castronovo). Many cinematic depictions of zombies are overtly racialized. For instance, zombies have been
treated as somnambulistic slave gures in White Zombie (1932) and I
Walked with a Zombie (1943), or monstrous cannibals pitched against
white westerners in Zombie Flesheaters (1979), Zombie Holocaust (1980),
and Zombie Creeping Flesh (1980). These texts illustrate specic anxieties (and fantasies) about race and colonialism. White Zombie and I
Walked with a Zombie make these links explicit via their Gothic postcolonial Caribbean settings, anxious miscegenation fantasies,1 and zombie laborers. In African traditions, zombies are not undead creatures
hungering after the esh of the living, but ordinary people who have
been victimized by a witch or sorcerer who then forces them to work
against their will. As Lars Bang Larsen observes, The origin of the zombie in Haitian vodoun has an explicit relationship to labor, as a repetition
or reenactment of slavery. The person who receives the zombie spell
dies, is buried, excavated, and put to work, usually as a eld hand. These
themes were explored, as Larsen points out, by Wade Davis in his controversial book The Serpent and the Rainbow, in which the ethnobotanist
sought a pharmacological explanation for zombies. Daviss social analysis
is more compelling than his pharmacological insights, however; for people of African descent in the post-colony, zombies represent the loss of
physical liberty that is slavery, and the sacrice of personal autonomy
implied by the loss of identity (qtd. in Lars Bang Larsen; see also
Thomas). In these traditions, zombies are terrifying not because they
are consumptive or contagious, but because they evoke enslavement to
the will of another. More recently, thinkers have drawn upon the zombie
to comprehend the apparently magical accumulation of wealth under
postcolonial neoliberalism (Comaroff and Comaroff ) and widespread
experiences of social precariousness.
Although it is now largely forgotten, the paradigmatic image of the
zombie as a looming, murderous horde also derives from the Caribbean,
and especially the Haitian revolution, which was perceived by the West
as mindless, rapacious destruction (Sibylle 2). The contemporary zombie
likewise almost always appears as a horde that threatens existence as we
know it. The zombie swarm is an inverted fantasy. Like contemporary
capitalism, it represents destruction through voracious, insatiable consumption. Simultaneously, zombies represent that which could deliver
us from that self-same death drive. Thus, zombies might appear as a
revolutionary multitudefaceless, inexorable, forcing a global transformation toward a genocidal absolute waror they might catalyze a per-
Introduction
manent dtente, in which humans band together regardless of ethnonational and religious differences. By dwelling on themes of collective
power and revolution, zombie narratives typically reduce the social
world to its day zero, providing opportunities to re-envisage society.
However, a number of our contributors point out that in some narratives
zombie futures bear a striking resemblance to our political present.
Moreover, as Sasha Cocarla argues in relation to Warm Bodies and both
Cathy Hannabach and Vossen argue in relation to different iterations of
The Walking Dead, many zombie narratives reproduce or even celebrate
norms tied to romance, gender, ability, and heterosexuality.
Zombie Sex
Introduction
Zombie Love
Not all undead beings were treated as mindless entities prior to the
1970s; The Mummy (1932), Dracula (1931), and Frankenstein (1931) all
feature central living dead gures that display conscious motivation.
Interestingly, these monsters are driven by explicitly human concerns
in particular, the quest for sexual companionship (although Frankensteins creation does not nd his partner until Bride of Frankenstein
[1935]). These lms pivotally present living dead beings not as mechanized husks, but as individuals who lay claim to sexual identity (even if
that identity is impersonal, distasteful or disaffected).
What is at once central and strangely absent from current debates
about the zombie is any detailed consideration of sex and sexuality. This
oversight is startling, not least since sex is arguably the most intimate
form of social engagement, and is a profound aspect of human social
identity. What makes the omission even more remarkable is how appositely the zombie reects socio-sexual desires and fears. Zombies are
fundamentally reproductive, attaining power through violent, interpersonal and contagious contact. In tandem, zombie texts typically feature
a band of survivors, families or their analogues, who must struggle to
endure the zombie apocalypse, and presumably repopulate the world.
In zombie narratives, human sex is symbolically powerful: it is an anxious reprieve to dystopian threat, and a promise that future generations
of the living will still inherit the earth. In one sense, sex might be envisaged as buttressing heteronormative fantasies, then. Allegorically, the
nuclear family closes ranks and is arrayed against an encroaching horde
(of foreigners or queers), and heterosexual propagation is presented as
the ultimate goal that might save humanity. On the other hand, zombie
procreation represents a powerful alternative to heterosexual breeding,
one that de-naturalizes the relationship between heterosexual intercourse and propagation. In the zombie narrative, heterosexual reproduction is superseded, and what Lee Edelman dubs reproductive
futurism is upended. In his essay here, Grizzell argues that such upendings, and especially the failures represented by zombie propagation, offer
useful queer re-conceptualizations of culture.
Where the zombie-lms sexual politics have been addressed by
academics, feminist methodologies have typically been used to examine
the living characters gendered relationships (Grant 200212; Greenberg
86; Paffenroth 5966; Patterson 103118). Subsequently, there are two
major oversights in the body of existing literature. First, sex and love
Zombie Sex
play crucial roles in numerous zombie narratives. That is, sex is important to the plots and meanings of many zombie lms, and manifests in
a multitude of ways. For example, Shaun of the Deads (2004) zombie
plague is a backdrop for a romantic narrative that drives towards lead
protagonist Shaun being happily reunited with his lover Liz. However,
the lms pivotal relationship is a bromance between Shaun and his
best friend Ed, who is more pertinently Shauns partner in the narrative.
Although Ed becomes infected, the lm closes not with a heterosexual
coupling, but with a merging between heterosexual and homosocial,
between living and dead: Shaun, Liz, and the now undead Ed live
together in a happily ever after union. In the Japanese lm Wild Zero
(1999), lead protagonist and wannabe rocker Ace is initially distressed
to discover that his damsel in distress beau (Tomoe) is male. However,
the zombie plague is the lms only crisis: Aces momentary confusion
is swiftly overturned when Ace has a vision of his rocknroll hero Guitar
Wolf, who proclaims, Love has no borders, nationalities, or genders!
DO IT!!! The romance unfolds in accordance with Guitar Wolf s enthusiastic assertion. Further indications that zombie-narratives are not
exclusively focused on heterosexuality are exemplied by Noble
Romances Zombies versus Lesbians novellas, such as Amber Greens
Dead Kitties Dont Purr. The series uses zombie outbreaks as complications in gay romance stories. Given that sex and love are driving forces
in so many zombie narratives, it is surprising that they have been disregarded by scholars in favor of other less prominent themes. In her
essay for this volume, Sasha Cocarla explores the queered normativity
of R, the zombie protagonist of Isaac Marions novel, Warm Bodies. R
engages in a three way relationship with Perry, whose brain he has
devoured and whose feelings he subsequently experiences, and Julie,
Perrys former love interest. Cocarla links Rs quest toward greater liveliness to the affective aspirations interpellated by neoliberal notions of
freedom, rationality, and the salvic couple form.2
The second element overlooked in current academic discussion is
zombie sexuality: the fact that the undead have sex with each other and
with humans in many contemporary zombie narratives. Since the late
1990s, zombies have been increasingly represented as sexual gures.
Frequently, the results have seemingly reiterated normative sexual hierarchies, in which certain bodies and modes of existence are subordinated
to others. Denise N. Cooks contribution to this volume evokes precisely
these problems. Critiquing Giddens plastic sexuality paradigm, Cooks
dissection of short-stories about undead sex-work demonstrates that
10
Introduction
Zombie Sex
11
12
Introduction
deviancy (Downing 168; Canter and Wentink 491; Gutierrez and GinerSorolla 85455), necrophilia underscores how morally disgusting the
males actions are. Harmes and Cooks essays in this volume offer
nuanced dissections of this necrophilic dynamic. It should also be noted
that zombies are not always victims of sexual violence. In The Necro Files
(1997) and its sequel (2003), and Rape Zombie: Lust of the Dead (2012),
for example, zombies rape the living. In these cases, zombies are portrayed as sexually active beings whose cravings for living esh are not
limited to anthropophagy.
Zombie Sex
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14
Introduction
Necrosexuality
Death is the great leveler of socio-political differences. The zombie
is the leveler of desires. It is not that humans who objectify zombies are
singled-out as perverts in these lms, but that all human desires are
aberrant. Just as there is no line between living and dead in zombie texts,
the constructed lines between normal and deviant desires fail.
The result is a kind of sexual freedom that manifests in two ways.
First, zombies invade locales associated with sexual license: for example,
in Zombies! Zombies! Zombies! (2008), the living dead attack a stripclub. In this case, the strip-club is transformed into a sanctuary from
the zombie-outbreak. Once the zombies invade, the location is devoid
of sex: that is, it is free from the constructed (and limited) anthropocentric vision of sex it previously stood for. Second, the zombies carnal
hedonism is not limited to specic locations or even body parts. During
the zombie invasion, all spaces and all esh are subject to the zombies
passion. The implication is that zombies cravings are not bound by the
restrictions placed on human sexual freedom, be they fears regarding
Zombie Sex
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Introduction
Zombie Sex
17
Notes
1. On zombie liminality, miscegenation, and interracial identity, see Ponder.
2. In a similar vein, both Zombie Honeymoon (2004) and Zombie Marriage Counseling: Im a Lesbian (2009) question the validity of marriage as a til death do us
part union.
3. There are some notable foils to this trend. For example, Cupcake: A Zombie
Lesbian Musical (2010) features songs such as My Girlfriend Ate My Pussy, Literally and No Penis Between Us, which counter the heterosexual bias found elsewhere in the zombie canon.
4. For a detailed discussion of various recent zombie lms set in and around stripclubs, see Jones XXXombies.
5. For an extended discussion on zombie sexuality and disgust, see Jones,
XXXombies.
Take, Eat,
These Are My Brains
Queer Zombie Jesus
Max Thornton
In 2013, I received a Facebook invitation to a Zombie BBQ: This
Sunday is Easter, which is basically a day where we celebrate the existence of zombies. Celebrate by eating meat that isnt braaaaaains at my
house. San Franciscos Sisters of Perpetual Indulgence held a Zombie
Christ Haunted House fundraiser for Easter weekend 2013, inviting visitors to travel through the disco inferno where aming queers practice
their delightful sinning; Survive the ghastly church with its soulconsuming pope; Feast with disciples at the zombie last supper! (Faetopia Crew). Meanwhile, a quick Google search for Zombie Jesus yields
a robust 15 million results, including Zombie Jesus Lives! (zombiejesus. com), ZombieJesusDay.org, and Ira Hunters short lm Corpus
Delecti (The Passion of Zombie Jesus, 2009)all these on the rst page
alone.
The Internet phenomenon of Zombie Jesus is largely a joke, propelled by social media users enjoying the cheeky blasphemy of wishing
each other a happy Zombie Jesus Day on Easter Sunday. But could
there be wider social and theological implications? I suggest that, when
viewed through a queer theology lens, Zombie Jesus can be seen as a
queer religious gure who bridges between secular Internet culture and
Christianity.
Queer theology is a relatively young discipline, but queer gurations
of Jesus have abounded for most of Christian history. The fourteenth19
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21
Theological Backgrounds
In 1968, George A. Romero and John Russo codied the zombie as
we currently understand it. Prior to the release of Night of the Living
Dead, the zombie was a footnote in movie monster lore, an oddity of
racist colonial fears of Haitian witchery. In lms such as White Zombie
(1932) and I Walked with a Zombie (1941), zombies were mindless slaves,
controlled by drugs and/or voodoo, with no autonomy or will. Such
zombies were alive, but appeared to be the walking dead. Romero and
Russos script took this one step further: their zombies really were the
walking dead, but what drove their actions was not a voodoo master but
the primal, cannibalistic urge to feast on human esh. With 1985s Return
of the Living Dead, the zombies tastes were narrowed to the human
brain specically, which is often the meal of choice for todays zombies.
By the time of the twenty-rst centurys pop-culture zombie boom,
which was launched in large part by Capcoms wildly popular videogame
series Resident Evil and Zack Snyders 2004 Dawn of the Dead remake,
the zombie had been cemented in the public imagination according to
Romeros specications: a walking corpse that eats human esh and has
no will or mind of its own (see Russell).
Romeros Catholic upbringing (Tony Williams 90) may have stimulated his creation of the esh-eating zombie (and Christian imagery is
certainly heavily pervasive in the European zombie movies of the 1970s
made by Lucio Fulci, Amando de Ossorio, and others). The three core
characteristics of the Romero/Russo zombie represent nightmarish
inversions of three central theological tenets of Christian faith, which
manifest in practices drawn from the life and death (and undeath) of
Jesus. Each of these three tenets carries within it an undercurrent of
profoundly embodied eshliness, which is important to the graphically
physical gure of Queer Zombie Jesus. Fleshliness denotes a fundamental, ineradicable tie to material reality and the physical bodies through
which our entire perception thereof is mediated, as Merleau-Ponty
pointed out and queer theory continues to emphasize. The spiritualizing
tendency of Christian theological history has often belied this eshliness,
but it is inescapable in a religion that stresses Gods bodily incarnation,
bodily death, bodily resurrection, and bodily continuity through the
Church. After all, the metaphysical need not be the non-physical, but
rather the physical-and-also-beyond-physical (the meta/physical). A
compelling analogy to this meta/physical nature of Christian eshliness
is found in the increasingly virtual lives of our Internet age, which I will
22
discuss more fully at the end of this essay. The zombie, and especially
Queer Zombie Jesus recovers strains of eshliness for the contemporary
meta/physical world.
Resurrection Immortality
The Nicene Creed of 325 CE , still one of the foundational declarations of Christian faith and still recited in some churches every Sunday,
states: We look for the resurrection of the dead, and the life of the world
to come (Episcopal Church 327). This resurrection is associated with
eschatological transformation, with a world to come which will be different from this one and yet have continuity with it. Just as the new
earth of Johns vision in Revelation (21:1) is a world transformeda
world that has some recognizable similarities with the old earth but
which arises out of the latters passing awayso the resurrected dead
of Christian eschatological hope are revolutionized re-creations of their
old selves.
The pattern for this balance of continuity and dramatic change is,
of course, the resurrected Christ himself. Examples of the continuities
between the pre- and post-resurrection Jesus include the ability to eat,
tangible materiality, visibility, audibility, and some form of physical continuity enabling him to be recognized as the same person. However,
Jesus resurrection is qualitatively different from the miracles he performed in the raising of Jairus daughter (Luke 8:4056 and parallels)
or Lazarus (John 11). These resuscitations restore the deceased to their
former state, whereas the revived Jesus is somehow new.
For example, although it is possible for Jesus to be recognized, this
does not happen immediately. Both Luke and John report rst encounters with the risen Christ wherein his closest friends are unable to recognize him until Jesus himself takes a decisive action (giving the disciples
bread in Luke 24:30; addressing Mary by name in John 20:16). Christs
resurrected body is both like and unlike his pre-resurrection body. He
is not a ghost: he can be touched (Luke 24:39), he can eat (Luke 24:42),
he bears the physical marks of his painful and ignominious death (John
20:20). And yet he can vanish and reappear at will (Luke 24:31, 36), and
he can pass through locked doors (John 20:19, 26).
Of course, the Gospel accounts are distinctly lacking in concrete
physical descriptions of the resurrected (or, indeed, the pre-resurrection)
Christ, and as such the writings of the church fathers on resurrection bodies are rife with the wildest speculation. The few New Testament passages
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Take[, eat]; this is my body (Matt. 26:26; Mark 14:22; Luke 22:19);
This cup that is poured out for you is the new covenant in my blood
(Matt. 26:28; Mark 14:24; Luke 22:20). Johns Gospel, while lacking an
explicit narrative of Eucharistic institution, features an extended theological discourse, commonly referred to as the Bread of Life discourse,
in chapter 6, as well as employing the imagery of ingesting Jesus
throughout (see Webster). Eucharistic liturgies draw directly from Pauls
words in 1 Corinthians 11:2325: the Lord Jesus, on the night when he
was betrayed, took a loaf of bread, and when he had given thanks, he
broke it and said, This is my body that is for you. Do this in remembrance of me. In the same way he took the cup also, after supper, saying,
This cup is the new covenant in my blood. Do this, as often as you drink
it, in remembrance of me. As a common thread running through all
four Gospels, the Pauline epistles, and nearly two millennia of Christian
liturgy, this idea of eating Jesus esh in the bread of the Eucharist is a
powerful, lasting, and singular aspect of Christian theology.4
In John particularly, eating Jesus esh is directly linked with life,
eternal life, and resurrection into immortality. Like the undead zombie
who must eat the esh of the living, the Christian believer must eat the
esh of Jesus in order to be resurrected to eternal life. It is noteworthy
that, whereas the rst Romero zombie to rise bestows the immortality
of the undead upon others by eating their esh, the resurrected Jesus
bestows immortality on his followers through their consumption of his
esh. This important difference will become apparent in the discussion
of Queer Zombie Jesus later in this essay. For now, though, I wish to
consider in more detail the meaning of eating Jesus esh.
The different grades of understanding Christs presence in the
Eucharist are well-known: transubstantiation, the Catholic understanding whereby the substance of the bread and wine are changed into the
body and blood of Christ; consubstantiation, the Lutheran notion of the
coexistence of bread and wine with body and blood; memorialism, associated with Zwingli, in which the Lords Supper functions solely as a
memorial of Jesus (see McKim). For much of Christian history, the two
higher theologies of the Eucharist have tended to prevail, and for many
believers the sacrament of the Eucharist has conveyed the real presence
of Jesus in one form or another.
For many medieval Christians, in fact, the Eucharist was imbued
with an assortment of mystical properties. Miraculous stories circulated
of pious women whose nutritional needs were completely sated by the
weekly Eucharistic host. The bread transformed into the body of Christ
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while [t]he metaphor of the body, used to describe a group of men [sic]
who have common interests and activities, was not infrequent in antiquity, Pauls innovation lies in the description of the Church as the body
of Christ (Barrett 236). The Church is identied with the specic, physical body of Christthe same body that is consumed in the Eucharist.
In this way there is an element of autophagy, a self-cannibalization that
takes place in the Eucharistic action of the Church. Yet this is not
destructive cannibalization, but a productive and life-giving ritual, more
fertile than any sexual union.
The image of the Church as the body of Christ, with the individuals
as the various body parts and Christ himself as the head, is not a direct
one-to-one analogy; for the analogy breaks down both as the body consumes itself in the Eucharist and as the Church recognizes the absence
of the physical body of Christ in the eschatological hope of the parousia
or Second Coming. The Church both is and is not the actual body of
Christ. Neo-orthodox theologian Karl Barth stresses that the individuals
who comprise the Church do not do so in the same way as so many
cells are united into one living organism (Barth 441), but rather as a
kind of ontological oneness in which believers participate in the unity
of God without sacricing their individuality: They are not a mass of
individuals, nor even a corporation, a personied society, or a totality,
but The Individual, The One, The New Man (1 Cor. Xii.12, 13) (Barth
443).
In the same way that the spiritual union of God and believer does
not oppose physical union but encompasses it, the oneness of corporate
identity in the Church does not contrast with individuality but embraces
and includes it. The community of the Church does not swallow up
the individual, nor obscure his or her uniqueness and unique contribution, nor take away individual freedom by assimilating it to the
collective will (LaCugna 229). This is, of course, exactly the opposite
of the mindless zombie, enslaved to its basest instincts. Sadly, all too
often the members of the Church succumb to uncritical dogmatism
and enforced conformity to a narrow set of norms, condemning and
erasing the diversity of individualsespecially sex and gender diversity.
Perhaps by recognizing the similarities between the unthinking singleminded focus of zombies and the oneness of the Church, Christians can
gain a heightened self- critical awareness and seek to maximize the
contrast between the diverse-yet-united body the Church is supposed
to be and the mindlessly assimilated brain-eating zombie it too often
resembles.
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Zombie Jesus
In Christian faith, then, the themes of resurrection immortality, the
consumption of esh, and corporate identity play important roles. These
themes are also crucial in dening contemporary movie zombies.
Despite manifesting in very different ways both zombie movie and faithbased articulations of these themes have similarly wide-reaching social
and theological implications.
The zombies of Night of the Living Dead rise from their graves for
no readily apparent reason. News channel speculation about radiation
is kept in the lms background, and zombie lmmakers following in
Night of the Living Deads footsteps have rarely been interested in
detailed or even remotely plausible explanations for the presence of
undead ghouls. The ultimate cause of reanimation is of little consequence to the embattled characters who are simply trying to survive in
the face of unrelenting threat. Unlike other popular monsters such as
vampires or werewolves, zombies are uninhibited by sunlight or lunar
phases. Their immortality is not a state actively achieved so much as a
failure to give in to physical decay (a fear increasingly relevant in a world
where human lifespans are being extended beyond the capacity of the
human body to remain healthy and whole). Zombies resurrection is no
divine gift of eternal life, but a nightmarish twistlike that of the everaging, never- dying Tithonus in Greek mythologyor perhaps even
divine punishment: as the televangelist says in Snyders Dawn of the
Dead, When theres no more room in hell, the dead will walk the earth.
Their cannibalism is similarly monstrous, a multivalent symbol for all
the ways in which humans turn on one another, such as the bitter inghting that beleaguers most every group of survivors in a zombie lm. It is
this same unthinking participation in social structures that is made monstrous in the corporate identity of the zombies, whose individual wills
are subsumed to an irresistible hunger, offer a neat metaphor for the
mob mentality that can sweep people into group hysteria, and can lead
to non-reexive participation in social (even systemic) injustices.
A queer-theory analysis of Zombie Jesus illuminates such systemic
social and psychological issues. Horror lms ability to tap into the unrestricted id has made it a fruitful target for queer, feminist, and disability
theorists (for example see Benshoff; Clover; Angela Smith), and Queer
Zombie Jesus can unite these social critiques of popular culture and
entertainment with social critiques of religion.
My Queer Zombie Jesus paradigm is not based on any one specic
28
incarnation of Zombie Jesus out of the many found online, but rather
an amalgam of various iterations that elucidate how Jesus differs from
established norms of contemporary zombidom. One example is an argument that appears to have begun circulating in this specic form around
Easter 2012, suggesting that Jesus was not a zombie but a lich (a type of
undead creature popularized by the role-playing game Dungeons & Dragons). Another is a picture of Good Guy Jesus, which plays on the popular meme Good Guy Greg. Good Guy Greg is an image macro of a
smiling, smoking man, accompanied by captions describing acts of kindness or generosity. Good Guy Jesus replaces the mans face with a popular depiction of Jesus, captioned: Is a zombie; lets you eat his esh.
