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The Transatlantic Zombie
Sarah J. Lauro
其他書名
Slavery, Rebellion, and Living Death
出版
Rutgers University Press
, 2015-07-15
主題
Art / Techniques / General
History / Caribbean & West Indies / General
Literary Criticism / General
Performing Arts / General
Performing Arts / Film / History & Criticism
Social Science / Folklore & Mythology
Social Science / Popular Culture
ISBN
0813568854
9780813568850
URL
http://books.google.com.hk/books?id=g6zkCwAAQBAJ&hl=&source=gbs_api
EBook
SAMPLE
註釋
Our most modern monster and perhaps our most American, the zombie that is so prevalent in popular culture today has its roots in African soul capture mythologies.
The Transatlantic Zombie
provides a more complete history of the zombie than has ever been told, explaining how the myth’s migration to the New World was facilitated by the transatlantic slave trade, and reveals the real-world import of storytelling, reminding us of the power of myths and mythmaking, and the high stakes of appropriation and homage. Beginning with an account of a probable ancestor of the zombie found in the Kongolese and Angolan regions of seventeenth-century Africa and ending with a description of the way, in contemporary culture, new media are used to facilitate zombie-themed events, Sarah Juliet Lauro plots the zombie’s cultural significance through Caribbean literature, Haitian folklore, and American literature, film, and the visual arts. The zombie entered US consciousness through the American occupation of Haiti, the site of an eighteenth-century slave rebellion that became a war for independence, thus making the figuration of living death inseparable from its resonances with both slavery and rebellion. Lauro bridges African mythology and US mainstream culture by articulating the ethical complications of the zombie as a cultural conquest that was rebranded for the American cinema. As
The Transatlantic Zombie
shows, the zombie is not merely a bogeyman representing the ills of modern society, but a battleground over which a cultural war has been fought between the imperial urge to absorb exotic, threatening elements, and the originary, Afro-diasporic culture’s preservation through a strategy of mythic combat.