Skip to main content

Home/ Ferrin Humanities II/ Group items tagged Zombies

Rss Feed Group items tagged

ashleykung

How Modern Life Is Like a Zombie Onslaught - NYTimes.com - 12 views

    • Sheldon T
       
      This is a possible reason, but not completely accurate, in my opinion. "The Walking Dead" is a show about apocalypse survivors, not a zombie killing maniac. Perhaps people were also simply curious about how to survive an apocalypse (or just looking for good entertainment). Also, while zombie killing may be "uncomplicated" and repetitive, our lives aren't usually like that. We encounter challenges, and solve them either individually or in a group. I think the author got this aspect of his thesis wrong. Modern life may be like slaughtering zombies, but it's not as "uncomplicated" as he makes it sound.
    • Sheldon T
       
      The author implies that you will always be doing the same thing for your entire life, but this isn't really true. Unlike a zombie apocalypse in which the future seems really bleak, real life has many opportunities that come along: promotions, love, vacationing, retirement, etc. I think the author is overlooking the fact that not everybody works in a cubicle or does other boring and repetitive work. Not all 5.3 million people were, that's for sure. If people were relating to the show, it was because of the challenges faced by the survivors, not the onslaught of zombies.
  •  
    According to this author, the reason we have a renewed and growing fascination with zombies can be understood when we look at modern life. As we begin our look at the Industrial Revolution and Modernization, reflect on whether or not you agree with this author's point of view. Add at least two comments or responses to other student comments.
  • ...15 more comments...
  •  
    One of my favorite points made by this author is that in popular culture it is possible to relate our everyday lives and Zombie killing. Day after day, people slave away at desks, writing out code, responding to emails, and doing things over and over again and getting paid to do so. In a post-apocalyptic state we find the exact same concept, except you are being paid in being able to live. You take zombie after zombie down, but at the end of the day there are still more left. Never will the war be over, never will there be no more zombies. At the end of the work day, you know that tomorrow, and the next day, and the next day, you will have to come back and continue what you just finished. What are we in this society? Are we the zombies, or are we something worse? Are we the all-singing, all-dancing crap of the world?
  •  
    I enjoyed another point made by the author. The Twilight series was made into film and the original film was released in 2008. Since then, many other series have popped up. True Blood also started in 2008, and as a fan of the show I advocate for its viewing much more than Twilight simply because it can tackle real life issues if need be. However, popular culture has since decided to move its focus to Zombies. In 2009, Zombieland, starring an Oscar winning cast, was released and was hugely successful because of its no holds barred look at gruesome Zombie comedy. The Walking Dead started in 2010, starting a huge fan base that continues to grow. Warm Bodies took a couple young actors and made a zombie flick out of it, that actually used Romance as a tool to win over the audience. What is the difference between Zombies and Vampires? In the article, the author states that the primary difference is that people can have a favorite vampire, or even identify with their problems. A zombie is just something you can kill. I agree with this, however as Warm Bodies (2013) showed me, there can be an identification in things such as Zombies.
  •  
    Personally I don't see the fascination of zombies, though it's interesting as to what this author said as to the reason why it's popular. Simply because it's similar to our day to day life except it's a way less complicated version such. For instance what he said, "Zombie killing is philosophically similar to reading and deleting 400 work e-mails on Monday morning". I see what he means by that in a sense that it's a drag and redundant. Though I reckon you should get a job in the field you're interested in so that sort of thing could be avoided. We don't live in the days in which the only occupation is farming, we have plenty of choices. Plus zombie attacks are something we can't avoid, frankly if you don't like the work you do in your job, then you can always find another. It may not be easy to do so, but in the end it's really up to you as to what you want to do. "Zombies are just so easy to kill." That is really the only reason I can possibly understand the affection for them. Sometimes, for me at least, there are things I just want to get rid of. That for instance are bugs, though the only problem is that I don't even want to go anywhere near them to start with, so getting rid of them is kind of a hard task to do. Therefore if I had pick out a relationship between people's interest in zombies, my guess would be that zombies are something that can just die (or technically die again since they are dead) and we won't even feel bad about them because they aren't really 'human' nor 'alive'.