In what follows, I analyze various ways in which Queer Zombie
Jesus problematizes the three social and theological elds of resurrection
immortality, the consumption of esh, and corporate identity. Queer
Zombie Jesus deconstructs binaries imposed on these three elds by
Western philosophical categoriesparticularly mind/body dualismin
order to recover and redeem the eshliness at their core. Transgressing
and inverting the norms serves to constantly challenge our understanding of them. Such destabilization allows us to probe and query identity
categories, particularly gender and sexuality, and the boundaries of identity. Zombie narratives conventionally caution against human greed and
selshness, which is hypostatized as monstrous Otherness. Queer Zombie Jesus instead invites us to see the divine in the monstrous Other and
to join ourselves with it in embodied, eshly, sexual consumption, in a
redemptive tale of love and self-giving.
29
Zombie Jesus deconstructs the sharp distinctions between undeadness and Christian resurrection by drawing them together into a single
gure. Zombie Jesus is the zombie that does not rot and the Jesus that
does. The simultaneous is and is not of Zombie Jesus recalls the practice
of negative theology, most famously practiced by medieval mystic Meister Eckhart, which seeks to radicalize ones understanding of characteristics attributed to God by negating them. For the one who believes that
God is good, the statement God is not good means that God is so radically, cosmically, surpassingly good that the human denition of good,
bounded as it is by the limits of human understanding, cannot apply to
the Supreme Being (see Eckhart). In the same way, Zombie Jesus dees
and expands human understandings of what it means to be immortal
and incorruptible (1 Corinthians 15:53). Excessive focus on the afterlife
can reduce Christian faith to a Pascals Wager, a get-out-of-jail-free card
for death, a basely transactional conception of salvation that diminishes
the whole notion of divinity and transcendence. Imagining oneself and
ones savior as shambling rotting corpses can enable Christians to interrogate their own motivations in having faith, and perhaps to recalibrate
the transactional soteriology that ultimately underpins our present
global economy in all of its injustices (see Grau).
Moreover, Queer Zombie Jesus challenges and rejects Cartesian
mind-body dualism and the sex- and body-negativity that results. Following Hegel, for whom the resurrection was not bodily but representative of a translation to spiritual presence (Hodgson 175), Christians
sometimes have a tendency to spiritualize or allegorize resurrection.
Unlike the airily disembodied Jesus found in metaphorical readings of
faith, zombies are gruesomely physical. Thanks to special effects wizard
Tom Savini, the gore and eshy lth of decaying corpses are graphically
presented onscreen in Dawn of the Dead and Day of the Dead. Meanwhile some subsequent lmmakers positively revel in upping the ante
for zombie grotesquery; Peter Jacksons magnicent 1992 splatterfest
Braindead (Dead Alive in North America) is one superlative example.
Zombie Jesus depicts an embodied Christ with a vividness matched only
by Julian of Norwichs gross-out descriptions of her bloodiest visions:
the fair skin was very deeply broken, down into the tender esh, sharply
slashed all over the dear body; the hot blood ran out so abundantly that
no skin or wound could be seen, it seemed to be all blood. However,
whereas Julian describes Christs crucixion, Zombie Jesus radically
embodies the post-resurrection Christ. Even the most conservative sexand body-negative Christian audiences today still have an appetite for
30
gore, as testied to by some evangelical leaders enthusiasm for Mel Gibsons notorious 2004 The Passion of the Christ (see Robinson). By transferring the obsessive focus on Christs body from his tortured death to
his resurrection, Zombie Jesus provides a more life-oriented, more productive, much less macabre outlet for this apparent psychological need.
Body-negative attitudes are often associated with the maintenance
of patriarchal, heterosexist norms, whereby the masculine, spiritual or
mental, heterosexual, cisgender, and so on are linked together and elevated over against the feminine, physical, queer, trans*, and other terms
in hierarchical binary oppositions. By rehabilitating the eshly physicality of the body within the context of Christian salvation and resurrection immortality, Zombie Jesus offers a doorway to the rehabilitation
of all the suppressed and denigrated aspects of bodily human existence.
Linking the object of Christian faith and devotion with the repulsive,
rotting monster provides a dramatic shock to the cultural categories of
sacred and secular. Rather than rejecting him in kneejerk horror, Christians who spend time considering Zombie Jesus could have their entire
sense of what is right or appropriate recalibrated, just as Jesus shocked
the religious sensibilities of faithful Jews in his own lifetime by spending
time with lepers and healing on the Sabbath. Queer Zombie Jesus makes
explicit the connection between Jesus acceptance of inappropriate
persons, and the need for contemporary religious institutions to accept
gender and sexual minorities.
31
32
those who ght for liberation and justice in this lifethen it must
change. Indecent theology represents the ongoing striving of some
religious believers for equality, despite centuries of attempts on the part
of the powerful to hinder the progress of liberal attitudes within organized religion. Trying to sever Christianity from secular, and particularly
queer, society does a disservice to both. If engaged mutually, secular and
Christian outlooks can cast light on one anothers failings and lead to selfcritical transformation: of secularism in the direction of transcendence,
of Christianity in the direction of contemporary relevance and justice.
33
might be free from any gender bias before God, but she is still subject
to sexism in a misogynistic society. Erasing her identity as a woman in
order to emphasize her equality before God might have its theological
uses, but socially it is dangerous. The challenge, not to say impossibility,
of living in the world but not of it, is reied in Zombie Jesus, who is
an inherently contradictory gure.
Zombie Jesus is by denition a special zombie. He is identied as
a specic individual, which zombies by denition are not. He deconstructs this distinction, and he deconstructs exactly the zombication
that some forms of Christianity would seem to demand from his followers. Zombie Jesus is part of a corporate identity, but by denition he has
not lost his individuality as true zombies do. This is the model and the
challenge for faithful Christians, and more broadly for anyone living in the
world but trying to ght against the systems of oppression and injustice.
Acknowledging difference without making it insurmountable is one
of the great challenges of our era. Any person who belongs to a gender
or sexual (or racial or ethnic or disabled or other) minority can testify
to the frustration of both extremes; of either being treated as though
ones identity is entirely dened by difference, or as though ones minority status can be ignored or elided over completely. Queer Zombie Jesus
is a gure that transcends the two extremes. As a zombie, he is part of
an inherently communal identity in which his individuality disappears;
as Jesus, he remains an identiable individual with his own specic subjectivity. Queer Zombie Jesus exemplies community life in diversity
and difference, and so calls and challenges us to seek an end to the systemic injustices that suppress or exaggerate minority identities.
Gregory A. Waller suggests that Romeros zombies are the projection of our desire to destroy, to challenge the fundamental values of
America, and to bring the institutions of our modern society to a halt
(Waller 280). The systemic racism of the prison-industrial complex;
the exclusion of people of certain genders and sexualities from full
participation in social institutions; the suppression of developing countries economic growth by transnational corporations operating in the
interests of developed nations; drone strikes on foreign soilall of these
and other injustices of the world suggest that perhaps the fundamental
values of America should be challenged, perhaps modern social institutions need to be impeded. Queer Zombie Jesus is an obscene gure situated at the intersection of queer radicalism, popular secular culture,
and religious sensibility, uniting these elds into a call for dramatic
change.
34
35
Many who are not Christian nd inspiration in the life and teachings
of Jesus, exploring and rewriting him in pursuit of their own concerns.
Perhaps Queer Zombie Jesus can be a place for Christians and non
Christians alike to explore a shared interest in the pursuit of a radical,
embodied justice and love.
Notes
1. Psuchikon and pneumatikon are usually translated as natural/physical and
spiritual, respectively, but their precise meaning is unclear. Certainly the rst
describes the body in life; the second, the post-resurrection body.
2. All biblical quotations are NRSV.
3. Of course, the average physical peak for humans is considered to be around
30: the same age as Jesus at the time of his death.
4. The practice of drinking Christs blood is less prominent, since laypeople were
not always given wine.
Victorian Values
Necrophilia and the Nineteenth
Century in Zombie Films
Marcus Harmes
Many zombie lms, including the most commercially and critically
successful examples within the genre, from Night of the Living Dead
(1968) to 28 Days Later (2002), are set in the present day. The quantity
of lms set more or less in the present day (according to the date of production) overshadows the fact that numerous zombie lms, from White
Zombie (1932) onwards, place the undead in historical settings. White
Zombie, for example, was set in nineteenth-century Haiti. Other examples include the Italian The Terrible Secret of Dr Hichcock (Lorrible Segreto del Dr Hichcock, 1962), Hammers Plague of the Zombies (1965) and
The Orgy of the Dead (La Orgia de los Muertos, 1973), a Spanish horror.
These lms share in common a nineteenth-century setting. Hichcock is
set in 1885. Plague is set a little earlier, in 1860. Orgy is not so chronologically precise but costumes and trappings locate the lm sometime
towards the end of Queen Victorias reign (she died in 1901) and thus in
the later-nineteenth century.
If many zombie lms share in common a setting that is more or less
the present day, another genre characteristic is that zombies were until
recently distinctively non-sexual. Functioning as an allusive device, the
zombies of Romeros Night of the Living Dead speak to nuclear rather than
sexual anxieties, as talk of the radioactive satellite by scientists in the lm
would suggest. Romeros mall-set sequel Dawn of the Dead overtly satirizes consumerism (Wood 213). Zombies in later lms are ravenous
36
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38
and desired opens up a liminal space that explores popular understandings of Victorian sexuality. This is most apparent in the Italian-made
but British-set Hichcock, in which sex with the undead women takes
place in surroundings which emulate the elaborate mourning ornamentation of the nineteenth century.
These European horror lms permit broader perspectives on the
cultural transmission of Victorian mores into twentieth century popular
culture and allow for the wide-ranging analysis of questions relating to
life, death and sexuality. In the introduction to The Politics of Everyday
Fear Brian Massumi suggested that there is always horror at the body
as a pleasure site (vii). The lms under analysis here can be understood
with this thought in mind. These works are both erotic and horric. At
the very heart of that horror are the deceased female bodies that men
gain pleasure from. In these lms, sexuality is emphatically heterosexual
and oriented around male pleasure. Simultaneously, because it is
expressed as lust for the undead, male lust is also perverse.
Nineteenth-Century Zombies
Taken together, Hichcock, Plague and Orgy present a coherent evocation of nineteenth-century England. Although only Plague was actually
made in Britain, all three share the same British setting. An opening
caption (superimposed over an image of the Big Ben clock tower of the
Houses of Parliament) in the rst scene of Hichcock establishes that the
lm, while made in Italy, takes place in London in 1885. Orgy, while
made in Spain and in locations that actually seem to evoke middle
Europe in terms of their appearance, is set in nineteenth-century Scotland.2 Neither of these lms settings should, however, surprise us. The
phenomenal success of Hammers gothic horrors in Europe prompted
European lm makers to emulate the companys signature themes,
styling and settings. 3 Hichcocks producers Luigi Carpentieri and
Ermanno Donati and scriptwriter Ernesto Gastaldi set out to create a
gothic horror in the Hammer vein, and critical commentary on Italian
horror in particular has stressed that directors within the genre are signicantly indebted to British cinema (Bertellini 214). This creative debt
is even signaled by the movies credits. In an attempt to suggest the
British consonances of their lms the creative personnel all worked
under anglicized pseudonyms.4 Orgy is also clearly modeled after British
horror lm; the detective in the lm even smokes a meerschaum pipe
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40
wife is still on the scene. But the remarriage plays an important dramatic
function. The second wife provides Hichcock with a respectable front.
The lm thereby characterizes Victorian sexuality as simultaneously
covert and repressive.
Necrophilia also features in Orgy. Set in nineteenth-century Scotland, a number of mysterious deaths attract the attention of both the
young hero Serge Rosi (Stelvio Rossi, aka Stan Cooper) and the Holmeslike detective (Pasquale Basile). Woven into this narrative of the police
investigation is a lurid subplot involving the gravedigger and necrophiliac Igor (Paul Naschy), who appropriates bodies from tombs in order to
caress them, speak to them tenderly and make love to them. Again, the
dead return to life. In this case, the living dead include the former mistress of the house, whose cadaver wanders naked through the countryside, retaining something of the attraction she aroused in men during
life. While her brain is dead, her body is intact and on display and her
status as object of lust and desire continues seamlessly from her living
to being undead.
Both Orgy and Hichcock rationalize the cause of zombication; in
the latter, it is Dr. Hichcocks potent anesthesia, and in the former it is
caused by the implantation of electrical devices in corpses which allow
the lms villain Professor Leon Droila (Grard Tichy) to control the
brains of the dead. Plague also provided explanation within its diegesis
for the zombication of young Cornish men. In this instance, zombication is caused by voodoo magic which the local squire Mr Hamilton
(John Carson) mastered while visiting Haiti. On his return to Cornwall
he used his skill to turn the corpses from the local churchyard into slave
workers in his tin mine. Not only is he the local squire, magistrate and
coroner, Hamilton is also a zombie master akin to Murder Legendre
(Bela Lugosi) in White Zombie.
The consonances between Plague and White Zombie do not end
there. In the 1932 lm the titular white zombie is Madeleine Short
Parker (Madge Bellamy). After rejecting the advances of millionaire
Charles Beaumont (Robert Frazer), Madeline is drugged, dies and is
reanimated as the white zombie (her skin color is offset by the black
zombie slaves toiling in Legendres mill). In the living dead state, she
can no longer reject the millionaire. However the relationship fails to
bring Beaumont much sexual or emotional satisfaction, as the reanimated Madeline can do little more than sit in a catatonic state. In Plague,
Sylvia (and before her, her old school friend Alice [Jacqueline Pearce])
falls victim to the Squires voodoo skills and sexual associations are
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41
Nineteenth-Century Society
The nineteenth century setting is compelling because the Victorian
milieu highlights the horrors evoked by reanimation and necrophilia.
The nineteenth century is richly suggestive in terms of how its inhabitants treated and regarded the dead. Victorian society created, developed
and cherished mourning rituals that kept the dead immanent in relation
to the living. Earlier I alluded to the death of Prince Albert in 1860. His
bereft widow Queen Victoria was thought of both at the time and later
as the Widow of Windsor. Far from being prostrate, she mourned the
dead Prince Consort energetically. Victoria built mausolea and monuments, and preserved his rooms as he had left them. Her entire family
(especially her daughters) and the royal household participated in an
immense pattern of mourning that endured until Victorias own death
in 1901. As early as 1864 Charles Dickens wrote in satiric exasperation:
If you should meet with an inaccessible cave anywhere in that neighborhood, to which a hermit could retire from the memory of Prince
Albert and testimonials to the same, pray let me know of it. We have
nothing solitary and deep enough in this part of England (cited in Read
95). The cumulative impact of Victorias efforts was to keep alive more
than the memory of Prince Albert. It was possible to walk into his room
and have the impression that he had just walked out and would return
in a moment. His desk looked as though he had just stood up from it.
His wardrobe was kept at ready as though he would require clothes and
valets to perform his toilet. Busts, portraits and statues served as pervasive reminders of his appearance and physicality. In essence, Prince
Albert was not allowed to die. The erotic implications of Victorias
mourning are often overlooked. When still alive, the rather prudish and
repressed Prince Albert was the object of Queen Victorias strong erotic
attachment. Victoria was the product of the Hanoverian worldmore
42
robust than the conservative Coburg court where Albert was brought
upand she is now recognized by historians as having openly enjoyed
sex (Pearsall 12). When she mourned Albert, she did not simply express
a sense of loss for her husband but her lover as well, and the perpetuation
of his memory through objects is fetishistic in tone.
Queen Victorias protracted and attention-grabbing widowhood is
one of the best remembered aspects of her life and reign. Many
twentieth-century lmmakers who set their work in her lifetime incorporate the cues of conduct and xation with the dead that dene the
Victorian era. Orgy, Plague and Hichcock are steeped in the very iconography of death. Much of the action in the Hammer lm including nocturnal body snatching and a much-imitated sequence of the undead
breaking out of their gravestakes place in the villages cemetery. Both
Orgy and Hichcock locate much of the action in catacombs and graveyards. In the climax of Hichcock, the rst Mrs. Hichcock, risen from her
tomb, chases the second Mrs. Hichcock through underground passages.
Orgy meanwhile concludes with an attack of zombies in a large and lavish
sepulcher. All lms revolve around sites and rituals that are not simply
associated with death but with its ornate commemoration.
The nineteenth century setting of these three lms is signicant
and suggestive in terms of the Victorian periods preoccupation with the
sumptuous public mourning of the dead, which carried over into the
sexualization of the undead. It is also signicant insofar as it illustrates
the private scandal that various cultural historians presume to have
existed beneath public practice in the nineteenth century. Dr. Hichcock
exemplies both the disjunction and the linkages between public practice and private perversion. The lm delineates Hichcocks mourning
for his (apparently) dead rst wife, including scenes of black clad mourners, funerary appurtenances and rain drenched cemeteries, all on a scale
to compare with the most impressive obsequies from the nineteenth
century. But the lm also shows the concealed scandal of his necrophilia,
which takes place in a secret chamber in the Hichcock mansion. The
chamber is decorated with trappings such as black crepe and feathers
that render it as much a boudoir as a tomb. As such, Dr. Hichcocks dark
secret epitomizes the concealed, scandalous and erotic fascination with
death lurking beneath the respectable veneer of Victorian England.
Among the later interpreters of Victorian sexuality, Michel Foucault has
accounted for a full taxonomy of perversions that Victorian sexologists
such as Krafft-Ebing and Rohleder categorized, including (besides
necrophiliacs) zoophiles, zooerasts, auto-monosexualists, gynecomasts,
Victorian ValuesHarmes
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44
Victorian ValuesHarmes
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46
lenge and complicate the idea that her passivity is normative. These
lms also reect a current of both Victorian theological and scientic
thought that was open to ontological speculation: whether death was
actually a xed state. Giovanni Aldinis galvanic experiments were among
the early nineteenth century scientic tests that seemed to reanimate
the dead. In one instance a dead mans muscles began to move and the
left eye actually opened (Behlmer 213). Experiments of this nature
prompted speculations as to whether death was a permanent or a mutable condition. These three zombie lms contain their own analogues to
these speculations. Orgy actually contains a kind of mad scientist gure, who has been experimenting with the dead and implanting transceivers in them that allow them to be reanimated and controlled. Dr.
Hichcocks chemical experiments that induce a deathlike state and ultimately kill her reect actual Victorian scientic speculations such as Sir
James Simpsons experiments with self- administered chloroform
dosages, which sought to discover its properties and effects (Gordon
108). While Plagues explanation for the zombiesthe voodoo magic
is more traditional and not at all scientic (Sir James Forbes, Professor
of Medicine at University College London, has to overcome his scientic
skepticism to accept the reality and power of voodoo), it still casts into
doubt the idea that death is ontologically absolute.
It is nonetheless equally clear that undead women can still be
objects of desire. The key denominator between the women in Orgy,
Hichcock and Plague is their accessibility. They occupy an uncertain
space; they are neither dead nor alive but undead, and certainly passive.
It is at this point that the creative decision to set these narratives in the
Victorian period becomes most salient. Gary Farnell, thinking of
nineteenth-century ctional women including Miss Havisham from
Dickenss Great Expectations refers to the eroticized and forbidden girlwoman at the heart of many Victorian accounts of female sexuality (14).
But set against this ctional construction is the very real accessibility of
womens bodies to men. The 1857 Divorce Act, while making escape
from a violent marriage possible for some women (albeit fraught with
potential for scandal and disgrace) did not particularly mitigate legal
circumstances which left Victorian women essentially as the possessions
of their husbands. Nor did the Married Womens Property Act (1870)
alleviate this legal reality (Combs 10281057). Instead the legal status
of Victorian women facilitated male possessiveness. Victorian-set zombie lms reect these legal contexts. Here, possessiveness extends to
posthumous control. The zombied women are sexually subordinated.
Victorian ValuesHarmes
47
Being undead they have no voice and offer no resistance. In Orgy the
control is explicit: the doctor has implanted devices that allow him to
control the mind and actions of the deceased lady of the house. In Hichcock control is more oblique: Hichcocks dead rst wife remains in his
house and at his bidding, although his possession of her is not as obvious
as the scientic explanation provided in Orgy. Both these European horror lms reect the sexual status of Victorian women, where loosely
dened legislation about sexual consent provided little protection and
failed to protect women who suffered unwanted sexual contact (Trumble
32). The lms distil ideas on both anxieties about womens sexuality and
the fears of women themselves. Womens agency is suppressed by various
meansdrugs, electrical implants, voodoo magic. But womens fears are
also depicted; the second Mrs. Hichcock ees in terror through the catacombs and Sylvia is strapped down and unable to resist the Squire.
Being enslaved by Haitian voodoo, the zombies of Plague are positioned within the diegesis more as pitiful and exploited creatures than
as threat; in common with the voodoo zombies of White Zombie these
are not rampaging esh eaters, but downtrodden manual slaves. The
two women in Plague, Alice and Sylvia, both succumb to the powers of
the zombie master Squire Franklin and both become passive victims of
sexual violence. The passivity of the living dead in Plague was pregured
by Hichcock and repeated in Orgy. The rst Mrs. Hichcock, while a willing participant in her husbands macabre sex games and consenting to
the stupefying injections, does not actively participate in the lovemaking.
To all intents and purposes she is dead, just as her husband likes it: she
is the object of his sexuality rather than a participant in lovemaking.
The two women of Orgy, the maidservant and the mistress, are the lovers
of the hero Serge in life, but their lovemaking is shot through with suggestions of exploitation. Serge insists the maidservant strip in front of
him and subjects her naked body to his gaze and evaluation, causing her
humiliation. The mistress of the house meanwhile suffers her own sexual
humiliation, having to share Serges sexual favors with her servant.
Tellingly, the impression of sexual exploitation continues once the mistress of the house is dead and zombied. When she has become a zombie, she moves naked and vulnerable through the Scottish countryside,
her body on display to the men pursuing her. Her brain is dead and she
no longer alert to their gaze. While this state may mean she is free from
the humiliation she would have felt when alive and objectied by Serge,
she nonetheless remains a sexual object. Sylvia is the least powerful of
all; she is strapped down as the Squire moves in to kiss her. Actual Vic-
48
torian writings on sexuality, such as Walters record of sexual transgression My Secret Life,6 suggest that women were mostly unwilling participants in male scopophilic gratication. The women in Walters
sexual memoirs are mostly remembered as assemblages of body parts
whom he observed through keyholes, with the aid of mirrors, or during
sex itself (Harmes and Harmes 24). Importantly, this point of view resonates with the women in these zombie horror lms; once their minds
have died, they too are purely assemblages of body parts, nothing more
than animated corpses. This point of view also nds a natural counterpart in the funerary and mortuary rituals of the period which these three
horror lms evoke. Victorian mourning reduced the deceased individual
to a dispersed collection of artifacts. Hair was encased in lockets and
other trinkets. Such mementos of a persons physicality were handed
out among friends and relatives of the deceased.
The themes iterated in these lmsof funereal intercourse, of
female sexual bondage that continues beyond the grave and the uncertain space that undead women occupyevoke actual Victorian practices.
The deathly xations, including the tombs, sepulchers and mourning
practices that the lms showcase, were normative Victorian practices.
