The walking dead live! : essays on the television show / edited by Philip L. Simpson and Marcus Mallard.
Material type: TextPublication details: Lanham : Rowman & Littlefield, 2016.Description: xx, 207 pages ; 23 cmISBN:- 9781442271203
- 791.4572 WAL
Item type | Current library | Call number | Copy number | Status | Date due | Barcode | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Standard Loan | Moylish Library Main Collection | 791.4572 WAL (Browse shelf(Opens below)) | 1 | Available | 39002100630145 |
Enhanced descriptions from Syndetics:
In 2010, The Walking Dead premiered on AMC and has since become the most watched scripted program in the history of basic cable. Based on the graphic novel series by Robert Kirkman, The Walking Dead provides a stark, metaphoric preview of what the end of civilization might look like: the collapse of infrastructure and central government, savage tribal anarchy, and purposeless hordes of the wandering wounded. While the representation of zombies has been a staple of the horror genre for more than half a century, the unprecedented popularity of The Walking Dead reflects an increased identification with uncertain times.
In The Walking Dead Live! Essays on the Television Show, Philip L. Simpson and Marcus Mallard have compiled essays that examine the show as a cultural text. Contributors to this volume consider how the show engages with our own social practices--from theology and leadership to gender, race, and politics--as well as how the show reflects matters of masculinity, memory, and survivor's guilt.
As a product of anxious times, The Walking Dead gives the audience an idea of what the future may hold and what popular interest in the zombie genre means. Providing insight into the broader significance of the zombie apocalypse story, The Walking Dead Live! will be of interest to scholars of sociology, cultural history, and television, as well as to fans of the show.
Includes bibliographical references and index.
Table of contents provided by Syndetics
- Introduction (p. ix)
- I "We Are The Walking Dead": Cross-Composition (p. 1)
- 1 "Zombies 'R' Us": Twenty-first Century America and Historical Inquiry (p. 3)
- 2 Zombies are Real?: Adapting Bazin (p. 19)
- 3 "The Devil You Say!": Zombies, Dante, and Theology (p. 37)
- 4 Take Me to Your Leader: Rick Versus Shane and the Problematic Representation of Leadership (p. 55)
- 5 Peering through the Blinds: Gothic Gaze in Fear the Walking Dead (p. 81)
- II "We Had to Stop Being Out There": Decomposition and Recomposition (p. 89)
- 6 Surviving Time: Zombie Narrative and Chronology (p. 91)
- 7 Confronting Trauma in the Zombie Apocalypse: Witnessing, Survivor Guilt, and Postmemory (p. 109)
- 8 There's a New Sheriff in Town: Hegemonic Masculinity in the Zombie Apocalypse (p. 131)
- 9 Rick Grimes, Eastman, and White Power: Resisting the Suture from a Critical Fan Perspective (p. 155)
- 10 Sects and Violence: The Allegory of Sectarian Conflict in AMC's Zombie Apocalypse (p. 165)
- Bibliography (p. 189)
- Index (p. 195)
- About the Editors and Contributors (p. 205)
Author notes provided by Syndetics
Philip L. Simpson serves as provost of the Titusville Campus of Eastern Florida State College. He is the author of Psycho Paths: Tracking the Serial Killer through Contemporary American Film and Fiction (2000) and Making Murder: The Fiction of Thomas Harris (2010) and coeditor of Stephen King's Contemporary Classics: Reflections on the Modern Master of Horror (2015).Marcus Mallard teaches composition at the University of Central Oklahoma and Oklahoma City Community College.