  •  
    I agree with the author in that we are all communal zombies. Nowadays, everyone seems to be very much attached to their computers and iphones as if life cannot go on without them. Technological advancements have indeed helped us and made life easier in many ways, but at the same time they corrupt the minds. It is up to the individual to get rid of these bad habits and take control of his life rather than being controlled by machines.
  •  
    I think the reason why monsters, vampires and zombies have flourished is because movie makers want to tap into the likes of the audience. In this way, they can make big money while the movie is still popular; and they can always reverse the trend as the market changes. This is evidenced by the revival of the Swedish film "Let the Right One In" due to the success of Twilight.
  •  
    "The Walking Dead" on AMC is benefitting from record breaking ratings, and the audience of the show seem more interested than ever in the concept of zombies. Clemson University Professor Sarah Lauro states that there is a direct correlation between the "zombie culture" and capitalism and the economy. She has been researching about the zombie culture for years, and she has discovered that the rise in popularity of such culture happens when a large number of people are beginning to get unemployed. Instead of viewing the zombie culture as a type of trend, she believes that it can be more conveniently stated as a metaphor for the way that people are feeling powerless within the system. Not only does modern life relate with zombies due to the fact that it is similar to the act fo repetitively killing zombies, however, I believe it can also be interpreted as a type of "silent protest." People are sick and tired of repetitive daily lives, and want a change from such lifestyle.
  •  
    i agree with his thinking. everyday life if you think about it is so repetitive. what seems like an easy and fun thing to do later comes to run your life. like making your facebook account, it seems like a good idea at first, socializing with friends and al that, but for many people, it becomes a necessity that they must check every hour of the day. to me, everyday life does remind me of zombies. everybody walks around and does the same thing everyday, work, study, life. it keeps pushing at us, and we keep pushing back. although it makes us sound like the survivor fighting the zombie horde, it really does not matter. both the zombies and the survivors are just doing one thing over and over again. zombies try to kill you, you try to kill zombies
  •  
    When I read this article, I found it fascinating of how it examined the psychology underneath our burning addiction of the idea of zombies. However, I think that the author's idea and even our obsession of zombies would not be true if the Industrial Revolution never happened. Before the Industrial Revolution, agriculture and village communities were the dominant life style during that age. The only thing that mattered at that time was to survive and to serve for the greater good (such as helping family, joining the army to serve the king, etc.). This meant that fulfilling oneself's desire was the last priority. When the Industrial Revolution began, products and goods at markets were sold at an affordable price that middle and low classes could afford, increasing the general welfare of the public. With more wealth, people started focusing on their selves instead on relying on others. The point is, before the Industrial Revolution, people had tighter and more social relationships and when they had to face a fear or problem, they usually relied on their community. But now with the industrial revolution passed, everyone relies on technology to solve their problems, which is where zombies come in place. They serve as a self-esteem booster to make people feel themselves better.
  •  
    @James H I strongly agree with you that The Walking Dead is a very efficient example of proving the fact that we want to see our fears conquered. "The Walking Dead" had over 2.5 million views on the first few episodes, which proves the fact that many people really would like to see their fears and problems easily killed
  •  