As we have seen, a range of voices from Dickens onwards testify to the
preoccupation of nineteenth-century people with mourning. While
zombies did not actually roam Victorian England, intensely observed
and elaborately practiced mourning rituals kept the dead alive and their
status ontologically uncertain. Such rituals did not so much commemorate the dead but keep their physical presence close by. But within this
normative practice, the lms show non-normative types of sexuality taking place: the Squire in Plague is leader of a pack of gang rapists; the
women in Orgy are adulterous; and most deviant of all is the necrophilic
Dr. Hichcock. The lms illustrate the productive potential of the nineteenth century setting; the periods distinctive mourning rituals are the
inspiration for lms that move beyond commemorating the dead to having the undead walk again.
But allied to this creative potential is the inversion of a societys
sexual morality. The dead in these lms transcend the mourning practices of Victorian society; returning as the undead they need no longer
be mourned, but they will become objects of sexual desire and lust. Figures such as Dr. Hichcock adhere to the iconography of public mourning
but repudiate the normalizing sexuality of the Victorian period. The disjunction between public practice and a private liminal space is developed
across these three lms. Tellingly, none of the male characters are the
Victorian ValuesHarmes
49
married patres familias that epitomizes Victorian respectability. Hichcock is married, but his perverse sex games do not led to healthy procreation. Both Serge and the Squire are bachelors. The anxious and
distorted sexual realms they occupy in the lms echo nineteenth century
warnings against sexual deviance. The 1870 iatric text Chronic Diseases,
especially the Nervous Diseases of Women by the German physician D.
Rosch warned that [p]unishments follow transgression, and if sins are
committed against the laws of nature, the offenders are driven through
abjection and affliction out of the paradise of a happy matrimonial life
(256). While this tract was issuing a warning, Freud made a similar
point, claiming that the essence of perversion lies solely in the exclusiveness with which these deviations are carried out and as a result of
which the sexual act serving the purpose of reproduction is put on one
side (Introductory Lectures on Psychoanalysis 364). The sexual acts of
these lms are not reproductive. Neither the Squire nor Dr. Hichcock
nor any of the male characters in Orgy are interested in producing children. In these three lms, the purpose of reproduction is put aside in
favor of sexually exploiting undead women who were unable to resist,
who are objects of desire, and cannot possibly be fecund. They are bodies
and nothing more.
Conclusion
These lms pursue the complex linkage between private sexual perversion and the public spaces, including those where people publicly
exhibited their grief. One factor above others that denes the world of
Victorian mourning, mortality and commemoration is its sheer physicality. Prince Albert is the apotheosis of this idea. With his living quarters
and office left as they were when he died, Albert remained a prominent
posthumous physical presence in the Victorian royal household. It is
neither a long nor a difficult jump from the physical proximity of the
Victorian dead to a zombie. A mindless creature of instinct, a zombie is
the quintessence of sheer posthumous physicality. The lms under analysis in this essay as much as the more familiar zombies from American
cinema bear this point out. The Cornish men zombied in Plague are
nothing more than physical laborers in the Squires mine, while the
women in all three lms become objects of sexual gratication for men.
The sites and iconography of Victorian mourning became major sites of
private transgressive sexuality.
50
But we should remember these are not primary texts; they are set
in the Victorian period, but were not products of it. Rather they are
1960s and 1970s examples of European exploitation horror cinema and
they raise challenging and disturbing questions about twentieth-century
sexual attitudes and their bridges back to the nineteenth century. These
lms signicantly problematize female sexuality. I suggested above that
the undead women were bodies and nothing more. The women are
undead (or narrowly rescued from that state) and the lms situate female
sexuality and sexual action in deeply disturbing, perverse contexts. These
women are not fecund, for fertility would restore them to a living realm
of normative female sexuality, where bearing a mans children and perpetuating a family name were prime female duties, from Queen Victoria
downwards.7 But these lms problematize female sexuality by severely
limiting their options. In these lms women are expected to become
child bearers to respectable pater familias. The alternative is being
reduced to mindless receptacles for sexual gratication. As examples of
exploitation cinema, these lms revel in their transgression. They do
not resolve the dilemmas they pose about female roles as undead objects
or fecund child bearers. They certainly make robust and dramatic use
of various Victorian social mores, extrapolating to a horric extent the
mourning rituals so that they modulate into the ritualized fetishes of
undead sexuality. Likewise they play with popular perceptions of the
status of Victorian women, who in these lms are the helpless playthings
of men. But in their eagerness to exploit rather than challenge, these
lms bring these attitudes into the twentieth century largely intact. The
lms use types of secret perversity to expose the cruelty and exploitation
that Victorian women were subjected to and to demonstrate that the
perverse men are the real monsters here, rather than the zombie women
they exploit. But as products of 20th century lm making, not the Victorian era itself, the lms also suggest that that these values are perhaps
not as distant from the 20th (and maybe even the and 21st) century as
we might imagine. Perhaps these values are, like the Victorian deceased,
still all too uncomfortably present.
Notes
1. The development of photography contributed to this discourse, creating photographic mementoes including post-mortem photographs of the deceased people,
to which were added religious icons and symbols and which record the full pageantry
of funerals. The spirit photographs of the Victorian period are one manifestation of
this trend, but the works reproduced in The Harlem Book of the Dead taken by James
van der Zee of corpses, caskets and mourning apparatus are its apotheosis.
Victorian ValuesHarmes
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2. Spanish horror lms were frequently set elsewhere than Spain; many were
European co-productions with other countries including Germany and Italy and
used generic European settings, and sometimes more exotic settings as well, including the Tibetan setting of Fury of the Wolfman (La Furia del Hombre Lobo 1970)
and Night of the Howling Beast (La Maldicion de la Bestia 1974). Other Spanish horrors of the 1970s horror boom in that country used British settings, such as Seven
Murders for Scotland Yard ( Jack el Destripador de Londres 1971).
3. An inuence also clearly at work in other national contexts, such as the period
horrors made by Roger Corman for American International Pictures, which were a
series very loosely based on Edgar Allen Poes writings, starting with The Fall of the
House of Usher (1960), and including The Pit and the Pendulum (1961), The Masque
of the Red Death (1964), and The Tomb of Ligeia (1964).
4. Carpentieri and Donati as Louis Mann and Gastaldi as Julyan (or Julian) Berry.
Cast members in Orgy also acted under English names. For example, Stelvio Rossi
appeared as Stan Cooper.
5. The 1966 theatrical trailer also invites such comparisons, promising cinema
patrons a view of a place dominated by men without morals, where blood lusts are
excited by hunting a human quarry.
6. Walter is the nom-de-plume of an anonymous Victorian author, famed for
his volumes of sexual odyssey.
7. Victoria herself was remarkably fecund and was pregnant for much of her married life. She gave birth to princes and princesses who married into almost all European royal families including the Prussian, Danish and Greek.
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ties. Following the events of September 11th, 2001, in the United States
cultural imaginary, the zombie became one of the primary gures that
social anxieties became inscribed upon. In this context, zombies have
been used to both symbolically work through and reproduce uncertainties surrounding terrorism, immigration, contagious diseases, and apocalyptic events (Saunders 81). While not all are as obvious as Call of Duty:
Modern Warfare 2 (2009), which features the Taliban as literal zombies
under attack by the hero rst-person shooter, and, Osombie, a 2012
lm that nds Osama Bin Laden as a living dead monster who is working
on creating an army of zombie terrorists, the popularity of zombies in
popular culture is deeply symptomatic of cultural upheaval and fear over
maintaining the status quoa sense of normalcy.
Within popular culture, zombie storylines generally culminate in
one of two waysmass defeat of all the living dead (either through physical elimination, quarantine, or subjugation) or the slow eradication of
all of humanity (Drezner 8). Unlike vampires, who are often depicted in
popular culture as not only coexisting with humans but also romancing
them, such narratives for zombies are few and far between.6 In this climate, the conation of monster/monstrosity with readings of the threatening and/or sexually perverse other become highlighted.
Within post9/11 zombie ction, it is clear that the very presence
of a zombie-other conjures up ideas of risk and transmission, social dissent and upheaval. This contagion that the threatening other/terrorist
other/monstrous other risks spreading to the masses is threatening
because of its very undoing of norms. For the zombie of modern ction,
the threat seems obvious; contagion of the zombie virus and movement
from living to the undead. On a symbolic level, this contagious threat
(again, especially within a post9/11 context) intersects with political
and social fears about the complete destabilization of national and
domestic norms, values, and ideals. Here, patriotism and nostalgic
strongholds of traditional values become seen as the antidote to ward
off the contagion of terrorism, which is feared as seeping into the cracks
of society and undoing political, social, and ideological norms (through
political dissent and activism, as well as progressive politics, lifestyles,
and sexualities more generally). These fears of contagion and disease
are palpable in zombie narrativesthe transmission of the zombie
infection is a symbolic form of radical brainwashing, where anyone can
become infected and be turned into the zombie other/an ideological
threat (Bishop American Zombie Gothic 29). It becomes necessary, then,
in both the zombie lm/story as well as in a post9/11 society, to make
56
every effort to protect ones self from the monstrous, sexually perverse
threatening other.
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because of their very other-ness. Even more so, the neoliberal project
benets from and is maintained by both the presence of the other and
their inherent inability to comply with neoliberal norms, with key sites
of power (including global warfare, neo-imperialism, the prison industrial complex, to name a few) being based on racist, sexist, queerphobic,
and abelist agendas and ideals.
With this in mind, it would seem that the neoliberal project should
simply implode on itself due to the fact that fewer bodies are able to be
read as rational and normal. Within the ideal neoliberal space, the
proper neoliberal subject is white, male, able-bodied, and heteronormativemeaning, they are able to subscribe to values associated with heterosexuality (the proper sexuality), including marriage, raising a family, and
participating in conspicuous consumption practices. In order to perpetuate the myth of free choice and rationality, then, the neoliberal project
cannot focus entirely on economic and legal reform, but must also
immerse itself within identity politics, and in doing so, alter some of its
membership policies for sake of a neoliberal legacy. Of course, this does
not mean that, for example, queer individuals or women of color are
automatically deemed rational citizens, with full access to the free market and all other social and political advantages. Instead, some minority
groups are granted certain accesses only when they subscribe to some of
the preordained characteristics that the proper, rational neoliberal subject
projects, namely, mass consumption practices, unfaltering national allegiance, and normative (or as close as you can get) domestic partnerships.
But what does this look like for zombies in Warm Bodies ? R details
numerous ways that he and the other zombies try to hold onto some
semblance of rationality and normal life, even if they cannot actually
remember what their lives were like before they became the undead.
The zombies have all congregated in an airport on the outskirts of a city.
Within this airport, there are specic moments of regularity that symbolically allude to the zombies inherent humanity and capacity to
change. They meet in airport bars with their zombie friends (although
these meetings are fairly uneventful since zombies can only speak a few
syllables at a time). There is a zombie place of worship, where all interested zombies congregate and wave their arms towards the sky. There
are marriages between male and female zombies. Zombie couples bump
their bodies together in an attempt to sexually engage with one another,
and unions between married zombies and parentless zombie children
(who attend zombie school) form domesticated zombie families. The
relevance of these activities to neoliberalism cannot be overlooked. Sub-
59
R bumps his body with other female zombie bodies because he feels like
that is something he faintly remembers doing; he seeks normalcy
through these actions simply because they are what living humans do,
not because they bring him any enjoyment. As the story progresses, Rs
relationship to neoliberal values becomes more and more apparent, and
in doing so, the possibility of him moving closer to life and humanity
become tangible. However, while Rs monstrosity forever denies him the
possibility of attaining normalcy (read: neoliberal status quo), his ability
to change and evolve exists both due to his belief in neoliberal ideologies
as signifying life and the norm7 and his differentiation from the other
undead who do not show his same resolve and dedication.
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some sort of allegiance to the Boneys. On the contrary, Rs very determination to save Julie from the Boneys, positions humanity, rationality,
and freedom at the forefront, even at the cost of the undeads demise
(Marion 54).
It is here where homonormativity is evoked, which does not
threaten dominant heteronormative ideals, assumptions, and institutions, but instead upholds and further solidies them (Duggan The Twilight of Equality? 50). The effects of this are threefold, allowing for: (1)
the legitimization of a depoliticized gay culture within the larger cultural
imaginary (we are just like you!); (2) rational gays access to neoliberal
avenues previously hidden from them, including the free market, state
recognition and acceptance of their domesticity, and patriotism; and (3)
the neoliberal project to both expand its followers (who will continuously
work to uphold its values) and to further differentiate themselves from
monstrous others.
Returning again to Puar, this new homonormative body holds an
incredible amount of power. Especially since the attacks in the United
States on September 11, 2001, and the subsequent War on Terror,
national (American) allegiance is more necessary than ever in order to
gain access to neoliberal norms as well as to maintain readiness against
terrorist threats. The proper, neoliberal, gay citizen, who is no longer
queered, perverse, and sexually deviant, becomes enveloped within this
national cause, to rid the state of perceived threatsthat is, the racialized
terrorist and the queered, sexual and gendered other (Puar 34). Yes,
the neoliberal gay citizen can still be read as sexually other through their
same-sex attraction and sexual relations. But what becomes more pressing within the context of safe-guarding against monstrous others is that
the American white, gay individual still enacts proper neoliberal and
nationalist ideals: the spending habits, familial values, and political interests of their hetero, rational counterpart. Within homonationalism, a
sexually deviant threat needs to constantly exist (or at least needs to be
believed to exist) in order to best mobilize citizens to their utmost potential.
In the process of perpetuating the myth of America as an allforgiving and accepting nation that is a safe-haven to persecuted outsiders, the racialized, queer, perverse, and other bodies that are perpetually deemed monstrous and irrational remain as the core
ideological threats to the neoliberal project and national undoing. In
other words, even though R is a literal monster himself (and thereby
queered in relation to the human norm), he clings to the dominant
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Perry and R
While for the most part Warm Bodies subscribes to a conventionally
heteronormative plot (boy meets girl, boy saves girl, boy and girl fall in
love), there are queer elements throughout (perhaps most notably being
the fact that said lover-boy is dead). In addition to this zombie romance
storyline, which I will later argue is an example of a queer normativity,
there are other relationships with R that are inscribed with queerness
(again, due to Rs undead state), with the relationship between Perry and
R being perhaps the most interesting in its queer possibility. The relationship between Perry and R opens itself up to a radical queer reading
that provides a hopeful alternative to the queerly-normative pair that is
R and Julie.
After the initial jolt of emotion that Perrys brain brings when R
eats a part of it, R decides to bring the rest of the brain with him back
to the airport (along with Julie). Instead of instantly devouring every
morsel of it, embracing his zombie instincts, R instead decides to ration
Perrys brain and savor each bite he takes. As he slowly consumes it, he
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Perry wanted out, and the only way to remove himself from a project
that prized rationality at all costs, was to place himself in a dangerous
position, thereby making an irrational choice.
The pairing of Perry and R is queered on many levels. Aside from the
most obvious point of queerness (the homosocial relationship between
these two men), at all moments of their relationship with each other, Perry
and R are both in various states of death; they are both the abject, mon-
65
strous other. When R rst encounters Perry he kills him; then R consumeseats/eats outPerry; and nally, they communicate with each
other because one is in the other. I am in you, Perry tells R (Marion 107).
The eating out/eating of Perry is the rst moment that R experiences this
level of intense pleasure. Previous brains left R with only mere seconds of
enjoyment and Perrys brain allows him to reach a more potent, even
orgasmic, state of being, to the point that R does not want it to end.
This relationship is also queered because of their connection with
Julie. This will be expanded upon more below, but throughout their interactions together, Perry continuously asks R to take care of Julie (Marion
63, 107). Finally, and perhaps most importantly, this relationship is queered
because it is positioned within a neoliberal understanding of proper/
improper bodies, proper/improper choices. While R as a zombie is perhaps
most easily read as anti-neoliberal subject (through his decay, irrational
consumption, and undead-state), it actually becomes Perry-through/in-R
that is begging for a complete undoing of social norms. R still clings to the
neoliberal possibility of success, where success is represented by
humanity/life. However, Perry not only recognizes the impossibility of
these social ideals, but also posits neoliberalism as the main culprit. His
continuous presence in Rs mind, blending with his thoughts, is an attempt
to break down Rs quest for normalcy/his quest to attain a yesterday.
Perry: Come on, R, dont you get this yet?
He seems upset by my question. He locks eyes on me and theres a
feverish intensity in them.
Perry: You and I are victims of the same disease. Were ghting the same
war, just different battles in different theaters, and its way too late
for me to hate you for anything, because were the same damn
thing. My soul, your conscience, whatevers left of me woven into
whatevers left of you, all tangled up and conjoined. He gives me a
hearty clap on the shoulder that almost hurts.
Perry: Were in this together, corpse [Marion 107].
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R and Julie
At its core, Warm Bodies is a zombie-romance story, where two
unlikely lovers nd themselves having to battle against forces that deem
67
their love and choices unacceptable and incompatible. While there are
many amusing similarities between the story of R and Julie with Shakespeares Romeo and Juliet (balcony scene included [Marion 85]), this tale
is not so much about incompatible love as it is about shaping ones love
to t a compatible mold, to change ones self enough that they are an
acceptable love match. The ability to change and evolve into a higher
state of being are the dening features of this story. Throughout Warm
Bodies, many of the characters undergo various changes/processes of
evolution, including Julie (who recognizes Rs growth) and Julies father
(who nally believes Julies pleas). However, amidst all these changes, it
is in fact R who changes and must evolve the most in order to be loved,
accepted, and seen as a rational, contributing citizen.
While the pairings of R and Perry and even R, Perry, and Julie invoke
multiple queered readings, the queerness that manifests through R and
Julies relationship is primarily relegated to R being a zombie and Julie
being human. At its most basic level, the relationship between R and
Julie is tinged with necrophilic possibility without ever actually being
necrophilic; they do not even share a kiss.12 This is not unfamiliar territory, though, especially in young adult ction. Intense yearning and
longing for the monster is common, but many of these supernatural
romance stories promote abstinence, and maybe this is in part to quell
the necrophilic taboo (Platt). While Warm Bodies never explicitly highlights necrophilia, something like it is undoubtedly scattered throughout
the book by mere virtue of the fact that R is dead and Julie is not. Here,
the reader is encouraged to ignore the necrophilic readings since R is
changing, and to instead focus on his progress as he becomes more and
more un-undead/less and less monstrous through his subscription to
normative values and ideals.
The power dynamic of necrophilia, as Scott Dudley states, turns on
the ways that the necrophilic act attempts to convert a subject that has
become an object back into a subject again (Dudley 288). With respect
to Warm Bodies, since R and Julie are never actually physically intimate,
it is the prospect of sex and romance that seems to encourage R to evolve
into a less-dead subject. There is a familiarity in Julies body that he
longs for, and as he spends more time with her, in addition to gaining
Perrys memories of her, he increasingly thinks about what it would be
like to be romantically intimate with her. I nd myself imagining her
dolled up for a concert, her neck-length hair swept and styled, her small
body radiant in a red party dress, and me kissing her, the lipstick smearing onto my mouth, spreading bright rouge onto my grey lips (Marion
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R: What?
M: Living sex.
I give him a warning look.
M: Shes hot. I would
R: Shut up.
He chuckles.
M: Fucking with you.
R: Its not that. Not like that.
M: Then what?
I hesitate, not sure how to answer.
R: More.
His face gets eerily serious.
M: What? Love?
I think about this, and I nd no response beyond a simple shrug. So I
shrug, trying not to smile.
M: You okay?
R: Changing [Marion 5051].
In these conversations, R expresses how he is changing due to his relationship with and feelings for Julie (as well as Perrys memories). He also
notes that his change could, at least in part, be due to his deep desire to
change. This is key to a neoliberal politic, where one must see the ability
to obtain social and economic privileges as resting solely on ones ability
to change and adapt, to incorporate neoliberal ideals into ones life, as
opposed to seeing inequality as a precondition for the state and cultural
ideals and realities. In the neoliberal view, if one does not achieve (success, rationality, access to the free market, etc.), it is simply because one
has not tried hard enough.
As both the story and R and Julies relationship progress, R increasingly becomes less-undead. He remembers every moment he has had
with Julie (where previously he could not remember anything), his ability
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Conclusion
In Warm Bodies, R embodies the monstrous queer because he is
read as castrated and asexual. He is a zombie on the one hand, and on
the other, he risks infecting Julie if he engages in sexual relations with
her. R also embodies the monstrous queer because of his consumption
of Perry. Throughout the story, R is made asexual, castrated, effeminate,
and monstrous because of his inability to subscribe to heteronormative
valueshe can never-not be a queered being because of his undead
nature. However, as the story unfolds, we see that through Julies encour-
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Notes
1. Throughout this essay I use queer to imply a non-normative sexuality/gender
identity. This is specically positioned in reference to hetero- and homonormativity
which actively work to reect social and political normalizing ideologies. Here,
queer seeks to go beyond these and all such categories based on the concepts of
normative heterosexuality and traditional gender roles to encompass a more inclusive, amorphous, and ambiguous positionality (Benshoff 5).
2. The perpetuation of liberal and neo-liberal ideologies under the disguise of
sexual openness and tolerance has been highlighted by many theorist in addition to
Duggan and Puar, including Robert McRuer, Judith Butler, Jos Esteban Muoz, Lee
Edelman, and Lauren Berlant, to name but a few. The links that Duggan and Puar
draw out between terrorism and the monstrous-other, in conversation with queerness and neoliberalism, are best suited for this discussion of a queered zombie
romance.
3. Discussions of the monstrous other has been detailed by many theorists,
most notable being Russo; Grosz; Creed; Benshoff.
4. See Auerbach; Gordon and Hollinger; Dennison; Overstreet; Clarke and
Osborn; Click, Aubrey, and Behm-Morawitz for more recent examples of the vampire
as metaphor for social fears and anxieties.
5. While there have been other romantic-comedy stories that feature zombies
(Shaun of the Dead, for example), there are a small number that actually involve
romantic and/or sexual relationships with the zombiesone notable example:
Perkins Hungry for Your Love. With the widespread popularity of both the book and
lm versions of Warm Bodies, it would not be a surprise if zom-rom became a
popular genre in and of itself.
6. The lms Fido and ParaNorman are two notable exceptions where zombies
coexist with other humans (although not always without difficulty).
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these texts because, for example, the undead are so ubiquitous in those
societies. In some zombie ction, zombies are a new subspecies of
humans that exist on the fringe of society; they are to be feared and
killed. In other zombie ction, such as the narratives considered in this
essay, the undead are integrated into the core of society. In such societies,
the service sector is comprised of zombies and humans alike. Zombies
are primarily used to complete dangerous tasks, or are employed as a
cheaper alternative to the human employee base. The undead may serve
as domestic servants or indentured slaves, for example. Such inclusion
amplies the sense that zombies are a commonplace feature of dystopicmodern society. The omnipresence of zombies in dystopicmodern society normalizes their presence.
