Zombies in popular culture Essays

  • Zombies in Popular culture

    750 Words  | 2 Pages

    I was a late bloomer when it came to knowledge of zombies. Well, late in the sense that I hadn’t noticed zombies in pop culture, not late in the sense that zombies had taken over. At least I hope the movies didn’t have real zombies acting like zombies, or else the world as we know it would be in a whole lot of trouble. The undead are everywhere in popular culture. Zombies appear in video games such as Doom, Zelda and Left 4 Dead. They are in movies like 28 Days Later, Dawn of the Dead, Shaun of

  • What Started the Zombie Craze and What Kept Them “Alive”?

    850 Words  | 2 Pages

    all disease-invested, flesh-rotted, brain-hungry zombies! Where did these undead monsters come from? How do they survive? What helped them crawl into the popular culture and continue through the changing fads of past decades? The zombie craze was “born” for the hardcore horror fans but has been kept “alive” by fear and publicity that is focused towards everyone. Before the zombies arrived, the hardcore horror fan needed something gruesome and zombies really gave it to them. A zombie is the living

  • How Do Zombies Affect Popular Culture

    1572 Words  | 4 Pages

    In this modern world of ours, Zombies have become increasingly popular. Ranging from movies, television shows, and graphics of the zombie, the viewpoint of what a zombie is can be different within each person. Taking a look at the recent images of zombies one can notice most being brain eating, undead monsters. Other few circumstances one can see that some zombies are represented as undead monsters who can feel and notice their surroundings; fall in love, and progressively become more humanized.

  • Zombies: Are They Real or Something of Imagination?

    1546 Words  | 4 Pages

    Concepts are how we give meaning to everyday things. We make, name, communicate, and imagine concepts all day everyday; concepts are vital to understanding this world we live in. A concept is an abstract idea or a cognitive unit of meaning. Zombies, for example, are a concept, but where did this concept of the living dead arise? Is there some religious link to this concept or is it an image of imagination? A zombie is defined as a fictional undead demon or a person in a rapt state being controlled

  • Continuing fascination in popular culture

    1565 Words  | 4 Pages

    Zombies The continuing fascination with the zombie motif in popular culture, including literature, film, television, and video games, points to the fact that zombies are of greater significance in our cultural psyche than simple vehicles for inducing easy fear. At the same time that the zombies themselves hold this weight, the fear of zombification - the threat of losing one’s selfhood and becoming one of the undead - holds an equal, if not greater, fascination for individuals as well. Terrifying

  • Dawn Of The Living Dead Analysis

    2876 Words  | 6 Pages

    fear of death and of dying. Zombies have also been represented as a physical manifestation of the flaws of humanity, such as mindless, joyless consumerism. (McGregor) George R. Romero modernized the concept of the “zombie” in the film “Night of the Living Dead”, which revitalized the genre and reintroduced it to mainstream audiences. In Romero’s films, zombies are not the main antagonist, and instead, the villains are usually other human beings, making it so that zombies are presented as a physical

  • Disaster Preparedness: Zombie Apocalypse Campaign Through Relevant Media Outlets

    1951 Words  | 4 Pages

    disaster preparedness. Daigle concluded – based on his personal affinity to zombie culture – that there are a similarities to the items one would need in a disaster kit and to those necessary to survive a zombie attack and that this unique connection would be relevant to a zombie crazed society. Realistic shows that depict the horrifying life of surviving a disease prone society, such as: The Walking Dead (a popular television series on AMC), have citizens convinced that the pragmatic story telling

  • Frontline Zombieism

    2277 Words  | 5 Pages

    there has been a huge increase of zombie related media in American pop-culture. Humanity has faced numerous crises and overcome them every time. The question has arisen that if a zombie epidemic were to occur would the United States have the ability to deal with it? The answer is yes. The United States has the ability to accept, adapt, and overcome an outbreak of such proportion. The U.S. has the manpower to rival the zombies’ growing numbers. The military and medical research staff have the technology

  • Everything You Ever Wanted to Know About Zombies

    873 Words  | 2 Pages

    Zombies have established a hold on the people of the twenty-first century. There are books, movies, TV shows, and video games about zombies. AMC’s “The Walking Dead” is a TV show about a group of people trying to survive the zombie apocalypse. While fans of the show may already love zombies, some fans watch the show with little knowledge on what zombies really are. Matt Mogk’s “Everything You Ever Wanted to Know About Zombies” is a book that is written to inform readers on everything they would want

  • World War Z Movie Analysis

    731 Words  | 2 Pages

    “Get back in your car!!!” The policeman was yelling at Gerry to tell him that something was not right and he would be safer in his car. As soon as the policeman said “Remain with your family…” he was mauled over by a huge 18-wheeler that was driving out of control down the middle of the street. Gerry floored the gas pedal as he speeded for safety, but was instantly halted as an ambulance ran slap into the driver side of the car. As Gerry and his wife, Karin, awoke from the crash, his ears were ringing