    The author also states that an alternative reason for the public's immense craving for zombies was because "Zombies are easy to kill." I believe that overanalyzing her point will just add a lot more complexity to the topic. If I just simply think about the reason to why I enjoy playing zombie games and watching zombie shows, its merely because zombies are just so vulnerable. Just like the gratifying feeling you get when you feel multiple buzzes from the mosquito swatter, and when you kill hundreds of zombies with a single machine gun in a survival game, I believe killing numerous extremely-vulnerable zombies just have the same effect. Thus, generating popularity for the "zombie culture."
  •  
    I agree with the metaphor that the author uses to describe the similarity between a zombie and a human. Every day as humans, we establish routines that we repeat on a daily basis. This action is continuous and we tend to never stop. Similarly, the author gave an example of killing a zombie. "IF THERE'S ONE THING we all understand about zombie killing, it's that the act is uncomplicated: you blast one in the brain from point-blank range (preferably with a shotgun). That's Step 1. Step 2 is doing the same thing to the next zombie that takes its place. Step 3 is identical to Step 2, and Step 4 isn't any different from Step 3. Repeat this process until (a) you perish, or (b) you run out of zombies. That's really the only viable strategy."
  •  
    I also agree with the author when he states "But above all, do not assume that the war is over, because it never is. The zombies you kill today will merely be replaced by the zombies of tomorrow." I believe that what the author is trying to say is that in life, every action has a consequence, and there will always be good times as well as hardships. Yet we have to face it with a pinch of salt, because there really isn't anything you can do about it. It is the way life works.
  •  
    "There are slow zombies, and there are fast zombies- that's pretty much the spectrum of zombie diversity." This part actually made me laugh out loud, mostly because of how ridiculously simple and true the sentence is. Zombies in a traditional sense don't really have feelings or minds of their own; their only instincts are to eat, destroy that which cannot be eaten, and to stay alive/undead. There is no actual diversity amongst zombies, unlike in humans. We have such a wide range and spectrum of inner and outer feelings and characteristics that it is entirely possible to be standing in the same room as someone whose qualities are completely opposite to yours. This, I think, is what's so beautiful yet terrible about the human race in general. As the diversity of our species is so great, we have some pretty terrible people, such as serial killers, as well as good people in our world, such as humanitarians. I think that this face of the human race is what helps defines us as humans. The moment we get too lost into technology and stop recognizing this, as Alice Gregory noted, we become the soulless undead ourselves. For a while, we forget who we are just to go online, and we mindlessly consume what we see on the web until we decide that we're bloated and go offline. Talking to someone in real life as they're searching things up is almost like talking to a wall, as they're engrossed in whatever they're doing and won't respond very actively or with much character at all.
  •  
    I found this overall article to be kind of funny, because I wasn't sure what the author was trying to convey through this article. He was just describing about zombies and how our lives seem to focus around it. However, I liked the analogies he made by comparing it to checking our mail inboxes because that was interesting. It gave a general idea of what he was saying about zombies.
  •  
    I disagree with the author when he says that zombies are just so easy to kill. I disagree with that statement because I've seen movies when a zombie has to take more than just putting a bullet to the head to die.
  •  
    @Tom I agree with what you said about vampires and zombies, and how the previous movies/tv shows caused another to make a story out of it. Like with The Vampire Diaries, it came out in 2009, a year after Twilight. Like Twilight, it was about a human girl who fell in love with a vampire. I think what producers/directors are trying to do nowadays is change a few plots and characters and other important factors of a previous film/tv series that was popular and try to gain their audience.
  •  
    I kind of disagree with the author when he says that killing zombies is very similar to our daily lives. For example its repetitive, I don't think that in life all you do is the same thing everyday. I don't see the point in living if you have to do the exact same thing over and over again for the rest of your life. I mean, I agree with repeating some things, such as eating lunch, showering, sleeping. But you definitely come across new things in life. So yeah, I don't fully agree with the author when he says that.
cryschan

