The zombie has cropped up in many forms—in film, in television, and as a cultural phenomenon in zombie walks and zombie awareness months—but few books have looked at what the zombie means in fiction.
Tim Lanzendörfer fills this gap by looking at a number of zombie novels, short stories, and comics, and probing what the zombie represents in contemporary literature. Lanzendörfer brings together the most recent critical discussion of zombies and applies it to a selection of key texts including Max Brooks’s
World War Z, Colson Whitehead’s
Zone One, Junot Díaz’s short story “Monstro, ” Robert Kirkman’s comic series
The Walking Dead, and Seth Grahame-Smith’s
Pride and Prejudice and Zombies. Within the context of broader literary culture, Lanzendörfer makes the case for reading these texts with care and openness in their own right.
Lanzendörfer contends that what zombies do is less important than what becomes possible when they are around. Indeed, they seem less interesting as metaphors for the various ways the world could end than they do as vehicles for how the world might exist in a different and often better form.
Over de auteur
Tim Lanzendörfer is assistant professor of American Studies at the Obama Institute for Transnational American Studies at the University of Mainz, Germany. His book, The Professionalization of the American Magazine: Periodicals, Biography, and Nationalism in the Early Republic, recently won the 2013-2014 Research Society for American Periodicals’ Book Prize, which recognizes the best title published by an academic press in the field of American periodical studies.