Despite their prevalence, zombies are nevertheless treated as different to and therefore separate from humans. Zombies are treated as
sub-human by the living. Accordingly, in these dystopicmodern stories,
zombie leasing companies offer clients a full range of services, including
sex work. In continuity with sex-workers in reality, zombie sex-workers
in popular culture are hired out or forced to perform sexual services,
typically by living managers, pimps or human-owned companies. There
are some exceptions to these patterns, and I will exemplify some of these
concessions in the analysis of zombie ction below. Regardless, sex work
demonstrates the extent to which the presence of zombies is normalized
in dystopicmodern society. The undead are integrated into all spheres
of life, including sex work.
Portrayals of zombie sex work under dystopicmodernity provide an
interesting vehicle via which to analyze plastic sexuality. Zombie sex
work both evolves and deviates from Giddens notion of plastic sexuality.
Plastic sexuality is what Giddens describes as an outcome of posttraditional sexual attitudes (Gross and Simmons 531). In practice, sexual
plasticity may potentially yield both positive and negative outcomes.
Self-fulllment is the driving factor of plastic sexuality and it is the standard by which behaviors are judged: if sex is not fullling, it is not moral
(Rubin 15). However, plastic sexuality is also underpinned by an egalitarian ethos. Sexuality should be fullling for everyone equally, or ones
self-fulllment should not come at the expense of someone elses. This
balance between self-fulllment and egalitarianism is hard to maintain.
That difficulty is explored in various ways in the examples of zombiection I analyze below. The main source of tension here is the difference
between human sexuality and zombie sexuality: the former is routinely
privileged over the latter. The living typically perceive zombies as sub-
75
human and negate the desires of the undead. That biaswhich centers
on zombie sexualityis distinctly non-egalitarian. Although zombie sex
work appears to offer a plastic, expanded range of sexual expressions in
these dystopicmodern texts, they do so for humans only. Thus, by centralizing various forms of zombie sex work, these stories evoke plastic
sexuality and expose its aws. During the course of this essay then, I
will explore what zombie sex work is, and how zombie sex work relates
to plastic sexuality. To do so, I will examine several literary short stories
in which zombies and sex work collude. Before engaging with those
examples, I will begin by briey explaining what is meant by plastic sexuality.
Plastic Sexuality
As Giddens denes it, plastic sexuality is dissimilar to passionate
love because of its detachment from romance (2). Plastic sexuality is a
form of sexual expression that is performed for pleasure as opposed to
procreation (27). Furthermore, plastic sexuality varies in expression from
one person to the next (2). Accordingly, plastic sexuality is connected
to the identity of the individual, and so helps to mold ones identity (144).
Since sexual expression varies from individual to individual, normalcy
is also hard to pin-point: almost anything goes in the realm of plastic
sexuality (179). Two key ideas follow. First, plastic sexuality is uid and
malleable. Second, so long as participants derive pleasure from the sexual
exchange, any sexual pursuit is acceptable. These conditions can certainly lead to positive outcomes, including a greater sense of egalitarianism. Yet, the lack of explicit sexual boundaries in plastic sexuality may
also lead to negative outcomes such as addiction (although Gross and
Simmons 549) contend that Giddens overemphasizes how common such
outcomes are.
Giddens (27) coined the term plastic sexuality to describe how our
sexual attitudes have and might continue to evolve over time. Subsequent
thinkers have utilized his paradigm to examine a myriad of related topics.
Langdridge and Butt (65) explore erotic power exchange utilizing plastic
sexuality as means to describe the emergence and normalization of sadomasochistic power play. Ross (342) argues that the Internet may help to
facilitate plastic sexuality. Guy uses Giddens Transformation of Intimacy
as a template when recounting the evolution of sexuality, situating plastic
sexuality in what he calls an autonomous social system (Guy 6). Gid-
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dens sexual evolution was previously expanded on in Warrs (251) elucidation of how plastic sexuality affects safe sex practice. Warr explains
that as the practice of monogamy becomes less common, the importance
of safer sex becomes paramount in limiting the spread of sexually transmitted diseases. What is important here is the emphasis placed on nontraditional forms of sexuality; that is, on how sex manifests a nonmonogamous, post-traditional world. Paul Johnson (191) is among the
thinkers who have explored related issues, coming to rather more cautious conclusions about how far sexuality has evolved. Johnson uses Giddens model to explore ways in which plastic sexuality might affect
homo/hetero sexual binaries. In spite of Giddens broad scale assertion
that sexual norms have become less stringent over time, sexual identity
and orientation remains fairly intact according to Johnson. In other
words, Johnson nds that the people he studies are not comfortable with
exceeding the bounds of normative intimate practices. While Giddens
conceptualizes plastic sexuality as an advance towards post-traditional
forms of sexuality, the cultural imagination shares some of Johnsons
caution when it comes to sexual plasticity. As I will demonstrate via
my analysis of zombie ction, zombie sexuality appears to embody many
of the traits that characterize Giddens plastic sexuality. However,
dystopicmodern ction is ultimately underpinned by a regressive vision
of sexuality, for men and women alike.
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ture. As part of the same process, social norms are altered, because one
is inextricable from the other. Sexual pleasure bridges between our most
intimate personal attitudes and the social fabric that impacts on such
desires. Zombies, who are usually considered monstrous, become sexually desirable. As is illustrated by ction in which living protagonists
freely and openly engage with zombie sex-workers, radical changes in
the social fabric impact on ones most personal attitudes.
Similarly, plastic sexuality shapes the identity of those who participate in it (Hancock et al., 4; Hawkes 3411; Wagner 292). Thus, although
plastic sexuality stretches the boundaries of normalcy and despite freedom being the goal of plastic sexuality, it is hard to see how plastic sexuality can facilitate such an escape. According to Gross and Simmons,
the individual is continually obliged to negotiate life-style options, and
this can lead to positive and negative outcomes (540). The positive outcomes are that the individual is not stuck in any one mode of behavior
and if ones sexual activity is not pleasurable there are ample opportunities to change ones sexual practices. But the negative outcomes are
rather dire: constant change and a lack of self-security can lead to
anomie.
Meathouse Man by George R. R. Martin exemplies the perilous
line between these outcomes, depicting a blue collar corpse handler
(Trager) who forms his identity around plastic sexuality and zombie sex
work. With savings earned from his job controlling zombie miners,
Trager regularly frequents meathouses, brothels which offer the sexual
services of zombies. These brothels are havens of sexual freedom for
the clients, who pay to indulge in any sexual acts they wish. In the narrative, Trager is personally invested in his amorous encounters with a
zombie prostitute. Since they climax simultaneously, he is under the
impression that she too enjoys their encounters. However, Trager discovers that the zombie sex-worker does not reciprocate his feelings.
Rather, the zombies are implanted with microchips that make the zombie
respond automatically to the clients brainwaves. The revelation leads
Trager into depression and isolation. The benet that Trager gains from
the interaction is that in spite of heartache and self-doubt, he grows and
develops into a passionate person who is capable of feeling what he
believes to be an intimate connection with the zombie, something Trager
failed to achieve in his relations with human women. Tragers case illustrates both the positive and negative outcomes Gross and Simmons refer
to. Plastic sexuality can be a vehicle for personal growth, but a stable
foundation is paramount to the success of shaping those sexually-dened
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Egalitarianism
In its superlative formabstracted from social circumstance
plastic sexuality should empower women and men alike. Various scholars
gesture towards this ideal telos. Giddens refers to sexual freedom as
a means by which power is expressed (144), for instance. In addition,
Rubin (9) perceives plastic sexuality as a means for women to gain
control over their sexuality and thereby yield greater power within
society. Pace these views, portrayals of zombie sex work in ction
illustrate the aws that arise from putting such notions into practice.
Zombie sex work is rarely sexually empowering for women in these
narratives. In fact, zombie sex work is typically more phallocentric in
nature. In stories such as Meathouse Man and What Maisie Knew,
most clients are human and male, while most zombie sex-workers are
female. Zombie Gigolo by S.G. Browne and The Dead by Michael
Swanwick are rare exceptions to this rule, featuring male zombie sexworkers.
Zombie Gigolo is narrated from the perspective of the male zombie sex-worker whose clients are female zombies. He speaks rather candidly about his sexual arousal and the sexual pleasure he provides for
his clients. Since his role is to sexually satisfy female clients, the clients
might appear to hold the powered position in their exchange. However,
should the female client fail to arouse the gigolo, the session is quickly
terminated. Thus, this narrative illustrates that males have sexual privilege, even in undeath and even in the apparently plastic world of
dystopicmodern sexuality. In this example, zombie sex work is closer to
traditional romantic love-based sexual culture than to the egalitarian
ideals of plastic sexuality. The male gigolo has sexual agency and his
female clients are subject to his decisions. The females have only the
power to request his services, but ultimately he decides whether he
wants to see that client and for how long. This male-biased arrangement
echoes Giddens description of romantic love as an active engagement with the maleness of modern society (2). In other words, romantic love is anathema to plastic sexual egalitarianism because it reinforces
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is also designed to obscure the reality of the zombies body and former
identity: it hides the fact that the zombie was elderly and is now an animated rotting cadaver. In Seminar Z then, the zombie sex exchange is
not a portrayal of sex work as an acceptable practice engaged in by willing participants who retain their dignity. Rather, the story is underpinned
by traditionalist sexual views (albeit in an amplied form). The zombiehuman sex exchange is conditional on male sexual pleasure only; the
male decides when the female zombie is sexually useful and when they
are not. If the male no longer derives sexual pleasure from the zombie,
then the zombie sex-worker is discarded and disposed of. Indeed, the
masks feature a deactivation button that allows the client to permanently
terminate the undead sex-workers services when they are no longer useful. In Seminar Z, the zombie is not simply a lesser creature. She is
reduced to a sex object. The mask implies that the zombie sex-workers
have feelings (which need to be muzzled), but it also allows men to treat
them as objects.
Meathouse Man and First Love Never Dies offer similar narratives. As outlined above, the sex-workers in Meathouse Man are
undead prostitutes implanted with microchips that cause them to
respond automatically to their clients desires. Although they appear to
actively enjoy the sexual exchanges they participate in, the zombies provide no input in the sexual encounters. The clients (such as lead protagonist Trager) thus assume that they are engaging in a form of plastic
sexuality. The clients are free to indulge in whatever fantasy they wish
to, and the zombie prostitute appears to mutually benet from their
congress. Indeed, the zombie prostitutes are programmed to achieve
orgasm concurrently with the clients, fostering a sense of sexual egalitarianism. Yet the implanted microchips undercut that impression,
demonstrating that egalitarianism is not possible when the sexual
exchange is based solely on one partys desires. While one party is under
the inuence of behavior-altering neural implants, sex cannot be equal
or mutually fullling, however free it appears to be. This underlying
inequality is highlighted when Trager discovers the truth. Despite knowing that the prostitute is mirroring and performing rather than sharing
his pleasure, Trager continues to visit the Meathouse. In the end, his
sexual fulllment is privileged over the zombies well-being. His decision
to continue frequenting the brothel supports inequality to the detriment
of the fully formed plastic sexuality he originally thought he was engaging in.
In these dystopicmodern texts, it is not only zombies who are sex-
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human lives during sex or if they suffer pain, living human protagonist
Walter purchases a zombie sex-worker, Maisie: the undead version of a
women Walter previously murdered. Walters intent is to stop Maisie
from telling others about Walters crime. Over several sex sessions, Walter discovers that Maisie remembers everything about the night he murdered her. Fearing that she will enact revenge on him, Walter has Maisie
destroyed: Maisie is taken to a gathering of male reanimate fetishists
who dismember her corpse with hand tools. Maisies disturbing fate at
the hands of these men manifests an extreme version of Giddens concern regarding violence towards women. Giddens (153) hypothesizes
that such violence is the result of a failure to sustai[n] basic trust,
related unresolved issues regarding mastery and control, and
repressed emotional dependence upon women. Walters fear that someone might discover his secret is indicative of his inability to sustain trust,
since it spirals into a paranoid compulsion to destroy Maisie entirely.
Violence is expressive of Walters desire to assert mastery and control.
Such control is inextricable from his sexuality since Walter purchases,
imprisons, and has sex with Maisie. He has complete control over her.
His decision to have her killed is the ultimate articulation of that control.
Since she belongs to him, it is not necessary to have her dismembered.
Nevertheless, Walter does so out of fear over her ability to eventually
take revenge. Walters reaction underlines that he considers Maisie to
be powerful: she ultimately has the power to ruin him if she exposes
him. In order to repress his dependence on her (to use Giddens terms),
Walter enacts extraordinary violence on her person. What is notable
here is that Walter is concerned with himself: his guilt over the murder
he committed and his fear that he will lose control. Maisie is reduced
to simply an embodiment of Walters inner-conicts. To Walter, Maisie
is a cipher, not a being. In What Maisie Knew, then, plastic sexuality
is undercut by the same narcissistic projection we see elsewhere in stories about zombie sex work. Tales such as What Maisie Knew highlight
that personal sexual freedom could easily slip into harmful selfindulgence. This, as Giddens recognizes, is one of the main dangers that
encumbers plastic sexuality.
Conclusion
At its best, plastic sexuality opens a door to endless sexual possibilities (Young; Johnson; Langdridge et al.). Yet, at its worst, Giddens
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believes that plastic sexuality could have dire consequences for men and
women alike (Giddens 65; Gross and Simmons 540). In Giddens view,
plastic sexuality may be fragmentary, and could lead to destructive
behaviors (see also Sanders 401). Whilst researchers such as Gross and
Simmons (549) are less convinced that plastic sexuality is problematic,
the representations of plastic sexuality offered in dystopicmodern zombie ction underline the darkest potentials of sexual plasticity.
Although the dystopicmodern context differs from our own everyday environments, these depictions analogize social and sexual concerns
that are relevant to our lives. Giddens uses real-world examples to conceptualize the directions in which sexuality might be heading. Zombie
ction provides an alternative way of hypothesizing about the same
issues Giddens raises. As Glassner (xi) observes, popular culture commonly reects our societal fears and assumptions about the future.
As such, portrayals of zombie sexuality paint a mixed picture of
sexual freedoms and sexual dangers. Zombie sex-workers may seem farfetched and fantastic compared with the everyday realities of sexual
expression that we engage in. Consequently, we might fail to see the
connections between sexuality under dystopicmodernity and under our
present social circumstances. However, it is worth noting that, as I have
demonstrated throughout this essay, the potential pitfalls of plastic sexualitynarcissism, distrust, violence against womenare all-too familiar and are readily applicable to our daily sex lives. In contrast, the ideals
that plastic sexuality could representegalitarianism, mutual pleasure,
sexual expression free from moral judgmentseem, troublingly, all-too
distant.
Laid to Rest
Romance, End of the World
Sexuality and Apocalyptic
Anticipation in Robert Kirkmans
The Walking Dead
Emma Vossen
I cant believe Im saying this but the dead, theyre a manageable threat. I can see the mistake I made wanting to run
not being willing to stand and ght Ive seen how we can
organize, plan, how if we do things right if everyone does
their part we can survive anything we can rebuild the
walls, stronger, taller make our community better than it
ever was I think about the road ahead of us, and for the
rst time it seems long and bright. After everything weve
been though, all the people weve lost I suddenly nd myself
overcome with something I thought wed lost hope. I
want to show you this new world I want to make it a reality
for you
Rick Grimes to his son Carl after the destruction of their
home and community [Kirkman ch 14].
Apocalyptic Anticipation
In 2007 lm scholar Kirsten Moana Thompson established and
traced the phenomenon that she refers to as apocalyptic dread throughout late 90s and post9/11 American cinema. Thompsons analysis builds
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moved beyond our inability to conceive of the collective political strategies to escape capitalism, and accepted that there is no political strategy
that will take us into a post-capitalist, utopian future.
Many of us have conceded our utopian dreams, admitting that capitalism, and the social and ideological constraints that accompany it, are
too pervasive to overcome. Indeed, it is becoming harder to distinguish
between our current pre-apocalyptic existence and our dystopian imagination. The period of apocalyptic dread that Thompson chronicles is
over. We are now living in a time in which our lms and comics stand
not for our fear of apocalypse, but instead reect what I will refer to as
apocalyptic anticipation.2 Because we have no political strategy that
will lead us to a more advantageous post-capitalist world, we are instead
searching for a larger, greater end that is above political distinction, an
end that is all consuming. Recently, the zombie apocalypse has become
the most popular of dystopian end-points. These dystopian zombie narratives no longer represent our dread that the world might end, and
instead offer a fantasy in which we anticipate and invite the apocalypse,
hoping that it will liberate or relieve us not only from our debt and more
quotidian economic constraints, but also from our increasingly bleak
looking future. Rather than offering portentous warnings, many new
apocalyptic narratives are optimistic and romantic versions of the end
of the world. They offer escapism from the present, allowing readers to
imagine what day-to-day life would be like in a near future postapocalypse. The post-apocalyptic world is one in which it is hard to take
anything for granted. Having lost their quotidian luxuries and possessions, survivors are forced to acknowledge and appreciate the simple
pleasures of companionship.
To illustrate this phenomenon, this essay is focused on a prominent
example of anticipatory apocalyptic ction: Robert Kirkman and Charlie
Adlards wildly popular zombie epic The Walking Dead (2003-present)
(Gaudiosi). The Walking Dead comic sets a new standard for the zombie
narrative by focusing not on the monsters, but rather on the humans
living amongst them. The protagonists are visibly concerned about nding food, shelter, and weapons, as is characteristic of post-apocalyptic
narratives. However, these details are mechanical rather than pivotal to
The Walking Deads thematic interests. The primary concern, instead,
is attaining and sustaining human contact. These survivors are not simply concerned with killing or avoiding zombies; the impetus for their
very continued existence is to nd a suitable home in which to settle
down, begin anew, and very importantly, to fornicate. What makes this
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who is brought back to life by their love (Marion). Warm Bodies shatters
the living/dead binary and establishes instead a continuity, a spectrum
of life in which the recuperation of a zombies humanity can only be
fully established through love. Love is thus framed as the fullest extent
of an interpersonal existence.
Kirkmans ongoing comic series The Walking Dead epitomizes this
same trend, being as much about sex and romance as it is horror and
apocalypse; Kirkmans characters learn how to fully live and love after
the end of the world. Indeed, Kirkman has claimed the success of his
series can be directly linked to its focus on human relationships. He
explains, Twilight is to Dracula as The Walking Dead is to [George A.]
Romero movies. Im the Stephenie Meyer of Zombies. I watched Romero
movies and I was like, yeah, but what if they had more kissing? (The
Nerdist). Kirkman argues that it is not zombies that makes The Walking
Dead so popular, but rather traditional soap opera elements such as
romance, betrayal, and sex. Soap operas and similar dramas have long
functioned as a type of escapist wish fulllment in their indulgence in
ctional American luxury. Whereas soap operas and dramas of the late
80s and 90s focused on the exciting sex and love lives of the rich and
beautiful, Kirkmans zombie-lled dystopia has become a choice form
of utopian escapism for those who see economic success as unattainable,
and who would rather imagine a social order unhinged and a world that
required a return to the primal apocalyptic pastoral.
Kirkmans departure from Romero hinges on optimism: the notion
that the end of the world provides opportunity to build a new and better
world, not just the chance to watch the old world crumble. Kirkmans
zombie narrative bears all the thematic dressings of horror, with its
macabre scenarios and constant threats from the innumerable hordes
of the undead but, more often than not, its plot is indulgent and driven
by palpably erotic fantasy fulllment. Kirkman explains that his approach
to the series is to take what is really cool about zombie movies and then
just add soap opera stuff. So its like action heroes crying, people falling
in love, people being sad I think thats what makes it popular (The
Nerdist). The Walking Deads protagonists are concerned less with slaying zombies than they are with being better people. Frequently, this
equates to being a more sexually and romantically fullled person. Sex
is emphasized in The Walking Dead as that which separates the living
from the dead. The survivors primal sexual urges and desire for personal companionship separate the living from the monstrous other.
Sex, and the momentary escape that accompanies it, is the force the
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characters use to ght against the temptation to give up, to become inhuman.
However, that is not to suggest that sex creates a dichotomy between
the living and their undead counterparts. The zombies provide a backdrop, the ctional conditions which facilitate the living characters interactions. Being constantly confronted with death means that the survivors
must prioritize what really matters to them during what are potentially
their last days on earth. Protagonists are frequently impelled to participate in the acts that accentuate their humanity. After being exposed to
death so frequently, the living characters must come to terms with the
possibility that they could be next. The survivors therefore live in a state
of perpetual acceptance of death. The survivors lives are dened by
their proximity to death. When not ensuring that they are staving off
death by fullling the basic needs of sustenance and safety, the protagonists live every spare moment as if it were their last. This mode of living
sets them apart from the dead. The zombies omnipresence underscores
how pivotal life and death are to existence.
The zombie highlights how inadequate it is to think of life and death
as entirely separate states. The Walking Deads characters instead adopt
a more postmodern view of death in which alive is measured by relative
quality of life. As Jeffrey Jerome Cohen explains in his study Monster
Theory, postmodernism itself is akin to Frankensteins monster. It is a
history, a theory, and a culture that is composed of a multitude of fragments, rather than of smooth epistemological wholes bound together
to form a loosely integrated netor, better, an assimilated hybrid, a monstrous body (3). Monsters enable postmodern theoretical examination
because they inhabit liminal spaces, policing what Cohen calls the borders of the possible, and calling into question binaries such as us and
them (12). Zombies epitomize this view of postmodern monstrosity,
since the undead inhabit the liminal space between human and inhuman,
between living and dead.
If one simply survives rather than lives, the line between living and
dead begins to blur. Rick Grimes, the series protagonist and leader of
the survivors, lectures his group on this topic:
The second we put a bullet in the head of one of those undead monsters
the moment one of us drove a hammer into one of their facesor cut a
head off. We became what we are! You people dont know what we are!
Were surrounded by the DEAD. Were among themand when we nally
give up we become them! Were living on borrowed time here. Every
minute of our life is a minute we steal from them! You see them out there.
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You KNOW that when we die we become them. You think we hide behind
walls to protect us from The Walking Dead? Dont you get it? We ARE The
Walking Dead! WE are The Walking Dead [Kirkman ch 4].
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struggles to protect not only Carl and Lori (who is pregnant), but also
the community of survivors with whom they travel (Kirkman ch 1). As
the story progresses, almost every character partakes in coupling at some
point, giving the group a reason to keep moving, to continue looking
for other survivors, and to nd a secure place to settle down. Because
making money and sustaining wealth are no longer goals in this world,
the characters focus on the happiness that human interaction offers
instead. In this zombie-infested apocalyptic environment, when an eligible, desirable individual becomes sexually available, there is no time
for the timidity, rituals, or shame that characterize contemporary sexual
standards and courting rituals. Here, bachelors and bachelorettes make
themselves readily available to each other almost entirely without any
hesitation or heed to heteronormative socio-sexual customs. Characters
establish very quickly what they have to offer and their willingness to
have sex in a timely and efficient manner in order to not be passed over
by potential partners. As one survivor, Maggie, explains, weve gotta be
proactive or were going to end up alone (Kirkman ch 2). Coupling is
more than just a choice, it is a survival technique. Pairings like Rick and
Lori, or Maggie and fellow survivor Glen, search for places where they
can properly raise not just existing children but children they want to
bring into the world. Sexual desire and romantic partnership stimulate
the characters will to keep living despite the fact that almost everyone
they knew before the apocalypse is likely dead.