How Modern Life Is Like a Zombie Onslaught - NYTimes.com - 1 views

  • When we think critically about monsters, we tend to classify them as personifications of what we fear
    • cryschan
       
      This is true because sometimes people describe monsters as something that scares them, making there no 'one type' of monster. The monster that we fear of is always the one that is created and imagined by our own fears.
  • depictions of their unconscious fears
  • more attracted to allegories of how their day-to-day existence
  • ...7 more annotations...
  • Every zombie war is a war of attrition
    • cryschan
       
      I agree with this paragraph because it is true. There's always just one motive in a zombie movie, and that's to survive and kill the zombies. In real life, once you have a job, your only motive is to survive and earn enough money for yourself. It's just an endless and boring cycle where people start to lose themselves and just go into 'zombie-mode' and just do everything repetitively everyday.
  • It’s hard not to think ‘death drive’ every time I go on the Internet,” she writes. “Opening Safari is an actively destructive decision. I am asking that consciousness be taken away from me.
  • . Zombies are like the Internet and the media and every conversation we don’t want to have.
  • enemy is relentless and colossal, but also uncreative and stupid.
  • nostalgia for teenage chastity,
  • contemporary fiction consumers tend to prefer long serialized novels that can be read rapidly.
  • Zombie love, however, is always communal. If you dig zombies, you dig the entire zombie concept. It’s never personal.
  •  
    I thought that it was interesting that the author said "The more you fill them with bullets, the more interesting they become. " I agree with this one hundred percent. Nowadays people are not just looking for a good story line in a movie but they are also looking for realistic characters.
  •  
    the author said that "the Walking Dead" on AMC, a stunning 83 percent more than the 2.9 million who watched the Season 4 premiere of "Mad Men." I think that this is true because as i previously said people thrive for things to look real. With our technology that we have today we could make zombies look very real, so thats why I think many people watch movies and t.v shows with zombies.
Yingli Sieh

How Modern Life Is Like a Zombie Onslaught - NYTimes.com - 0 views

    • Yingli Sieh
       
      From my own experience with zombie culture, zombies really aren't that easy to kill.
    • Yingli Sieh
       
      I think this is a good metaphor for life; what do you do when your time is almost up, when you're on the run for your life and your days are numbered? Zombie culture gets us thinking about what we'd actually want to do with our last days, and the sacrifices we would or would not make to survive or help other survive.
    • ashleykung
       
      I totally agree with what you said above. I think that one of the reasons why so many people are into zombie culture is because of the adrenaline rush they get when they imagine how it would be like to be the last human survivors of a zombie apocalypse. I mean- if you've lasted that long, you're a badass, survivor, and intelligent all in your own right. It's also psychologically stimulating to challenge yourself and to ask yourself what you would do in such a primitive environment, and also offers you a peek into who you really are as a person.
    • Yingli Sieh
       
      I don't think it's accurate to say that if you dig zombies you 'dig the entire zombie concept.' This writer seems to lump all forms of zombie culture together on one united platter, but I've read and watched a variety of material that has provoked extremely different reactions and thoughts with me; if anything, it makes me less interested in zombies, and more interested in the human condition and the way our civilizations struggle to stay together during an apocalypse.
Andrew Szeto

How Modern Life Is Like a Zombie Onslaught - NYTimes.com - 0 views

    • Andrew Szeto
       
      There was actually an interesting proposal on why people enjoy the concept of zombies so much, and the theory stated that it was because of an instinctive and deep-seated hatred of the 'outsider'. In appearance, zombies are similar enough to the living person so as not be hated as something inherently not human, but in behavior, they are always seen as the 'bad guy', because zombies eat living people and that's something that's bad, which is more rare than you'd think in media and in real life. The road to hell is paved with good intentions, and it shows, as no one does anything just because they want to be evil unless they're some kind of psychopath, while zombies are just bad guys who pose a threat to the living without any rhyme or reason. Because of these reasons, it's easy to enjoy zombie media because shunning the 'outsider' is something that people are pretty much hard-wired to do and would probably do all the time if conscience didn't stop them.
Eliza Lai

zombies - 0 views

started by Eliza Lai on 09 Apr 13 no follow-up yet
Eliza Lai

zombies 2 - 0 views

started by Eliza Lai on 09 Apr 13 no follow-up yet
Andrew Szeto

How Modern Life Is Like a Zombie Onslaught - NYTimes.com - 0 views

    • Andrew Szeto
       
      But yeah this is actually pretty true. It also feels a lot more 'relevant' to reality than the xenophobia thing I heard before so yeah.
1 - 7 of 7
Showing 20 items per page