  • Zombie Apocalypse Rules

    726 Words  | 2 Pages

    Rules and procedures do apply when it comes to making it through the multiples days of the vast world of zombies. One may want to make sure he follows some of the main key points and rules of surviving, a zombie outbreak. Keep to these very concrete rules and regulations to be prepared and make it more than one day in the outbreak. 1. Supplies are needed

  • Tom And Benny Imura Character Analysis

    1498 Words  | 3 Pages

    Tom and Benny Imura live in a post-apocalyptic world where zombies have taken over most of the land and the remaining human survivors stay locked behind tall walls or fences. Benny is about to turn 15, and in the survivor town of Mountainside, that means he must get a job or he would lose half his rations. His older brother Tom wants him to join the family business. Tom is a renowned zombie hunter. But Benny isn’t interested in having anything to do with his brother, even if he “got to whack some

  • Romero vs Brooks

    868 Words  | 2 Pages

    The zombie sequence has become extremely popular with the increase of novels and films recently produced. George Romero and Maximillian “Max” Brooks are two popular screenwriters focusing on zombie stories and horror films. George Romero is an American-Canadian film director and producer best known for his horror film Night of the Living Dead (Staff, 2012). Max Brooks is an American horror author and screenwriter best known for his novel and now film World War Z (Staff, 2012). Romero and Brooks

  • World War Z Movie Review: World War Z

    1610 Words  | 4 Pages

    Gary wakes up he is accompanied by scientist that he has to convince that he is working for the United Nations. After Gerry convinces them he tells them that he has to get to the Wing B part of the lab which is full of the virus spreading mindless zombies. Why? The cure to save the world is in that Wing. As Gerry is walking through the wing he stays silent as he does not want to attract any unwanted attention, but as soon as he opens the door…it creeks and the race is on. Gerry bolts down the hallway

  • How the Portrayal of Zombies in Literature Reflect the Beliefs of a Given Era

    2173 Words  | 5 Pages

    monsters teach us?” (Seifert 62) Before one can talk about zombies, one must first understand what a zombie is. The Oxford English Dictionary is known to be the most comprehensive dictionary in existence, its definition for the word ‘zombie’ may not be up to date anymore. In the dictionary, it describes a zombie as one of the Vodou zombies from Africa and Haiti and not any of the un-dead creatures seen today. Informally, zombies nowadays are described as a very aggressive, reanimated human corpse

  • Chuck Klosterman My Zombies Yourself Analysis

    790 Words  | 2 Pages

    haul of homework is surviving a whole mob of zombies. This is the picture that Chuck Klosterman paints in his article published in The New York Times, “My Zombie, Myself: Why Modern Life Feels Rather Undead.” Having published many books and essays concerning pop culture, Klosterman attempts to uncover the reason why zombies are so popular right now. He concludes that their popularity is a result of the current zombie-like state of our society. Killing zombies is repetitive, and it is no different from

  • Apocalyptic Strain In Popular Culture Analysis

    1091 Words  | 3 Pages

    that zombies are calming people’s fears? Everywhere people look they would find zombies being used in almost every possible way. Zombies could be found in tv shows, movies, and books/comic-books. Overall the fear that we all have is the unknown and the idea of zombies used to a part of the unknown. Soon, the fear of the unknown has become the ideal “American Dream” for the people. This was an idea from an author, Paul A. Cantor, who wrote an article called, “The Apocalyptic Strain in Popular Culture:

  • How Have Zombies Changed American Culture

    1114 Words  | 3 Pages

    Zombies, the ghoulish creatures who creatures who once represented widely spread fears are no longer fear causing monsters. Zombies have changed with our culture just as we have needed to them to change. Zombies now serve as the happy hour to most people since they allow humans to indulge in apocalyptic fantasies and create outrageous ways to glorify slaughter. The legend of zombies started as a Haitian slave tale. Zombies served as the embodiment of fear of being a prisoner, even while being dead

  • Analysis Of 'Our Zombies, Ourselves'

    758 Words  | 2 Pages

    folklore from diverse cultures around the world. The mythological world usually contains myths and stories about fantastic beasts, immortal gods and goddesses, unearthly beings, and bizarre creatures that rule or roam the depths of the earth. Since the rise of the internet, classic myths like mermaids, vampires, dragons, werewolves, zombies, and unicorns continue to have a certain appeal to the public. Due to this advancement of technology, myths like vampires and zombies can tap into people’s needs

  • The Zombie Craze

    653 Words  | 2 Pages

    movies and related media. Among zombie movies, eight of the top ten best sellers have been in the last ten years. Why is it that a concept that came into the public eye in the thirties with the release of “White Zombie” only became popular in the last ten years? Zombies were born of Caribbean and bayou voodoo. They weren’t undead and flesh seeking, as society knows them today. They were people who were highly suggestible and didn’t think for themselves, being controlled by the voodoo practitioner