This sexual desire mirrors apocalyptic anticipation and the collective desire amongst generation Y and Z for the end. Kirkmans characters
demonstrate collective desire for a new and better world through their
romantic satisfaction, utopian hope, and general contentment in spite
of the hardships they face. The characters nd and form life-changing
relationships that they did not previously have. Their world is constrained, but also offers new opportunities. Sometimes the characters
sexual satisfaction is eeting but, this type of momentary escape makes
life worth living, since they provide hope for the future in otherwise
bleak circumstances.
For some of Kirkmans protagonists, sex is the primary reason to
keep going in the face of seemingly hopeless circumstances. One of the
more endearing characters in the series is relatively young Glen, who
humbly admits being sexually interested in a slightly older fellow survivor, Carol. When Carol couples up with Ricks second-in-command,
the strong and reliable Tyreese, Glen realizes he has lost his chance, and
quietly reassesses his position in the group. Kirkman and Adlard demon-
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strate Glenns episodic loss of desire to live through many silent panels
of Glen looking longingly at Carol. The otherwise proactive Glen vacillates between survival and aimlessness throughout the rst three
camps that the characters inhabit (Kirkman ch 2). Glens attitude
towards his own life is unclear during this period: it is implied that Glen
may take his own life, or that he may recklessly gamble with his wellbeing by volunteering for dangerous missions to forage for supplies. Just
when it seems like Glen is about to see an early grave, the survivors are
taken in by a veterinarian, Hershel, and his young adult family. One of
Hershels daughters, Maggie, inquires after Glens gloomy temperament,
to which he replies, Everyone around me is pairing off I dont want
to end up alone too (Kirkman ch 2). Maggies succinct and pragmatic
responseif thats what youre after, Ill fuck youmight seem terse,
but it spurs possibly the most authentic and earnest romance of the
entire series (Kirkman ch 2). The two become arguably the most psychologically stable couple in the book, killing zombies en tandem
throughout the day, and enjoying each others company at night. They
become self-sufficient as a pair, and provide for the greater group. As
the couples relationship becomes more serious, they begin to consider
their new world version of marriage as well as the possibility of having
children, although they readily admit that they rst require a permanent,
stable home and community. Their ideal designs are rooted in sexual
chemistry, motivating their desire to instigate a new society. Because
they have nothing to lose and everything to gain as a young couple, Glen
and Maggie are able to very quickly get on with their life together. Their
pragmatic outlook, and the lack of nancial barriers allow them to very
quickly become serious about their relationship and live happily together,
getting married and having children. The normative pleasures of marriage and family seem increasingly unattainable and futile in todays
world of widespread unemployment, educational debts, ever-increasing
cost of living, and prohibitive housing costs. For Glen and Maggie, the
apocalypse simplies this romantic process immensely.
Social constraints that currently inhibit sex and relationships are
typically tossed off by The Walking Dead characters. There is no time
for traditional courting in the wake of the apocalypse. The characters
sexual liberation represents their liberation in all facets of life including,
most importantly, the freedom to be themselves and to follow their
desires. For example, because they are not separated by institutions such
as school systems, employment, and retirement, large differences in age
cease to be a factor for many of the characters when selecting romantic
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partners. Age has little relevance as a societal qualier within The Walking Dead because it has very little to do with how soon one may die in
a landscape populated with the shambling horrors. All characters are
effectively at the same stage of life as they all share a goal: to survive.
Driven by the desire to spend their limited days with someone else, the
characters feel free to couple up with who they want regardless of age
or other socially constructed obstacles. For instance, near-geriatric survivor Dale questions why his twenty-something spouse Andrea would
want to be with someone so old, askingn How many good years can I
have left? Andrea quickly replies, Nobody has any good years left
(Kirkman ch 3). Andrea and Dales relationship is life changing for both
of them. Andrea is with Dale for the rest of his life and her life is better
and more satisfying because of their partnership. Shortly after Dales
death, Andrea explains to Rick: Over the course of a year I inherited a
familyI grew upI loved the woman I became and the life I had. And
now its all gone. Im all alone and all I can think about is how Im that
girl again, the girl I was the one I didnt like (Kirkman ch 12). During
her sexual attachment with Dale, Andrea implicitly displays her refusal
to recede into some existential infancy; her ability to nd in Dale a reason
to keep living marks her and those like her as alive, and thus distinct
from the undead.
Despite being surrounded by death and decay, having no luxuries
and being constantly uprooted, Andrea valorizes her post-apocalypse
life, characterizing it as more satisfying and honest than her previous
existence. She attains all the achievements and satisfactions she could
not nd in normal society, including falling deeply in love with a much
older man and adopting children. After Dales death, and a series of other
unfortunate events Andrea is left with nothing, not even herself (as she
had come to be). At this point in the narrative the survivor-community
is at its most utopian in terms of supplies, security, and stability; yet,
without a partner, Andrea spirals into self-loathing. This depression
does not last long as Andrea again nds a new world happiness when
she nally gives in to her long-suppressed feelings for Rick (who is
also recently widowed) and consummates that relationship. Both Rick
and Andrea reached near zombie status in terms of emotional living
after losing their respective partners (Lori and Dale), but their
partnership reignites their will to live. Right before this coupling takes
place, Rick claims that although he is physically alive, he emotionally
died a long time ago, to which Andrea replies, Have you forgotten?
Death doesnt affect people quite like it used to. Dont you think its
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about time you came back to life? Andrea then kisses Rick for the rst
time (Kirkman ch 15). Although they have both experienced substantial
losses, together they gain hope for their future, they know that they
must live everyday as if it is their last in order to be proud of the people
they have become.
Andrea is not the only person who feels that their new life is an
improvement over their old world life. Glen and Maggie are depicted as
exceedingly happy throughout the series, and Carol displays a similar
favoring of her new, post-apocalypse life. She explains to Lori, Ive
almost got things better nowTyreese is better than my husband ever
was I mean look around you. Look at this place. We could have it all
here. We could rebuildmake a new life (Kirkman ch 3). The focus
here is on creating a new life, not re-creating the ultra-structured life
they had previously. In fact, at one point Rick settles his survivors down
in a gated community that Carl considers to be too much like their old
life. Carl, having grown-up in the wake of disaster refuses to buy into
the fantasy the community offers. He claims the members of the community are all stupid. The roamers didnt go away because you cant see
them. I hate this place, Dad. It doesnt feel real. It feels like everyone is
playing pretend (Kirkman ch 12). Despite Ricks initial reluctance to
Carls point of view, he eventually realizes that there is no benet to
living in a simulation and alters the communitys practices, adopting a
more pragmatic approach to the zombie threat.
Kirkmans zombie narrative offers readers a fantasy that is as liberating as it is unimaginable. The Walking Dead depicts a world without
capitalism, without traditional social structures and the designations
that go along with them. When these structures are uprooted, life decisions are no longer limited by economics or socially circumscribed
mores. This post-apocalyptic world invokes a new kind of American
dream, one of self re-creation. Kirkmans characters can completely reinvent themselves. As such, they are conduits for fantasizing Generation
Y and Z readers, whose prospects seem bleak, but who hope for postapocalyptic escape. For many characters in The Walking Dead, postapocalyptic existence is an improvement over their previous lives. They
have the opportunity to transcend their imposed roles within the social
order: a gym teacher becomes a soldier; a policeman becomes a leader;
a lawyer becomes the lone warrior; a young girl becomes a mother; a
prisoner becomes a farmer; a thief becomes a husband. Social upheaval
allows them to overcome self-hatred or self-doubt and truly live as the
people they always wanted to be.
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acts as voyeur in this scene much like the reader does throughout
the rest of the text. Like Donna, we are voyeurs on the characters
progress, satisfaction, and freedomboth sexual and otherwisewhich
stand in contradistinction to the constraints that we face in our day-today lives.
Unfortunately, Donnas voyeuristically inspired enthusiasm is shortlived. The next morning the newly hopeful Donna is careless in her
inspection of homes that the characters seek to inhabit. She joyfully
explores the house, exclaiming, This is going to be so fun. Its going to
be like one of those home shows but better! (Kirkman ch 2). Almost
immediately after making this proclamation, the left side of her face is
torn off by a stealthy zombie. Killing off Donna is not a means of cynically undercutting optimism per se. Rather, the incident debunks her
over-compensatory enthusiasm. In this scenario, Dale and Andrea use
sex to cope with their changing lives. In contrast, Donna is inspired into
blind idealism. Such naivety frequently leads to a gruesome demise in
Kirkmans narratives. Unrealistic expectations about the futuresuch
as Donnas statement regarding their potential abodeare kept in check
by the realities of the zombie plague. In The Walking Dead, the characters who survive are pragmatic about life and death; they are satised
with what happiness they nd and do not attempt to recreate their previous lives. Dale and Andreas relationship reects the type of new world
optimism that Kirkman proffers. They enjoy their freedom but remain
cautious and aware that they could die at any moment. Donna and Alan
on the other hand are unt for this new world, as are most characters
who seem to value the old world and its ideals. They are incapable of
appreciating their new world for what it is. They seek to simulate their
old lives instead of nding happiness that is more attuned to their surroundings (as Andrea and Dale do).
Soon after Donnas death, her bereaved husband Alan expresses his
despair, saying to Rick that [e]verything is just hard. Ricks replyI
know, nothings easy anymore. Nothing (Kirkman ch 2)corroborates
Alans reversal of the idealism Donna previously espoused. Yet that is
not to say that the narrative perspective concurs with Alans pessimism.
Their conversation is contrasted by parallel panels depicting Glen and
Maggie walking hand-in-hand. The text box containing Alans despair
overlaps two panels portraying Maggie and Glen sneaking off to have
sex. They have found an escape that is in fact easy. This contrast
between the couples depiction and Alans dialogue implies that, even at
the end of the world, sex is a fundamental aspect of existence. Finding,
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existential yearning for the end represents a desire to return to a simpler time: a time in which surviving is lifes principal challenge; a time
in which individuals might congratulate one another for not being
dead! The post-apocalyptic landscape of The Walking Dead functions
in the same manner. Such narratives are particularly resonant with those
individuals who identify with the sense of collective disempowerment
Thompson and Kierkegaard evoke.
Zombie narratives are especially pertinent in agging these themes.
The zombie apocalypse causes social upheaval and necessitates starting
anew. It illuminates how zombie-like existence within capitalism can
feel. Sarah Lauro, author of The Zombie Manifesto, argues that unconsciously we are more interested in the zombie at times when as a culture
we feel disempowered. She goes on to explain that zombie narratives
provide a great variety of outlets for people during periods of dissolution, such as the global economic crisis (Kinnard). In contrast to the
unconceivable scale of capitalism or international nancial ruin, the
zombie offers a singular threat to survival that signies all of our problems and anxieties. As such, the zombie summates the threats of debt,
unemployment, global warming, war, homelessness, disease, and so
forth.
Yet zombies are not the primary focus in The Walking Dead. Rather,
they catalyze social reorganization, and this is the principal source of
both trepidation and anticipation for Kirkmans characters and readers.
Those of us fortunate enough to live in relative affluence have so much
control over what we want to do with our individual lives, but so little
control over how we function in the larger web of society. Kirkman is
particularly attuned to these notions. Indeed, the publishing blurb on
the back of the comics highlights how pivotal these anxieties are in shaping The Walking Deads ongoing story of apocalyptic anticipation:
When is the last time any of us REALLY worked to get something that we
wanted? How long has it been since any of us really NEEDED something
that we WANTED? The world we know is gone. The world of commerce
and frivolous necessity has been replaced by a world of survival and
responsibility. In a matter of months society has crumbledno government, no grocery stores, no mail delivery, no cable TV. In a world ruled by
the dead, we are forced to nally start living.
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Notes
1. As has been chronicled in the anthology Comic Books and the Cold War (2012).
2. A term that was also used in Matthew Barrett Grosss The Last Myth, although
he uses it to describe a phenomenon of fear of the apocalypse, much like Thompsons
apocalyptic dread and unlike the ideas that I am attempting to advance here.
3. Typically generation Y is considered those born roughly between 1980 and the
year 2000. Generation Z is comprised of individuals born any time after the year
2000, although often times those born in the late 90s are also considered part of
generation Z.
4. Sharon Bartlett and Maria LeRoses 2013 documentary enshrines this phrase
in its title.
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are the zombies, as their ideologies spread through contemporary culture and politics like a virus, infecting the rest of us 99 percent in the
process. David McNally also mobilizes the viral zombie metaphor to
explain global neoliberal capitalism, but for him it is the exploited who
are the walking dead: those disgured creatures, frequently depicted
as zombies, who have been turned into mere bodies, unthinking and
exploitable collections of esh, blood, muscle and tissue through the
processes of alienated labor and commodity fetishism (McNally 4,
emphasis in original). While these economic explanations for the zombie
revival are convincing in many ways, their primary focus on political
economy often fails to engage with the explicit ways that race, sexuality,
and disability shape both how global capitalism operates and how the
viral zombie functions to knit together political, cultural, and economic
anxieties.
The Walking Dead demonstrates the ways these cultural, political,
and economic concerns feed each other. The show takes place in a postapocalyptic Atlanta, Georgia, overrun by zombies called walkers. A
mutated virus has been introduced to the human population that causes
them to turn into zombies upon their death, after which they attack and
consume humans for food. The show follows a core group of human
survivors as they struggle to stay alive, avoid the walkers, and gure out
how to maintain social bonds in a world largely absent of the political
and economic institutions that are designed to support them. The few
human survivors, led by the straight, white patriarchal sheriff Rick, must
navigate a state-less, service-less world that even capital seems to have
abandoned, drawing only on their own strengths and bootstrap-agencies
for assistance. In many ways, The Walking Deads setting, while hyperbolic, embodies a logic that is central to neoliberal capitalism: privatization of social services and basic human needs is enabled through the
withdrawal of public state support, and individuals are left to fend for
themselves in a hostile world with only their ambitions and families on
which to draw. In this way, Giroux and McNally are correct in their
assessment of neoliberal global capitalisms zombie production. The
Walking Dead offers us a world in which there are no working banks,
grocery stores, apartment buildings, or schools even though the buildings that housed these public institutions litter the landscape, haunting
and taunting the human survivors in their lack of safety. In postapocalyptic Atlanta, only independent, able-bodied, virile folks are imagined to be able to survive while those whose embodiments or identities
are interdependent with others and with a social safety net face death
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and lms such as Last Man on Earth (1964), The Omega Man (1971),
and the recent I Am Legend remake (2007) starring Will Smith ghting
viral zombies, all adapted from Richard Mathesons Cold War novel I
Am Legend (1954).
The viral zombie also has a specically racial, sexual, and disability
history even as disability seems to be largely absent from most critical
analysis. The zombie has roots in Afro-Haitian spiritual traditions and
the zombies blackness has historically been central to the horror it produces in the white United States imaginary. Drawing on racialized histories, zombies are often represented as mindless bodies, staggering
around and often maimed, unable to fully communicate or participate
in the social contract. In this way they join the list of marginalized populations who have similarly been constructed as the others against
which the (neo)liberal social contract has been denedmost notably
women, people of color, queers, trans* people, and people with disabilities.6 Signicantly these groups have been excluded precisely through
their imagined lack of rationality and interdependence (rather than independence), as well as their embodiments that exceed white, cisgendered,7
able-bodied norms. These historical constructions are deeply imbricated
in popular constructions of viral zombies, particularly within The Walking Dead.
The specically Afro-Haitian history of the zombie, which lurks in
the shadows of all zombie representations including those on The Walking Dead, render even more clear the intertwining of sexuality, disability,
and race. For example, the show explains the zombies as infected with
a virus that brings death and life-in-death. Viral narratives in popular
culture often mobilize sexual and racial panics that locate disease, disability, and death in sexually and racially othered bodies. In The Walking Dead, the zombies historical racialization as Afro- Haitian and
alignment with improper desire that can spread a virus to unsuspecting
and undeserving humans raises the specter of HIV/AIDS and draws on
even while it disavows this connection.
For example, in the rst season the survivors head to the Centers
for Disease Control, assuming that answers about the virus and zombies
would be available there if anywhere. After meeting with the head
researcher in charge of eradicating the zombie virus, Edwin Jenner, the
group learns that no cure has been found, even though French scientists
had come close. In choosing to highlight the CDC and American-French
viral research relationships, the writers of the show invoke the specic
history of the AIDS pandemic, as both played key roles in publicizing
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U.S. society no longer bind the zombies nor shape their desires, even as
the human survivors cling to them. Indeed, the zombies quite explicitly
refuse marriage ties, coupledom, childrearing, and gender norms, desiring instead some rather queer corporeal communion and reproducing
not through heterosexual intercourse but rather through promiscuous
orgies of esh and blood with bodies of all genders. The HIV/AIDS
metaphor codes the zombie virus as a challenge to heteronormativity in
ways similar to AIDS narratives that blamed the virus on sexually deviant
bodies, including gay men (Wald), Haitian mothers (Hannabach), and
sex workers (Treichler).
Heteronormativity is not the only social norm that the zombies of
The Walking Dead violate, however. Robert McRuer writes that compulsory heterosexuality is intertwined with compulsory able-bodiness;
both systems work to (re)produce the able body and heterosexuality.
But precisely because these systems depend on a queer/disabled existence that can never quite be contained, able-bodied heterosexualitys
hegemony is always in danger of collapse (McRuer 31). Quite literally,
the zombies are the constitutive outside of the human, they are what
the humans are dened against, and the zombies sexual and reproductive practices are a key component of what renders them inhuman in
this world.
Not only do the zombies perform a version of queer disability, they
trouble the boundaries separating queer from straight, disabled from
able-bodied, and human from inhuman. Further, they reveal the ways
that disability functions differently for different kinds of subjects. For
example, The Walking Deads white men are continually rendered disabled through traumatic injury, yet this form of disability is overcome
to avoid threatening white patriarchal heterosexuality. The show opens
with the straight white male protagonist Rick in the hospital, waking
from the coma he fell into after being shot. Staggering out of the hospital,
still weak and injured, Rick realizes that his wife Lori and son Carl are
missing, the city is seemingly empty of humans, and blood-thirsty zombies are running amok. It turns out that Lori and Carl have escaped with
Shane, another sheriff who is Ricks partner, and are camped out in the
woods with several other survivors. Thinking Rick dead, Lori and Shane
begin a sexual relationship that is depicted as partly out of desire for
each other and partly out of a desire to have Shane ll the open role of
Carls father, thus preserving the heterosexual nuclear family in the midst
of chaos. The show essentially begins in a place of straight white male
disability, which is overcome through Ricks reclamation of his physical
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corporeal norms governing the world of The Walking Dead, these experiences of disability all shore up such norms. As David Serlin argues in
Replaceable You, people with disabilities or with bodies considered different can often be reincorporated into the body politic through prosthetic and other medical technologies that have historically been made
available to white men (Serlin 2). However, what about disabled bodies
that do not have access to these technologies of social incorporation?
Those irredeemably queer bodies, those bodies that are rendered the
constitutive outside to the social, and whose disabilities are rendered
not through sudden, unexpected traumatic injury but rather through
historical processes of racialization, sexualization, and gendering enjoy
no such reincorporation.
In contrast to the white men who experience disability as sudden
and surmountable, the women and people of color in the show are disabled in more structural and sustained ways. Lori, who is entirely dened
in relation to the men in her life (Ricks wife, Carls mother, Shanes lover),
becomes pregnant during the second season and is unsure of the fetuss
father. Her pregnancy is presented as disabling both her and the rest of
the group, as it is the reason why characters are forced to risk their lives
obtaining pregnancy tests and baby formula, the reason why the group
cannot move as quickly or as strategically as the male leaders desire, and
the reason why Rick and Shane ght with each other. Eventually, Loris
pregnancy is presented as the reason why Loris son Carl is forced to kill
his mother, to save the baby and prevent its zombication. Loris dependency upon the group is attributed to her pregnancy, and sets her apart
from the other women characters. While almost all of the women on
the show are dependent upon men for survival, support, and basic
human existence, pregnancy in particular is pathologized. Feminist
scholars have been right to critique the pathologizing ways pregnancy
has historically been constructed as a disabling condition in legal and
cultural frameworks that take white masculinity as their norm (Samuels
5556). However, feminist disability studies scholars have also pointed
out that this critique also often leaves intact the ableist assumption that
disability is inherently contaminating and that certain bodily conditions
themselves are disabling (Hall 6). In the framework of the show, women
in general and pregnant women in particular are rendered disabled not
in the sudden, surmountable ways the white men are, but rather in their
very constitution by the social order that denes them as dependent.
Relatedly, the African American characters on the show are disabled
in ways quite different from the white characters. In Social Death:
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ability in the form of Dales old age and his own blood poisoning make
them likely targets of violence from the other white characters, as well
as the neoliberal world itself. Dale here speaks as the good white liberal
who cannot believe that race and disability would matter in the biopolitical context of the apocalypse (partly because he cannot understand
racism and ableism as structural, as something other than individual
prejudice), but T-Dog points out that racism and disability have always
grounded U.S. state practices and heteronormative community formations, as well as histories of visual representation. Zombies or no zombies, black life has always been rendered precarious in the U.S. state and
visual culture even as that black precarity has grounded the construction
of the white, bourgeois heteronuclear family. Black people have historically been enslaved, tortured, lynched, murdered, raped, and incarcerated so that white heterosexual family life can be enshrined. Similarly,
compulsory able-bodiness lives at the heart of U.S. politics and culture.
In a rare moment of explicit critique, T-Dog and the show itself forces
viewers to confront the ways race, sexuality, and disability dovetail not
merely in the ctional and futural world of the zombie apocalypse, or
even in the present day world of the viewers, but across the entire history
of the United States. Just when we think the show might be opening up
space to critique the ideologies that thus far the show seems deeply
invested in maintaining, the moment is closed down. Dale reduces TDogs structural critique to hallucinations caused by a fever, and the
show cuts over to the white characters escapades in the woods. At the
end of this remarkable scene, ultimately structural racism and ableism
are reduced to the delusional fantasies of a black disabled man in need
of cure. Despite this attempt at foreclosure though, the show cant manage to entirely erase the lingering effects of T-Dogs radical and structural
critique of compulsory white heteronormativity and its attendant compulsory able-bodiness. T-Dog is eventually killed off, as are all of the
black male characters, save oneTyreeseas of the time of this writing
(the end of Season 3). Yet his critique seems to haunt the shows subsequent episodes, demonstrating how possibilities for resistance to the
shows ideologies lurk within the very fabric of visual culture itself.
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ters, queering her gender presentation. Her hair is in braids, she wears
no apparent makeup, and perhaps most tellingly, she walks with her
head held high, physical prowess, and even a bit of a swaggerall visual
signiers that in the world of the show are only attributed to men, never
women. Considering that all of the white women on the show are coded
as feminine, we might be wary of the racism at work in constructing
femininity itself as white and thus excluding Michonne, particularly
given the U.S. history of excluding black women from femininity12 and
queer black women from queer femme communities (Bryan 147).
Indeed, there are very few African American women on the show including Jacqui, a mother and wife who kills herself at the CDC; and Sasha,
a member of another survivor group who eventually joins the Governor
at Woodbury. However, these other black women are also quite feminine
in relation to Michonne, which renders her butchness not as synonymous with black womanhood per se but rather as something that explicitly queers her in contrast to the other black and white women.
In addition to her gender presentation, Michonne is queered
through her emotional and erotic attachments. After saving Andrea, the
two women become close, with Michonne tending to and often risking
her life to save Andrea from various illnesses and attacks as they live
and travel together for several months.13 Throughout the rst half of
Season 3, while there is no sex depicted between them, their relationship
is visualized through tropes associated with romantic and sexual coupledom: they are framed by the camera as physically close to one another,
they touch often (particularly signicant considering how rare it is for
other characters to touch or be touched by Michonne), their emotional
commitment is clearly to each other, they embody a vaguely butchfemme dynamic, and, perhaps most telling, Michonne becomes very
jealous when Andreas emotional and bodily attention shifts to another
sexual partner. When Andrea begins a sexual relationship with the Governor of Woodbury, a terrifyingly brutal and abusive character whose
violence is immediately obvious to Michonne, the women essentially
experience a break-up. Citing the long-standing and offensive stereotype
in lesbian cinema, literature, and cultural productions of the supposed
straight girl who leaves the supposed real lesbian for a man, The
Walking Dead renders their break up legible to audiences who have
already learned to read the codes signifying their erotic and emotional
entanglement. Richard Dyer explains that visual culture often relies upon
iconography to signify homosexuality without having to (or being able
to) explicitly depict it, using a certain set of visual and aural signs which
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surprising to read Michonne as disabled (after all, she is one of the most
physically capable characters and doesnt sustain any long-term serious
injuries through Season 3), disability studies reminds us that disability
is constructed by culture, as it is cultural institutions that disable particular bodies through constructing them as other. In this way,
Michonnes blackness, queerness, communication practices, affects, and
butchness are all rendered disabilities in the world of the show, disabilities that exceed and ultimately critique the ideologies of compulsory
able-bodiness, compulsory heterosexuality, and compulsory whiteness.
Part of what frustrates the Governor about Michonne is her refusal
of the gender norms, sexual practices, and racial hierarchies that the
Governor and Woodbury represent, as well as her revealing of the brutal
violence that undergird them. From their rst introduction, Michonne
reads the Governor as violent and dangerous. In contrast to the zombies,
whose violence and threat to the core group of survivors is obvious to
all of the characters, the Governors threat remains hidden to all but
Michonne. Unlike Andrea, she never buys into the faade of a social
contract and a community based around (coerced) consent. She recognizes from the beginning the brutal and constitutive violence that undergirds Woodburys social order, which includes torturing zombies in the
name of scientic experimentation, and refuses to play along. For this,
the Governor absolutely hates her. The show tries to suggest that his
brutal and terrifying rage stems from specic actions of hers (such as
killing his daughter, who is a zombie), but this is ultimately unconvincing
as his hatred of this black, queer, butch body is more clearly tied to her
very being rather than any specic actions she takes. As the show pits
Michonne and the Governor against each other for the affections of
Andrea, it subtly invokes sexual histories of race and disability whereby
white heteronormativity is dened against and through racialized queer
disability. While the show itself does not seem interested in critiquing
these histories, indeed its conservative politics cause it to uphold and
naturalize them, Michonne persists, ercely attacking those who attack
her and her loved ones, and refusing to allow such a system to dene
her desires, embodiment, or relationships.
As is clear, AMCs The Walking Dead offers a rich site to analyze
the ways that sexuality, disability, gender, and race intertwine in contemporary zombie media. Further, it elucidates the histories of violence
that stitch together global capitalism, compulsory able-bodiness, and
white heterosexual patriarchy. The show raises complicated questions
about these histories and offers moments of disruption that are never
Notes
1. The television show is adapted from Robert Kirkman, Tony Moore, and Charlie
Adlards comic book series of the same name. Due to space constraints, this essay
focuses on the television show only. The comics contain signicant differences in
narrative and character development, which renders some of the details of my argument only applicable to the television show. For example, in the television show,
Michonne (who I analyze extensively later in this essay) is a much queerer character
than she is in the comics, and in the show the narrative information about viral
transmission and the zombie virus is discovered in a different manner (and through
a different character) than in the comics. Many Walking Dead television audiences
are also fans of the comics, and analyzing how those transmedia audiences render
intertextuality might make for an interesting larger project.
2. See for example Christie and Lauro; Moreman and Rushton; McAlister.
3. For more on queer disability studies, see Kaefer; McRuer; McRuer and Mollow;
McRuer and Wilkerson.
4. Trans* refers to all non-cisgendered people, including transgender people,
transsexuals, transvestites, genderqueers, gender non-conforming people, and others.
5. It is important to keep in mind that these marginalized groups have been historically written out of the social contract; indeed they are the bodies against which
liberalism (and neoliberalism) has been dened. Through unequal suffrage laws,
slavery, discrimination in housing and employment, mass criminalization and incarceration, ableist constructions of public space, colonial genocide, heterosexist and
privatized health care systems, and racist immigration laws, these populations have
disproportionately been denied the basic means of survival to begin with, and then
are blamed in neoliberal discourse for being drains on the state coffer and used as
justication for cutting public services. For more on these histories, see Spade.
6. In making this claim, I do not mean to equate the historical ways these populations have been and are dened, nor do I mean to reproduce the violent analogies
proclaiming these populations mutually exclusive. Rather, following interdisciplinary
social justice scholars I want to emphasize how these populations have been historically produced against the white, male, heterosexual, able-bodied citizen through
shared discourses of medicine, law, political policy, economics, and popular culture
(Cacho; Chen; Smith; Spade; Mogul, Ritchie, and Whitlock).
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7. Cisgendered refers to people whose assigned gender and gender identity align;
in other words, people who are not transgendered.
8. Merle incarcerates Maggie and plans to interrogate her about the rest of the
groups whereabouts. The Governor tells Merle that he will take over, at which points
the Governor proceeds to sexually assault her and threaten her with rape. While
Merle does not directly assault Maggie in this scene, he sets up the situation, enables
the Governors actions, and defends the behavior afterwards.
9. The history of the eugenics movement is but one evocative example of this.
Throughout the 19th and 20th centuries, the term of feeblemindedness functioned
as a catch-all category that physicians and lawmakers attributed to lesbians, gay
men, transgender people, bisexual people, sex workers, African Americans, Native
Americans, people with physical and mental disabilities, unwed mothers, poor and
homeless people, and immigrants to justify forcibly sterilizing them (Cacho; Wilkerson; Hall; Garland-Thomson; Ordover; Briggs; Schweik).
10. I draw here on the work of Carrie Sandahl and other disability studies scholars
who argue for crip as both a radical adjective and verb analogous to and intertwined
with queer. For Sandahl, cripping spins mainstream representations or practices
to reveal able-bodied assumptions and exclusionary effects. Both queering and cripping expose the arbitrary delineation between normal and defective and the negative
social ramications of attempts to homogenize humanity (37).
11. See E. Patrick Johnson; Howard.
12. See Somerville.
13. The relationship between Michonne and Andrea is signicantly different
between the television show and the comic series. In the show, it is the central relationship for both characters in Season 3. In the comics, the two women barely know
each other and do not have any kind of intimate relationship.
14. See D. A. Miller.
15. Clark discusses gay window dressing in Commodity Lesbianism.
16. Sender discusses gay window dressing in Business Not Politics.
17. For more on how communication norms have been used to construct these
gures in popular culture, medicine, law, and even queer communities, see Gilbert
and Gubar; Hall; Garland-Thomson; Gates; Halberstam Female Masculinity.
Re-Animating the
Social Order
Zombies and Queer Failure
Trevor Grizzell
Zombies are failures. Whether it is in the realm of reproduction,
control, or life itself, zombies fail to t into the social order in ways that
make sense, and instead have a knack for bringing about the failure of
society at-large. In contemporary popular culture, works like The Walking Dead prominently feature zombies as plot devices, with zombies
infecting characters with unknown pathogens, making spaces unlivable,
and creating a generalized sense of panic that serves to push the narrative
forward. I do not think it is a coincidence that queer people have frequently been accused of these same actions and similarly seen as lessthan-human and societal failures, with accusations of contagion and difference similarly upholding normative standards of intimacy and life. It
is this articulation of queerness and the zombie that I analyze, asking
how the gure of the zombie might offer new visions of queer politics.
As Judith Butler questions in an analysis of violence and mourning post
9/11, if the humanities has a future as cultural criticism, and cultural
criticism has a task at the present moment, it is no doubt to return us
to the human where we do not expect to nd it, in its frailty and at the
limits of its capacity to make sense (Precarious Life 151). Along these
lines, I call on a variety of contemporary and historical works in cultural
theory and criticism to suggest we might nd in the zombie new perspectives on failure and the human (and non-human, for that matter)
that may give us a certain queer view of culture, a reconceptualization
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(or what one might call a re-animation) of the social order that gestures
towards a politics of the zombie that might be, in its seeming elision of
life and meaning, more livable and meaningful for queers and other nonnormative persons. Through this queer re-thinking of the zombie, I want
to continue critical work begun by other scholars that questions what
meanings we might gather from the supposedly meaningless and antisocial zombie, and reveal the ways in which the zombie can encourage
us to rethink how we understand life, intimacy, and interactions between
the human and non-human.
To talk about the politics of the undead is in many ways to take part
in a type of theorizing that might seem unnecessary, wasteful, or unconnected to real-world concerns; zombies arent exactly knocking down
the doors of the average citizen on an everyday basis, after all. As numerous scholars have shown, however, the ideological issues present in
depictions of the zombie are extremely pertinent; denitions of life and
death (and the meaning attached to these denitions), notions of proper
kinship and reproduction, and rhetorics of control and excess serve to
buttress innumerable inequalities in contemporary society. Even if the
subject matter may seem silly or illogical, that shouldnt stop us as critics
from engaging with it; if anything, this underlying assumption of uselessness should be immediately suspect and indicative of a critical gap
worth examining. In The Queer Art of Failure, Judith Halberstam encourages us to engage these seemingly childish and immature notions of
possibility in order to divine new ways of encountering and understanding the world and its underlying components and structures (23).
In many ways I am engaging with her notion of low theory, a type of
theorizing that makes its peace with the possibility that alternatives
dwell in the murky waters of a counterintuitive, often impossibly dark
and negative realm of critique and refusal (2). It is in the pursuit of low
theory that I nd myself knee-deep in the charnel house, digging through
discarded parts to nd meaning in seemingly meaningless corpses, a
vibrancy in death that might let us live, if not better, at least differently.
The core lens through which I am examining the gure of the
zombie is that of queer failure, exemplied in recent theoretical work
by Halberstams The Queer Art of Failure. As Halberstam asks, what
rewards might failure offer us? (3). Rather than being simply an inability to succeed and an impetus to do better, instead failure might be
reimagined as an opening for critical intervention or even an intervention in and of the social itself. From a queer theoretical perspective,
the failure to complete a task or live up to a normative standard is a cru-
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of cloth in the fathers arms. After opening it up, the audience is presented with a close-up of what looks to be a dead child, its pale blue skin
and sunken-in eye sockets seemingly lifeless. The baby then ings its
arms wide and screams, revealing grey eyes that mark it as undead. The
audio of the baby screaming continues while the image cuts away to the
hallway outside of the room, and a gunshot is heard silencing the zombied child while the lm leaves the viewer with slow-cutting images of
empty locations in the mall.
This striking scene, and the seconds-long existence of this zombied baby, provides a wealth of imagery and incitements to thought that
epitomize, in many ways, how the zombie brings about and evinces the
failure of the standard family structure, reproduction, and intimate
human interactions. Following Mel Chens statement that queering is
violating proper intimacies, I argue that in the restructuring of human
intimacies, the zombie can be seen as engaging in a process of queering
the social order (11). For my denition of intimacy, I refer to Staci
Newmahrs discussion in her work Playing on the Edge, in which she
states that intimacy depends on the cultivation of a belief in the privacy
of a particular experience. What is intimate is that which is normally
not apparent, accessible, or available (171). I argue, through looking
specically at this sequence from Dawn of the Dead, as well as more
general conceptualizations of zombies in other ctional works as they
relate to reproduction, the body, and toxicity, that zombies undermine
simplistic understandings of bodies through their violent, unthinkable
acts that radically restructure normative models of the family, (a)sexual
reproduction, and pleasure.
If the proper intimate relationship between mother and child is one
in which the mother gives the gift of life to a child, this scene from Dawn
of the Dead begins to queer (re)production by instead presenting a
mother giving undeath to her baby. The womb itself becomes a queer
mechanism here, as it inverts the general understanding of birth practices (giving undeath rather than life). Thinking through Sara Ahmeds
conceptualization of orientations, from its queer birth this undead child
is already oriented away from the social order and towards alternative
forms of development and reproduction. As Ahmed argues, the orientations we have toward others shape the contours of space by affecting
relations of proximity and distance between bodies (3). As a zombie,
the child will seemingly never grow up, in the sense of puberty and body
development, and as such will never be able to reproduce in the normative method; in this respect, the process of infection has oriented the
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child away from normative models of intimacy and love.1 Instead, however, the child would be able to (re)produce as a zombie does: through
the act of biting or sharing blood or other bodily uids. This queer act
of (re)production is not limited due to qualities of sex, gender, or even
species as standard sexual reproduction is; zombication as a process
knows few limits other than necessitating a subject for infection. The
incest taboo, as well, ceases to be meaningful in a system in which children may (re)produce with parents or siblings may infect siblings with
no extraneous consequences of consanguinity. One might think back to
the Night of the Living Dead and the scene in which the young girl Karen
is found feeding on her father who soon reanimates as a zombie, for
example, to see how a child can become the giver of undeath to her parents.
Denitions of bodily pleasure and intimacy are also complicated by
the zombie, as the mouth for the zombie becomes the privileged site of
bodily intimacy rather than the genitals and the point through which
the zombie makes its bodily connections. This intimacy, however, is not
explicitly sexual; on the contrary, it tends to be violent and frequently
traumatic for victims of zombie bites or infection. As the denition of
intimacy I presented earlier shows, intimacy does not have to be pleasant
for either or both parties. After all, to violate, and be violated, are intimate experiences if we conceive of intimacy as gaining access to something thought to be inaccessible (Newmahr 176). In this way, the bite of
a zombie could be seen as an intimate act for both parties; the bite victim
experiences something thought to generally be off-limits or taboo (the
bite of another person) as well as the foreknowledge (and accompanying
anxiety, dread, and fear) that they will likely become a zombie and experience a heretofore unknown way of existing, while the zombie experiences the specic taste of the victim and transmits the otherwisecontained contagion to the victim. The violation of human skin by zombied human jaws creates a vision of intimacy that is at once horrifying
and wondrous, life-ending and existence-creating; thanatos and eros
combine in this almost inconceivable act that disrupts the meaningmaking structures of the social order.
As these examples have hinted, intimacy is not a solely private concept. As Lauren Berlant states, the inwardness of the intimate is met
by a corresponding publicness (1). Intimacy, as a private experience, is
always understood relationally to other forms of action, and it is this
liminal space between public and private that the gure of the zombie
illuminates, bringing the intimate explicitly to the public. As many depic-
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tions of zombies in media show us, the act of a human being bitten or
eaten by a zombie seems to be most horrifying when it is seen by others.
The public display of an intimacy like violent infection or murder amplies its cultural disruption, and we can see this even beyond zombie
media and in current news. As recent events have shown us with Rudy
Eugene, the man referred to in some media reports as the Miami Zombie
who was recorded on video eating the face of another man while supposedly high on bath salts (with this video quickly making its way around
the Internet, accompanied with images of the victims devoured face [see
Koplowitz]), all intimacy is not treated equally. To know someone on the
level of taste, or to feel how ones teeth might sink into another persons
esh and the force needed to remove skin, is to cross the line of propriety
and know too much of another person, and for this act to be seen or
recorded is even more anathema (while at the same time being a curiosity
for a public discouraged from seeing such intimate acts).
These taboo forms of intimacy are not limited solely to material
bodily interactions; even the meaning of time and age affect what forms
of intimacy are seen as acceptable, and the zombie similarly disassembles
these understandings. The child is not the only age-dened gure that
is given new meaning in the zombied social order. The temporal shift
brought about by the zombie also changes the meaning of what it means
to be elderly. Bodies that may have been considered past their prime,
waning and quickly losing usefulness, once zombied become equalized
with bodies that may have once been youthful and far from the processes
of decay that are thought to characterize old age. While the zombie still
decays, it equalizes the process. The zombied child of Dawn of the
Dead is the same as the elderly woman from the same lm. In a similar
way, the (re)productive capability of the elderly becomes awakened in
the zombied form, with contagion taking the place of gametes. The
elderly person, seemingly incapable of contributing to the continuation
of society through their own reproductive processes, is now able to
(re)produce a new social order, one in which the state of decay of ones
body seems not to matter as long as ones brain is intact. Through its
reworking and redenition of time and the life cycle, the zombie calls
attention to the ways that temporality affects our understandings of what
sorts of intimacy are allowed for certain individuals (in this case, those
of certain ages).
The gure of the Child as evinced by Lee Edelman in his work No
Future provides a fantastic model for examining in greater detail the
complex meanings of this zombie child. Edelman states that in the social
129
order, the gure of [the] Child remains the perpetual horizon of every
acknowledged politics, the fantasmatic beneciary of every political
intervention (3). Rather than representing a real child, Edelman discusses how the idea of the Child serves to prop up the social order in
an unchanging state whose purpose is to save the children, creating a
future that is reproductive (producing itself over and over again) rather
than productive to protect the eponymous and imaginary Child.
If the Child in Edelmans formulation embodies innocence, propriety, and the continuation of society as-is, the zombie child embodies
desire, chaos, and the beginning of a radically new form of being. At
every point that the social orders Child is deployed to cover up realities
of society or individual behaviors, the zombie child shows its instabilities. While Edelmans Child lacks desire or passion, the zombie child is
id uncompromised. Where Edelmans Child is meant to remain a symbol
for all that is pure, the zombie child destabilizes notions of children as
pure and innocent, becoming a fully (re)productive subject at birth that
is only held back from eating as it pleases by its physical being. When
Edelmans Child gets trotted out whenever the social order is being
threatened in order to buttress a ailing social order, the zombie child
serves as a marker of a radically different (and productive rather than
reproductive) future.
In response to the Child of the social order, Edelman bases a model
of queerness around the death drive, what he describes as the inarticulate surplus that dismantles the subject from within, an excess within
that serves to destabilize the subject (9). Through heterosexual reproduction (and the desire for gays and lesbians to take part in similar
activities through creating families after the heterosexual model), the
state is able to reproduce itself and nds its greatest use out of sexuality. Edelman, however, sees queerness as nding its place with an
identication with the death drive and a denial of reason and the logics
of life; queerness attains its ethical value precisely insofar as it accedes
to that place [of the death drive], accepting its gural status as resistance to the viability of the social (9). Only through a denial of the
social order and politics itself can queerness truly be queer, and with
this denition, the zombie (and specically the zombie child) embodies
a form of queerness that is so radical it must be destroyed. The zombie
child is not simply dangerous on a physical level; its very existence is a
threat to the social order, as it represents radical possibilities that are
inconceivable under social norms as they are. As such, the zombie
child is never innocent, never a life worth saving (as so much political
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131
132
133
134
135
136
137
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Conclusion
Through these texts and examples, Ive attempted to curate a heteroglossic view of the zombie as producing new ways of being at the
same time that it destroys or renders murky old ways of life (and death,
for that matter). In cultural tropes surrounding zombies and in these
examples specically, the failures of the zombie to live up to the social
order or reproduce it point to new, queerer ways of experiencing and
understanding the body, identity, environment, and society. In its seemingly nihilistic actions, the zombie manages to bring about new forms
of meaning and ways of looking at everyday phenomena, and so I continue to consider what it might mean to embody the zombies politics.
I align myself with Robert McRuer as he argue[s] for the desirability of
a loss of composure, since it is only in such a state that heteronormativity
might be questioned or resisted and that new (queer/disabled) identities
and communities might be imagined (149). I think we may already have
some models of this decomposing in zombie literature, instances where
characters may, for one reason or another, start to connect with the
undead in ways that refuse the dictates of the social order, in the process
destabilizing norms. I think of the ending scenes of Shaun of the Dead,
for example, in which we see humans coming to live with zombies as
citizens in their own right. While we dont get a sense of the complete
destruction of the social order here, as Edelman might desire, we see
the gentle pulling apart of society and questioning of norms as romances
and friendships form between the living and the undead, illuminating
the failures described in this piece and how society might try to make
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Notes
1. A possible complication in this scenario is the fathers protecting and caring
for the child. At this point in the lm, I think his actions actually act as more of a
queering of the norm than a supporting of it, however, as weve previously seen that
he is so indebted to a normative family structure that he would watch his wife
become zombied and give birth to a zombied child rather than end her life and
her unnatural birth. In this situation, the presence of the zombie queers the nuclear
family, as it turns supposedly rational decisions (encouraging birth of child, protecting family) into irrational ones (proliferating the undead, protecting zombies).
2. For more on some of the issues surrounding autism and medical treatment,
see Rosin.
3. Here Im specically thinking of the history of uranium mines built on Native
land in the United States, and the subsequent worker exploitation and environmental
degradation taking place that continues to this day in the name of clean nuclear
energy.
Gay Zombies
Consuming Masculinity and
Community in Bruce
LaBruces Otto; or, Up with
Dead People and L.A. Zombie
Darren Elliott-Smith
Traditionally the vampire remains a clear top to the zombies bottom: within the undead cohort, the zombie is a marginalized upstart
and notably sits outside the literary tradition. Often depicted as an
uncharismatic and often comic creature, the zombie is often satirically
deployed as a representation of mindless conformity or consumption.
For James Twitchell the zombie is an utter cretin, a vampire with a
lobotomy (Twitchell 15), and Kyle Bishop underscores the gures limited emotional depth, [its] inability to express or act on human desires.
Being bound to physical action he suggests that the zombie must be
watched (Bishop Raising the Dead 196). This suggests both a compulsion to look at the gure of the zombie and a wariness of a monster
that must be kept at a remove, for fear of being turned or being
infected.
Such anxieties also bear comparison with the guardedness inherent
in homosexual panic. In recent queer-inuenced horror lm the zombie
gure is used both as a cipher for homosexuality and for a sub-cultural
critique within western gay male culture. This article focuses specically
on the shambling, semi-articulate, gay zombies from Bruce LaBruces
melancholic and pornographic zombie lms Otto; or, Up with Dead Peo140
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141
ple (2008) and L.A. Zombie (2010). LaBruces appropriation of the gay
zombie gure is used as a means of exploring sub-cultural anxieties
within a white, bourgeois, homonormative community, but similarly the
emphasis on zombie performance reveals Otherness as celebratory.
LaBruces Otto; or, Up with Dead People uses the zombie to attack both
oppressive homophobia (in the lms poignant portrayal of zombie/queer
bashing) and to critique the bourgeois homonormativity of its middle
class Berlin clubbing milieu. His comic contemplation of the deadening
gay scene reveals the isolation and disillusionment within certain gay
communities. The lms depiction of the young gay zombie Otto as both
consumed and a reluctant consumer (a satirical riff on gay male
top/bottom sexual politics) locked within an inescapable capitalist ideology also points the nger at urban gay cultures role in the privileging
of property.
The messy physicality of the zombie also connects with the zombie
lms frequent utilization of pornographic tropes. The hard-core sexual
elements in Ottos gut-fucking imagery magnify the gay mans oral
eroticism in cannibalistic orgies that supplant anality with orality.
LaBruces follow up lm L.A. Zombie develops Ottos hard-core scenes
of necrophilic gay sex and, as such, forms its own critiques of gay mens
erotic valorization of masculine forms as meat and the emerging zombication of a capitalist gay porn industry. Yet despite the radical potential
of gay zombie sex as a method of alternative reproduction, it is often
alienating rather than empowering.
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matters more complex, scenes from each of the lms are often juxtaposed with one another, shown out of chronological order and both are
directed by the lms ctional radical feminist lmmaker Medea Yarn
(Katarina Klewinghaus). LaBruce interweaves Medeas lms in fragmented form, presenting behind the scenes sections of the making of
her lms alongside scenes from the lms themselves and including
scenes from Ottos journey to Berlin, which exists outside of the behind
the scenes conceit.
Otto is not the typical abject corpse zombie. He is a slight adolescent, with a grey complexion, dirty brown hair and milky blue eyes, a
decidedly blank face with bruises and congealed blood on his face and
lips. More coolly wasted than decomposing, his look strikes one as more
of a cultivated, deliberate style than that of archetypal rotting cadaver.
Indeed, his wasted emo-teen aesthetic10 (displayed via his disheveled
hoodie, striped sweater and shirt and tie combo) support the lms depiction of zombie-ism as modish and clearly conates various youth cultures (such as emo and punk). As such, he stands out as different from
the more masculine skinhead style of the lms faux-zombies. In an
online interview with Ernest Hardy LaBruce declares that his intentions
for the character of Otto were, from the outset, deliberately ambiguous:
I wanted to make a zombie who was a mist, a sissy and a plague-ridden
faggot. I deliberately leave it open to interpretation whether Otto is supposed to be a real zombie or merely a screwed up, homeless, mentally ill
kid with an eating disorder, who believes that hes dead [Hardy].
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is a given. Together with his resolute declarations of his true zombieism, this would suggest that Otto is sure both of his sexuality and of
being undead. It is his sense of not belonging, and of his failure to t in
with the fake or dead subcultures offered to him in Berlin, that causes
him to question his identity.
In several interviews, other characters discuss Ottos function as a
tabula rasa (both for Medea and extra-diegetically for LaBruce). Fritz
Fritze (Marcel Schlutt), who plays the revolutionary leader of skinhead
gay zombies, discusses his rival zombie lead:
He [Otto] was the Hollow Man, the empty signier, upon which she could
project her political agenda. Otto is a blank slate, onto which LaBruce
can project anxieties about the alienating effects of both bourgeois homonormative and gym-body oriented gay clubbing cultures. Upon rst meeting Medea Yarn, Otto is cast as an actor in her zombie lm (as a
fake-zombie) and, at rst, he appears to t in seamlessly into her zombie
imitator-group. Medea comments on his appearance that, there was
something different about Otto, something more authentic.
Ottos authenticity can also be read in terms of his difference, not only
from humans but from the other zombie-actors too. Still, there remains
an ambiguity as to whether he is more procient at acting than Medeas
other zombies, really a zombie, or merely a psychotic who believes he
is a zombie. Medea and Fritz both identify his persona as a reaction
against an oppressive capitalist system, from which they believe he is
retreating into a narcoleptic state. The authenticity of the zombies
Otto meets on his journey through Berlin is questionable. The presence
of Medeas actor-zombies undermines the authenticity of all zombies
within the lm. The legitimacy of the homeless zombies that Otto
encounters also remains dubious, not to mention the pseudodocumentary and Ottos own claims of zombie-ism.
As with Romeros lms, the zombies in Up with Dead People represent the once-consumed masses returning to consume the living,
who LaBruce (via Medea Yarn) recasts as conformist bourgeois homonormativity. The zombie, like the homosexual, has arguably been so
thoroughly assimilated into the dominant culture that it has taken on
normative traits and become conventional, even banal. Like contemporary homosexuality in some Western cultures, these gay zombies are
simultaneously tolerated and intolerable. Though commonplace, Berlin
is hardly a utopia for the undead. As Medea states, the gay zombie is
considered even more abject to their oppressors, who then take to
zombie-bashing where the gay undead [are] hunted down and murdered
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being picked up one evening by a young male passing driver. Via multiple cross-cuts LaBruce establishes the ambiguity of the zombie gure,
the lms spectator sees Sagats character as the greenish, alien
zombie and yet via the reverse point of view shot of the anonymous driver, he appears human. Startled, the driver crashes the car. A
fade up frames the overturned car with the driver having been thrown
on to the road, lying in a pool of his own blood and esh. His chest is
shown clearly ripped open and his heart eventually ceases beating.
Sagats alien zombie then crawls out of the wreckage seemingly
unharmed, and stumbles over to the drivers corpse. Straddling
the cadaver, the zombie pulls out his large black, erect stinger-tipped
penis and proceeds to penetrate the gash in the drivers chest, thrusting in and out underneath his still heart. With each thrust the heart
begins to pulse and pump once more, causing the driver to reani mate and writhe in ecstasy, his eyes uttering open. Eventually the
zombie withdraws and ejaculates oily black semen over the drivers
chest and face. Later the bloodied, but restored driver is framed sitting relieved near to the car wreckage, his chest having healed itself.
Soon the monster turns, looks unmoved and stumbles off into the night
alone.
These sex sequences between the undead in L.A. Zombie underline
the curative and recuperative qualities of alien zombie sex and, in particular, the healing power of his ejaculate. In the course of the lm the
zombie comes across (physically and sexually) a dead homeless man
whom he has sex with in his cardboard box shelter, a stabbed gangster
who has double-crossed his partner for money who is erotically resurrected in a storm drain, and several gunned down victims of a drug deal
gone awry (played by muscular gay porn stars including Erik Rhodes
and Francesco DMacho). In all instances, via corporeally penetrative
sex, the zombie is able to bring the dead back to life. Despite Sagats
zombies protruding teeth, which would seem to suggest his desire for
oral consumption and his castrating qualities, LaBruces L.A. zombie
does not eat esh or cannibalize his victims, instead he is seemingly
driven only to resurrect or restore others. This perhaps suggests that
unlike the cannibal zombies of Otto; or, Up with Dead People, who long
to orally assimilate and consume machismo, Sagats alreadyhypermasculine zombie seems sated and engorged with it. Instead of
desiring and consuming masculinity Sagat becomes the end product of
consumption: a grotesquely unsatised hypermasculine ideal in the
form of a zombie-phallus.
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LaBruces lm suggests that sex and death provide neither an end nor
an answer. Instead, Otto continues in a limbo-like state, never knowing
others like him, never knowing where to go, unable to separate reality
from fantasy and never experiencing the suicidal ecstasy (Is the Rectum a Grave? 18) connoted in the conation of sex with death. In his
reading of Otto, Shaka McGlotten (182193) rightly states that there is
little evidence of Bersanis melodramatic shattering of the self he nds
in gay sex (Bersani The Freudian Body 38). Instead, McGlotten sees in
Otto a passive indifference to any polemics (such as Medeas radical
political posturing). But this apathy seems to achieve empowerment.
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Notes
1. Niall Richardson argues that the interpretation of the gym body or the hypermasculine body should not only be understood as an attempt to reinforce essentialist ideas of male power. Instead it is entirely dependent on the context or culture
in which it is construed. Hyperbolic muscularity may indeed be making an ironic
comment on masculine ideals, whereas gay scenes maintain a fetishistic interest
in hyper-muscular torsos (389). LaBruces valorization of the hyperbolic muscular
body of Franois Sagat in L.A. Zombie therefore may be interpreted as adoration
of muscularity, or as a camp comment, comparable to drag, which is attempting to
challenge or overthrow regimes of masculinity (39).
2. According to Jos Muoz: Disidentication is a performative mode of tactical
recognition that various minoritarian subjects employ in an effort to resist the
oppressive and normalizing discourse of dominant ideology (91). In terms of gay
male identication, the subject simultaneously recognizes himself in the image of
an unattainable phallic masculine ideal (symbolized in the heterosexual male) but
also acknowledges that it is different from his homosexual self.
3. Jouissance is dened as an increased enjoyment or pleasure that is connected
to Lacans concept of desire and has sexual aspects. Whereas Freud sees desire as a
drive where the subject seeks a reduction of tensions to a low level, Lacan, argues
that the two elements of pleasure are diametrically opposed. His jouissance can be
seen as connected to an increase in tension and the compounding of desire, a sexually
based concept with potentially self-immolating consequences: It starts with a tickle
and ends up bursting into ames (83). This inuences Bersanis own utilization of
the term throughout his works, sexuality would not be originally an exchange of
intensities between individuals a condition in which others merely set off the selfshattering mechanisms of masochistic jouissance (Bersani Is the Rectum a Grave?
41).
4. For a wider reading of Porn of the Dead see Steve Jones Porn of the Dead.
5. See Darren Elliott-Smith for a wider overview of gay zombie narratives in lm
and television, including titles such as Flaming Gay Zombies (2007), Gay Zombie
(2007), Creatures from the Pink Lagoon (2006), The Nature of Nicholas (2002), and
the BBCs recent television serial In The Flesh (2012).
6. Ellis Hanson considers the gure of the vampire to be the utmost in monstrous
metaphors for the spread of AIDS within the gay community (324326). The
metaphor of the AIDS patient as the dead or living corpse has been acerbically
rendered in zombie lms such as, I, Zombie: The Chronicles of Pain (1998), in which
the infection and decay of zombie-ism is directly paralleled with sexually transmitted
disease.
7. For example, Todd Haynes lm Poison (1991) features a section entitled Horror, a black and white 1950s mad- scientist parody which congures the 1950s
McCarthy-ist fear of the unseen threat of secret communism and veiled homosexuality.
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spectatorial rewards for its most preferred consumer: not the male
viewer, but male viewers (122). The role that Jeremy and comedy play
in this mediation, Shelton argues, is similar to that of the female performer: she performs the function of a reassuring alibi for some of the
more unruly and disconcerting uid sexualities that arise from heterosexual pornography. Although Shelton is not concerned with the
undead, vampires and zombies amplify these issues. Zombies are too
abject, too genderless in their deadness to perform this mediatory function as satisfactorily as the vampire or the human. In other words, the
disgust elicited by zombies is not the primary problem with zombie
porn. Rather, the problem is that the zombies failure to adhere to customary pornographic roles exposes the careful constructions of gendered performance in hardcore. Zombie porn also exposes that gender
uidity and queerness are inherent to all heterosexual pornography.
Antiporn feminists commonly posit that hardcore pornography
objecties womens bodies in degrading and often violent ways for the
scopophilic pleasure of a sadistic, solitary, and anonymous male viewers
(see Dworkin; Dines).3 Furthermore, according to this framework, the
women of pornography are always ready for sex and are enthusiastic to
do whatever men want, irrespective of how painful, humiliating, or
harmful the act is (Dines xxiii). Yet, I contend, the popularity of the
female vampire and concomitant unpopularity of the female zombie in
porn disrupts this understanding of the female pornographic subjects
function. The women of pornography are neither perpetual victims of
the male objectifying gaze, nor independent whores liberated by unbridled sexuality. Furthermore, the spectator is not necessarily male or
sadistic (as presumed) and, whether solitary or not, the spectator is part
of an extended network of spectators that function in a similar fashion
to the porn theater audiences of the 1970s.4 Indeed, the pornographic
promise of liberated sexuality is not only deceptive, but also carefully
constructed as an integral part of the genre. The pleasures of transgression and sexual liberation involve a careful navigation of social norms,
rather than fully breaking free of social and sexual categorization or heteronormative boundary-drawing. In this sense, pornography is truly
carnivalesque in that it pleasurably ruptures social conventions while
leaving overarching systems intact (Bakhtin).
But pornography does do political work in its transgressions.
Indeed, I agree with Laura Kipniss contention that pornography enacts
a theatrics of transgression (164) designed to produce pleasure by violating social norms. Still, it is important to demystify and dispel the illu-
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sumers and critics) in a grey area between art and porn (Brinkema)
has made two hardcore zombie lms, Otto: Or Up with Dead People
(2008) and L.A. Zombie (2010), both of which were screened at lm festivals (and created some controversy as a result).5 In these lms, LaBruce
uses the zombie as a further marker of subversion; as an integral aspect
of his goal of offend[ing] everyone (LaBruce): Im often surprised that
there is an audience for my work at all. The art world often ignores me
because they think Im too pornographic, while the porn world resents
me for being too arty or intellectual and interfering with their precious,
pornographically pure project (LaBruce).
While LaBruces arty lmmaking style certainly interferes with
generic expectations, the zombie itself interferes with the pornographically pure project even when the pornographer attempts to integrate
it. Patricia MacCormacks description of DAmatos hardcore zombie
lms as being about breakdown and dysfunctions of narrative, body,
society and reality might equally apply to pornography and its eshy,
indulgent rupture of traditional narrative. Yet, the death, corroding,
rotting and disheveled esh (116) of the zombie occupies minimal space
in this same pornotopic world due to its failure to embody the ideal
pornographic subject. Pornographic desire revolves around delicate and
carefully managed points of breakdown and containment; of letting go
and holding on; of transgressing and maintaining order.6 The zombie is
too broken, too voiceless, too devoid of subjectivity to fulll the narrative
requirements of pornography.
Zombies are bodies, nothing more and nothing less, MacCormack
argues, asking, [w]hat gender are zombies? and concluding that they
are neuter (104). In a genre where [s]ex, in the sense of a natural, biological, and visible doing what comes naturally, is the supreme ction
and gender, the social construction of the relations between the sexes,
is what helps constitute that ction (Hard Core 267), genderless objects
are typically incompatible. Moreover, if gender contributes toward subjectivity (Weeks 212), paradoxically the zombie is not enough of a subject
to be a suitable pornographic object. The vampire, in contrast, is perfect:
beautiful and dependent, intelligent and conscious.
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tice. Isabel Pinedo asserts that horror trades in the wet death while
pornography trades in the wet dream (61), going on to characterize
both types of lm as genres that dar[e] not only to violate taboos but
to expose the secrets of the esh, to spill the contents of the body (61);
both genres are obsessed with the transgression of bodily boundaries
(61). Linda Williams also made such connections in her inuential 1991
essay, Film Bodies, in which she collectively refers to horror, pornography, and melodrama as body genres, looked down on as low due
to the perception that the body of the spectator is caught up in an
almost involuntary mimicry of the emotion or sensation of the body on
screen along with the fact that the body displayed is female (270). Signicantly, Williams claims that of these three genres, pornography is
the lowest in cultural esteem, gross-out horror is the next lowest (269).
Williams evaluation reects broader concerns over the dangers of such
gratuitous genres: the more excessive, prurient, and low the genre,
the greater the threat it poses to its audience, and society at large.
While there are similarities and overlaps in horror and pornography,
there are also distinct differences in each genres appeal. Pinedo notes,
[t]he decisive difference between pornography and horror lies in their
disparate claims to facticity (62). Another crucial difference is that the
viewer of pornography is encouraged, indeed expected, to bring his wet
dream to fruition whereas the viewer of horror is neither encouraged
nor expected to participate in murder, mutilation, or bloodletting (64).
Even this distinction has been blurred in the discourse surrounding torture porn lms (see Jones, Torture Porn). When horror and porn meet,
then, which is surprisingly often, something of a pleasurable undermining of each genre occurs, exposing the generic frameworks of each.
Horror, pornography, and melodrama, Williams asserts, can be
explored as genres of gender fantasy (Film Bodies 277), but these
genres are also sites of genderand genreplay. Indeed, traditional psychoanalytic approaches to horror and pornography have become
increasingly untenable over the intervening years thanks to shifts in the
notion of who exactly is watching and how exactly they might be
responding. A combination of radical developments in technology and
concomitant changes in the gender, race, and sexual orientation of those
in front of and behind the camera has meant a revision of theories surrounding body genres, particularly pornography. In her analysis of Internet porn, Susanna Paasonen argues that theories of the sadistic male
gaze are rooted in a cinema studies approach no longer relevant to the
complex click and grab practices of Internet porn consumption (175
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182). Meanwhile, Pinedo has argued that rather than oppressing and
marginalizing female viewers or representing women in sadistic scenarios for the pleasures of a male audience (as is commonly purported),
contemporary horrors onscreen violence offers pleasures to female audiences. In porn studies, too, women have spoken about their relationship
to pornography with a frankness necessary to rupture the traditionally
homosocial networks of porn spectators, lmmakers, and fan communities. Most recently, Jane Ward wrote of the seeming contradiction of
her, a feminist dyke (130), enjoying and getting off watching college
reality porn, concluding, even within this less-than-liberating genre we
can nd ideas, gestures, and scenes that unintentionally provide fodder
for queer orgasms, and opportunities for queer reection (137). With
this in mind, I do not make claims for a unied, static viewership
indeed, the very notion of a unied, unisexual spectator is unrealistic.
Rather, I ask what pornography presents to its viewers and theorize what
this might reveal about spectatorial desirewhat pornographic lmmakers deem sexy and suitable for mainstream pornographic representationin an effort to explore how pornography functions as a genre in
Western discourse.
A signicant connection between horror and pornography is the
female victim-hero, a term coined by Carol J. Clover to describe the
female protagonist of the slasher lm; a woman who possesses both masculine and feminine traits, who is victim to the violent onslaught of an
attacker, but who is resilient, persistent, and resourceful and typically
ghts back in a heroic nale. More recently, David Greven has argued
against such binary reductions, conceptualizing victim-heroes as transformative in nature, closer to the protagonists of the womans picture,
and ghting for a stake in gendered power. Similar work has been done
by the female protagonists (and lmmakers) of pornography. Contrary
to assumptions of inherent misogyny and backlash, pornography has
provided a space for women to contest their sexually oppressed status.
Yet, while Linda Williams asserts that non-sadomasochistic pornography has historically been one of the few types of popular lm that has
not punished women for actively pursuing their sexual pleasure (Film
Bodies 274), the reality is more complex. First, distinguishing any genre
of lm from that which elicits sadomasochistic pleasure is difficult, and
second, heterosexual pornographic genres utilize the female object/subject in ways that resemble the victim-hero of horror rather than the
unpunished and liberated heroine.7 In this way the horror-porn lm renders explicit what some regard as implicit in all hardcore pornography:
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does not facilitate the same kind of uid and oscillating pornographic
fantasy that the vampire does; the zombie does not move enough, while
the vampire is moved and moving. In Joness analysis of Porn of the Dead,
the issues of necrophilia, consent, and female sexual agency are foremost
concerns, prompting him to ask, [c]an a zombie be sexually violated,
and can we utilize terms such as misogyny when dealing with the partially formed zombie-subject? (40). The answer seems to be yes and
no. While Jones is less than convinced that [Porn of the Dead ] should
be read simply as a misogynistic statement that purely takes pleasure in
this hatred [of women] (55), and even suggests that the lm is a critique
of pornography and male sexual aggression, he also allows that its
fantasy (whether intended as radical or not) hinges on sexual difference,
and we should not overlook that while the zombie may offer a potential liberation for women (in becoming free to explore and perform aspects of
aggression and sexual freedom typically denied from femininity, via the
fantasy space of the monster), the males (alive and dead) continually reinscribe a traditional gendered system via overt sexual aggression [55].
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unlike the vampire, is mindless and mortal (they die after seven days of
gradual decomposition). The slags never fully transition into vampires
themselves, and so are treated as lower-order life-forms; they are disposable soldiers who serve the vampires. Moreover, the vampires underline their assumed superiority by seeking to eradicate the infection in
their bloodline. The vampires, led by Draken (Barrett Blade), must seek
out The One: a human descended from vampires who is pure (uninfected) and can re-fortify the vampire clans infected bloodline. One key
difference between vampire and zombie slag here is that the latter never
engage in any sexual activity. In this way, the distinction between zombies (unsexy) and vampires (sexy) is central to the lms plot.
As the lms vampire hunter Jack Cross (Dillon Day) explains, the
slags are not people. Theyre dead. Or should I say undead. Theyre
usually vagrants or bums or street people without any family to really
miss em. But now theyve been changed. Now theyre the property of a
man called Draken. He uses them as soldiers in his own private army.
In this way, the regressive slags perform a role similar to that of Count
Draculas wolveshis children of the night whom he controls and uses
to physically intimidate antagonistsalthough Draken is more disgusted
by his progeny than the Count was by his wolves.9
The slags represent the corroding of Drakens aristocratic and beautiful vampire bloodline; not only are the slags visibly decomposing, they
are also not immortal. Cross explains:
Theyre not real vampires, theyre like half breeds. Theyve been infected;
they dont turn into vampires like you might think. Theyre more like the
walking dead. Theyve got some of the same characteristics as vampires,
like superhuman strength, speed, but theyve only got a life span of about
nine days. Theyre decaying like real dead bodies; when the body gets too
decomposed, they drop. We can kill em just like anyone else.
Cross fails to add that these slags also differ from vampires in that they
are mindless, passive beings who are ready to follow orders and lack the
ability to speak or assert agency. Thus, Dark Angels 2 literalizes the hierarchy of the undead only suggested by the respective popularity and
unpopularity of vampire and zombie porn. The slags are asexual servants.
Furthermore, the slags are not gendered; they are repeatedly referred to
as things and those. In this sense, even though the slags bear the markings of gender through clothing and hairstyles, their gender is not emphasized either through sexual intercourse or discourse. Therefore, the
zombie queers notions of gender performance, exposing gender as performance, emptying gendered signiers of their supposed signicance.
170
171
172
173
174
among the primary pleasures of pornographic texts (41), a car horn, the
beeping of a reversing delivery truck, and other traffic sounds can be
heard during this sex scene, rupturing the notion that the characters
occupy a desolate apocalyptic landscape. Yet, subversive, text-rupturing
pleasures aside, zombidom is incompatible with active sexual agency.
Thus, the female performer resorts to more conventional modes of performance as the sex scene progresses. Soas initial passive acceptance,
and eventual recourse to a standard, active sexual performance (albeit
with zombie make-up and grunting), demonstrates that the zombie is
incompatible with conventional pornographic desire. She must eventually break character, ride Carl cowgirl, nger her clit, and enthusiastically
perform oral sex, all while staring blankly and grunting repetitively.
The Walking Dead: A Hardcore Parody employs comedy as one way
of evading the pitfalls of a nonsensical plot and the abject grotesqueries
of growling, decomposing bodies. When Carl realizes Soa has been left
behind at the mercy of the undead, he is upset, asking, [w]hat if she
turned already? and demanding they go back for her. Rick gives the
sobbing Carl a talk, set to amusingly melodramatic music: Now listen
up, big man. All right? Theres still a chance she may have turned. Okay?
Which means youre gonna have to fuck her mouth and cum in her. To
kill her. The performers pull bemused faces during their absurd and
melodramatic dialogue, reecting what Jones regards as horror-porns
particular self-consciousness, which commonly manifests via self-deprecating jokes about the lms status as porn (Torture Porn 161).
Unlike The Walking Dead, Beyond Fucked: A Zombie Odyssey is not
an outright comedy. Rather, it is a post-apocalyptic thriller with satirical
elements. The lm does not depict any human-zombie sexual interaction, and so does not require comedy to defuse the incongruity of the
passive and abject zombie. The lm takes place during the zombie apocalypse, brought about by a drug created by the government to control
the obesity epidemic. When people take the new wonder drug, they lose
weight. Protagonist Bonnie explains in the introductory voice over, how
it worked basically was your body would feed off the fat from the inside.
Great right? But once youve had no more fat to take off, thats when
the hunger would take over. Bonnie is a professional zombie killer hired
by Dr. Life (Mark Wood) to search for pure semen that can be used to
inseminate a new mother Mary and restart a pure human civilization.
The majority of the lm takes place in an exclusive bar that hosts
human/zombie ghts, and where Bonnie has a female lover whom she
visits during her downtime. The refusal to depict human-zombie sexual
175
176
ing cum shot, the female zombie begins to verbalize stock phrases such
as, [o]h give me that load right now, and give me that cum. Meanwhile,
Tommy maintains zombie-like composure, reecting Joness contention
that heterosexual male performance in porn is quite zombielike (Jones
Porn of the Dead 52).11
177
178
and sexuality. How this subject position might change (and is changing)
in light of new and newly-revealed audiences and desires is a critical
point of discourse for ongoing genre studies.
Notes
1. See for example, Gayracula (1983), Dragula (1973), The Night Boys (1991),
and the many softcore lesbian vampire lms produced in the 1970s by Jess Franco
and in the twenty-rst century by Seduction Cinema. Hustlers decision to simultaneously release the straight Dracula XXX and gay His Dracula in 2012 indicates
the ease with which the vampire adheres to multiple sexualities.
2. While my focus in this essay is on the female subject, my argument can be
extended to male performers also, particularly in gay porn and pre80s porn. Indeed,
in a telling coincidence, Steve Jones compares the voiceless and objectied male
performers of gonzo porn to zombies (Porn of the Dead 50) while male performer
Kurt Lockwood compares male performers to vampires. These comparisons would
make for a fascinating extension of my argument here; an extension that is beyond
the scope of the current project.
3. For a thorough analysis of antiporn radical feminism in the 1970s and 1980s,
see Strub 213255.
4. For an analysis of cross-gender identication in pornographic lm, see Wilcox.
Loftus Watching Sex demonstrates the variety of motivations, preferences, and
responses when it comes to male consumption of pornography. See Schaefer for a
discussion of the diverse audiences who attended adult lms. See Berenstein for a
similar discussion regarding the mixed gender address of classic horror advertising.
See Delaney for a description of the ways in which heterosexual lm exhibition
mobilized queer sexual interactions in the audience.
5. LaBruces L.A. Zombie was banned from the 2010 Melbourne Film Festival.
The festival organizers did not seem to feel the need to justify this decision beyond
their ruling that the lm was porn.
6. In this way, the prolapse and anal gape are instructive. Gaping, the forerunner
of the prolapse, offers a vision of the interior of a mans or womans body sealed in
by a membrane. The prolapse takes it a step further, offering a rosy red bud that
is as close to the bloody intestines of a zombie victim as one might get while still
technically remaining sealed and integrated.
7. See Paasonen for a complication of the notion of objectication and a discussion of pornographys construction of people as both sexual subjects and objects
(175).
8. For an analysis of vampire ction as representing a fear of reverse colonization
(gendered feminine), see Marilyn Brock; see Christopher Craft for an analysis of
gender uidity and homoerotic displacement in Dracula; for the argument that
Count Dracula represents a fear of the Jewish Other, see Judith Halberstams Skin
Shows (specically chapter four); nally, for an analysis of Dracula as a reaction to
the increasingly liberated woman see Carol A. Senf.
9. Towards the end of the lm, as their vampire lair comes under attack by Jesse
(Sunny Lane) and Cross, Quinn cries, Ill release the hounds! in reference to the slags.
10. An important exception to this rule is the femdom pegging subgenre. In the
Strap Attack series (200412), for example, the male performer customarily consumes his own cum shot at the scenes conclusion. In addition, in cuckold lms such
as Shane Diesels Cuckold Stories (2009present), the cuckolded husband typically
consumes the other mans semen at the end of the scene.
179
11. It is worth noting that Tommy Pistol is typically one of the more vocal, animated male performers in porn. It is unusual to see him embody a passive character
in this way, then, but this merely serves to emphasize the ease with which male performers might embody the zombie role in heteroporn.
12. When looked at from a broad vantage point, however, straight porn is
incredibly queer. In order to assert that heteroporn has a homosexual taboo, one
must lter out the many subgenres that complicate the notion of coherent heterosexuality, hence my reference to conventional pornographies. Even mainstream
heteroporn, as discussed in this chapter, contains instances of homoeroticism if not
outright homosexual acts, though there are even exceptions to this such as The Story
of Joanna (1975) and The Erotic Adventures of Candy (1978), both of which depict
homosexual acts between men. While such homosexual transgressions were a more
common occurrence in 1970s porn, a minimal amount of recent straight hardcore
lms depict simulated male homosexual acts as part of the narrative, such as in
Southern Hospitality (2013).
13. In contrast, vampire porn boasts an entire subgenre devoted to lesbian interactions that requires no such staging; rather, vampires are to a degree always-already
queer.
Pretty, Dead
Sociosexuality, Rationality and
the Transition into Zom-Being
Steve Jones
Unlike other horror archetypes, zombies have an established presence in philosophical discussion. Following David Chalmers in particular,1
many philosophers have evoked the undead when hypothesizing about
consciousness. In recent years, zombies have been utilized to examine
phenomenology and mental knowledge (see Furst; Malatesti; Macpherson), visual processing and intentional action (see Mole; Wayne Wu), and
the relationship between consciousness and cognition (Smithies). These
are all variations on the explanatory gap problem, which refers to a rift
between psycho-physiological explanations of mental function (deriving
from neuroscience, for instance) and the intuitive sense that selfhood,
agency, and introspective knowledge are metaphysically signicant.
Such discussion frequently feels nebulous. Neuroscience is fascinating, but its empirical ndings can be difficult to relate to everyday,
experiential reality. Indeed, neuroscience habitually seeks to uncover
how the mind operates in spite of our intuitions. Abstract philosophical
discussions about consciousness are just as intangible. Debates over
philosophical zombies (hereafter, p-zombies) are commonly rooted in
notions about hypothetical twin worlds, ruminations on the impossibility of imagining what it would be like to lack phenomenal experiences,
and semantic discussions regarding whether conceivability equates to
possibility. Again, it is often hard to comprehend how such discussion
relates to personal experiences.
180
Pretty, DeadJones
181
182
Pretty, DeadJones
183
184
Pretty, DeadJones
185
186
Pretty, DeadJones
187
gesting that they are incurably monstrous actions. Third, she writes
those actions into her identity, dubbing herself a monster. Regina
thereby anchors her liability for the killings in her selfhood. However,
this means that she both judges her actions from a human perspective
distancing herself from the perpetrators monstrosityand also recognizes that she is the inhuman creature she vilies. Her discordant
assessment is only deepened by her outright denials elsewhere in the
lm: I swear I didnt do this that wasnt me.
Reginas conicting statements reveal not a tug of conscience, but
a disjuncture in her being. The onset of zom- being impels Regina
towards forsaking the values and social bonds that dene her humanity.
Zom-being necessitates anti-social activity10esh-eatingand so relinquishing social bonds is a necessary part of zom-becoming. Reginas
efforts to resist turning into a zombie are expressed as attempts to maintain her established notion of human sociality. For example, Regina
declares, I dont want to hurt people anymore so I stay away from
them. Although stay[ing] away means negating sociality, her intent is
social in orientation since it recognizes her duty to defend others.
Reginas conict is most notable in her key social relationship: her
love for Ryan. Regina wishes to maintain their affiliation, imploring, I
need your help, and angrily accusing Ryan of ditching [her] when [she]
needed [him] most. Simultaneously, by keeping Ryan close, Regina poses
a threat to his safety. Although Regina longs to maintain her social links
in order to evince her humanity then, in doing so she risks eradicating
those bonds. Moreover, Reginas transition into zom-being can be
charted via her changing relationship with Ryan, because Ryans presence
underscores her loss of humanity-qua-sociality. The earliest point in the
plot is Reginas rst date with Ryan, and the bulk of Pretty Dead maps
their relationship until Ryans death. Ryans changing attitudes towards
Regina also illuminates her gradual transformation. Ryan initially accepts
Reginas behavior. He laughs it off when Regina bites him (I appreciate
your enthusiasm, but Jesus Christ youve got to watch those chompers),
and proclaims that he loves her despite the fact that [she is] eating raw
bacon. Ryan jokingly adapts Kelis 2003 song Milkshake, singing you
like to drink human lard, Im going to blow my chunks as Regina consumes a glass of liquidized fat. Ryan admits that such jokes help him
cope. As the lm progresses however, Ryans gags articulate his escalating trepidation. Although light-hearted in tone, Ryans request dont
eat me if I die expresses a valid fear. As Regina changes and his doubts
intensify, Ryans jokes are replaced by serious requests[l]et me take
188
Pretty, DeadJones
189
190
Pretty, DeadJones
191
192
Pretty, DeadJones
193
194
Despite their powerful supporting structures, rationalist medicoscientic understandings of Reginas condition are ultimately subordinate to her personal experiences and social identity in Pretty Dead. So,
contrary to the commonplace notion that rationality is a pre-condition
for forming meaningful social bonds (Anderson 1278), Pretty Dead
indicates that (a) phenomenological experience is the foundation of selfhood, and (b) social bonds provide an index for the formation of identity.
These are the elements Regina loses during her transition into zombeing. Rationality provides one mode of apprehending self, but here it
pales in comparison with experiential understanding of selfhood in the
socio-sexual realm.
Pretty, DeadJones
195
196
Notes
1. The philosophical zombie was evoked earlier by Kripke and Block for example,
although Chalmers contentions (The Conscious Mind ) have inspired much recent
debate.
2. A terminological point requires clarication. The term transition carries
established meanings in the context of sociosexual identity discourse. Individuals
experience sociosexual transformations of all kinds, ranging from pubescence to
coming out to transsexual transition. My use of transition does not seek to draw
a comparison between any of these particular shifts and becoming undead.
3. This play on Romero evinces that the narrative is clearly staked as a zombie
lm, despite the ambiguity over Reginas undeadness.
4. There are two notable variations on this theme. First, lms such as Zombie
Love (2007) and A Zombie Love Song (2013) depict zombies falling in love with living
persons. Zombies are limned as having autonomy in these cases, and so they will
not be considered here. Second, Dating a Zombie (2012) presents a living protagonist
who eschews relationships with the living in favour of partnerships with the undead.
In this case, socialitys value is called into question. Anyone interested in the practicalities of sociosexuality in the wake of outbreak may wish to consult Chip and
Bernies Dating Guide for the Zombie Apocalypse (2011), which outlines problems
associated with zomance and offers advice on handling the opposite (undead)
sex.
5. Indeed, zombies exhibit behaviors, but (presumably) have no underlying mental
states.
6. Qualia, in this view, are indicators of consciousness.
7. On the conceivability of p-zombies and epistemic limitations, see Hanrahan;
Goff; Diaz-Leon; Majeed.
8. As an aside, some full-blown zombies claim to have experiences and display
awareness of their state. One prototypical example is the female zombie torso in
Return of the Living Dead (1985) who is able to articulate that being undead hurts;
she explains that zombies eat brains because it temporarily assuages the agony of
being dead. This zombie purports to have at least one kind of phenomenal experience
Pretty, DeadJones
197
(pain), which signies self-knowledge: the zombie describes herself as an entity that
has undergone an experience. One could argue that the zombie is mistaken and does
not really have phenomenal experiences. There is a difference between stating that
one has had an experience and actually having an experience. However, the same
line of thought would give us reason to doubt the veracity of qualia in general. We
have no means of knowing whether other living humans reports of experiencing
are as false as the zombies are. Moreover, if the zombie believes that they are experiencing, there is every chance that ones own claims to experiencing are also false.
Incredulity over the zombies claim to consciousness leaves the living sceptic with
no grounds for demonstrating their own claim to consciousness (on this quandary,
see Macpherson 2312).
9. Cordyceps fungus also causes the zombie plague in the recent videogame The
Last of Us (2013).
10. Flesh eating is anti-social according to Reginas norms. In some cultures cannibalism is a social practice rooted in compassion and interpersonal obligation. For
example, see Conklin.
11. For discussion of zombies and gender politics, see Jones Gender Monstrosity.
12. Moreover, the lm-makers have declared that they intended to make a realistic, scientically plausible zombie lm. See Wilkins.
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Last Man on Earth (1964, dir. Ubaldo B.
Ragona, Italy/USA)
The Last of Us (2013, dirs. Bruce Straley
and Neil Druckmann, USA)
Left 4 Dead (2008, dir. Mike Booth,
USA)
Lesbian Zombies from Outer Space
(2013, dir. Jave Galt-Miller, USA)
Martin (1976, dir. George A. Romero,
USA)
The Masque of the Red Death (1964, dir.
Roger Corman, USA/UK)
The Mummy (1932, dir. Karl Freund, USA)
The Nature of Nicholas (2002, dir. Jeff
Erbbach, Canada)
The Necro Files (1997, dir. Matt Jaissle,
USA)
The Necro Files 2 (2003, dir. Ron Carlo,
USA)
The Nerdist Zombies! (2013, Dir. Alan
Wu, USA)
The Night Boys (1991, dir. Gino Colbert,
USA)
Night of the Giving Head (2008, dir. Rodney Moore, USA)
Night of the Howling Beast (La Maldicion
de la Bestia) (1974, dir. M.I. Bonns,
Spain)
Night of the Living Dead (1968, dir.
George A. Romero, USA)
Night of the Living Dead: Reanimated
(2009, dir. Mike Schneider, USA)
Night of the Living Dorks (Die Nacht der
Lebenden Loser) (2004, dir. Mathias
Dinter, Germany)
The Omega Man (1971, dir. Boris Sagal,
USA)
The Orgy of the Dead (La Orgia de los
Muerto) (1973, dir. Jos Luis Merino,
Spain/Italy)
Osombie (2012, dir. John Lyde, USA)
Otto; or, Up with Dead People (2008, dir.
Bruce LaBruce, Germany/Canada)
ParaNorman (2012, dirs. Chris Butler
and Sam Fell, USA)
The Passion of the Christ (2004, dir. Mel
Gibson, USA)
The Pit and the Pendulum (1961, dir.
Roger Corman, USA)
The Plague of the Zombies (1966, dir.
John Gilling, UK)
Poison (1991, dir. Todd Haynes, USA)
211
212
Bibliography
213
214
philosophy of self, gender politics, and ethics. His monograph Torture Porn:
Popular Horror After Saw was published in 2013 by Palgrave-Macmillan.
Laura Helen Marks is a postdoctoral fellow in the English department at
Louisiana State University. Her research concerns gender, genre and sexual
representation, specically in pornographic lm and literature and hardcore
lm adaptations of Victorian literature and the various ways pornography
makes use of the Victorian as a canvas on which to construct erotic appeal.
Shaka McGlotten is an anthropologist and an associate professor of media,
society, and the arts at Purchase College-SUNY. Much of his research is
ethnographically based, although he also draws on the humanities and arts.
His essays on affect, anthropology, race, media, and technology have
appeared in journals and books.
Max Thornton studied classics at University College London and theology at
Graduate Theological Union in Berkeley, California. He is a doctoral candidate
in theology and philosophy at Drew University in Madison, New Jersey. His
research interests include new media studies, gender and queer theory, deaf and
disability studies, and the intersection of Christian theology with the above.
Emma Vossen is a comics and sexuality scholar completing her PhD at the
University of Waterloo and writing a dissertation about pornographic comics.
Her publications cover a variety of topics including Supermans co-creator
Joe Shuster, The Walking Dead comic and videogame, and the Fifty Shades of
Grey trilogy.
Index
Chaos Campus 3
Chen, Mel 6, 126, 131132, 134135
Chip and Bernies Dating Guide for the
Zombie Apocalypse 196n4
Chronic Diseases, Especially the Nervous
Diseases of Women 49
Clark, Danae 119, 122n15
Clover, Carol J. 166
Cockneys vs. Zombies 3
Cohen, Jeffrey Jerome 95
Comeau, J.L. 81
Comic Books and the Cold War 105n1
Corpus Delecti (The Passion of Zombie
Jesus) 19
Creatures from the Pink Lagoon 12, 157n5
Cruz, Annie 159
Cupcake: A Zombie Lesbian Musical 17n3
215
216
Doghouse 11
Dombey and Son 44
Donati, Ermanno 38, 51n4
Dracula (1931 lm) 8
Dracula (novel) 94, 163, 167, 178n8
Dracula XXX 178n1
Dragula 178n1
Dudley, Scott 6768
Duggan, Lisa 13, 53, 60, 61, 71n2, 144
Dunham, Lena 103
Dyer, Richard 118119
Eckhart, Meister 29
Edelman, Lee 8, 12830, 138
The Erotic Adventures of Candy 179n12
Erotic Nights of the Living Dead 170
Eugene, Rudy (Miami Zombie) 128
The Fall of the House of Usher 51n3
Farnell, Gary 46
Fido 71n6
First Love Never Dies 77, 81, 82, 84
Flaming Gay Zombies 157n5
Fleshed Out 3
Foucault, Michel 4243, 57, 132
Franco, Jesus (Jess) 143, 178n1
Frankenstein 8
Freud, Sigmund 44, 49, 145, 157n3
Fulci, Lucio 21, 143
Fury of the Wolfman (La Furia del Hombre
Lobo) 51n2
Fuss, Diana 145
Gastaldi, Ernesto 38, 51n4
Gay Zombie 12
Gayracula 178n1
Gibson, Mel 30
Giddens, Anthony 9, 7387 passim
Girls 103
Giroux, Henry 107108
Glassner, Barry 87
Goff, Philip 195
Great Expectations 44, 46
Green, Amber 9
Greven, David 166
Gross, Neil 7479 passim, 85, 87
GrubGirl 10, 15
Guy, Jean-Sebastien 75
Halberstam, Judith (Jack) 13, 72n9, 124,
163, 178n8
Hammer Films 36, 38, 39, 42
Hanrahan, Rebecca Roman 184
Hardy, Ernest 148
Harolds Going Stiff 182
His Dracula 178n1
Index
Hoffman, Nina Kiriki 81
Holmes, Sherlock 3839
Horno 15
House of the Dead 3
Hunter, Ira 19
Hustler 178n1
I Am Legend 110
I Cant Believe I Fucked a Zombie 159
I Walked with a Zombie 5, 21
I, Zombie: The Chronicles of Pain 17,
157n6
In the Flesh 157n5
Jackson, Peter 29
Jameson, Frederick 89
Jeremy, Ron 161162
Jesus H. Zombie 14
Johnson, Paul 76
Jones, Steve 17n4, 17n5, 37, 157n4, 163,
165, 168, 174, 176, 178n2, 197n11
Juan of the Dead 3
Julian of Norwich 20, 29
Kierkegaard, Sren 89, 103104
King William IV 43
Kipnis, Laura 162
Kirkman, Robert 90104 passim, 171
Kozlowski, Jan 81
Krafft-Ebing, Richard von 42
L.A. Zombie 1213, 140158 passim, 164,
178n5
LaBruce, Bruce 1213, 140158 passim,
164, 178n5
Langdridge, Darren 75
Larsen, Lars Bang 5
Last Man on Earth 110
The Last Myth 105n2
The Last of Us 197n9
Lauro, Sarah 104
Lee, Edward 10, 15
Left 4 Dead 3
Lenz, Wylie 160
Lesbian Zombies from Outer Space 10
Lincoln, Abraham 37
Liss, David 76, 81
Lokis-Adkins, Julie 191192
Lord Lytton 45
Lugones, Mara 135, 137
MacCormack, Patricia 164
Macpherson, Fiona 186, 197n8
Marion, Isaac 9, 5272 passim, 9394
Martin 147
Martin, George R. R. 79, 81
Index
Marvel Zombies 3
The Masque of the Red Death 51n3
Massumi, Brian 38
Matheson, Richard 110
Mbembe, Achille 133134
McGlotten, Shaka 155156
McNally, David 108
McRuer, Robert 109, 112, 138
Meathouse Man 7985
Merleau-Ponty, Maurice 21
Milkov, Nikolay 182
Mill, John Stuart 190191
Miller, Frank 89
Miller, William Ian 161, 170
Moore, Alan 89
The Mummy 8
Musical of the Living Dead 3
My Secret Life 48
The Nature of Nicholas 157n5
The Necro Files 12
The Necro Files 2 12
Newmahr, Staci 126127
The Night Boys 178n1
Night of the Giving Head 15
Night of the Howling Beast (La Maldicion
de la Bestia) 51n2
Night of the Living Dead 21, 27, 36, 127,
143, 150
Night of the Living Dead: Reanimated 3
Night of the Living Dorks 158n10
Nye, Andrea 194195
The Omega Man 110
The Orgy of the Dead (La Orgia de los
Muertos) 36, 3840, 4243, 4549
Osombie 55
Ossorio, Amando de 21
Ostherr, Kristin 109
Otto; Or, Up with Dead People 1213, 37,
140158 passim, 164
Paasonen, Susanna 165, 178n7
ParaNorman 3, 71n6
The Passion of the Christ 30
Penley, Constance 89
Pinedo, Isabel 165166
Pistol, Tommy 159, 179n11
The Pit and the Pendulum 51n3
Plague of the Zombies 3650 passim
Poison 157n7
Porn of the Dead 143, 157n4, 168
Porn Star Zombies 15
Pretty Dead 180197 passim
Pride and Prejudice and Zombies 3,
158n11
217
218
Index