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First, a bit more“theory.”Anyone reading recent contributions to the scholarly literature on zombies will soon encounter the names of Julia Kristeva and Giorgio Agamben. Kristeva is a Bulgarian-born philosopher, sociologist, psychologist, and feminist who has lived in France since the 1960s. Among the many ideas she is credited with introducinginto contemporary intellectual life is that of “abjection.” In basic terms, this is a condition that is suspended somewhere between “life” and “death,” between existence as a “subject” and existence as an “object.” Something that is abject has been excluded and rejected, has been “marked off” or “cast out.” Such a “thing” threatens to dissolve the definitions onwhich individuality, personality, and identityall rest. The most startling confrontation wehave with the abjectis anencounter with death. The exposure to someone who was once alive but is no longercompels us to recognize that this is the fate that awaits each of us. Consequently, across cultures and religions death has been ritualized andthereby cordoned off from our everyday lives. Difference andseparation have to be maintained, otherwisethe basic categories of existencebreakdown. As a result, the “normal”person’s response to the abject is revulsion, aversion, and horror. (You can look this up in Kristeva, Powers of Horror: An Essay on Abjection, Eng. Translation 1982).Agamben is an Italian philosopher who has written on some of the most troubling issues of the 20th (and now the 21st) century. Heis especially known for propounding the idea of “bare life”—a condition of existence that no rights and protections. “Bare life” can be killed without any of the usual consequences. Forms of life that are biologically “alive” but legally “dead” can be deprived of identity, autonomy, even control of theirownbodiesand minds. The examples Agamben cites includethe millions of people who were incarcerated in Nazi concentration camps during World War II and more recently the millions of “stateless” people who have no permanent home or legal citizenship.Images of refugees streaming into Europe a couple of years ago should come to mind, or for that matter the “caravans”of migrantsreported to beapproaching the US/Mexico border. Think of how these people, or at least some of them, have been treated. (ForAgamben,seeHomo Sacer: Sovereign Power and Bare Life, 1998). Because he has argued that certain policiesof the US government, e.g., towards suspects in the “war on terror,” have reduced human beings to the condition of “bare life,” Agamben has become a controversial figure.On the basis of these snapshots—that’s all they are—in theory, think about the films we have watched so far this semester. Thenwrite an intelligent, well-organized essay on which film, in your opinion, most closely fits the archetype of the zombie as it might be understood in light of the ideas of “abjection”and “bare life.” Youcan doany reading or research that you like, on or off the syllabus (make sure you attribute any explicit borrowing), but don’t put vast amounts of time into this. Write your essay on the basis of what we’ve seen so far, what we’ve read, and what we’ve talked aboutin class.4 to 5 pages, double spaced, e-mailed as a Word attachment to me no later than 4 PM, Friday the 22nd.Watch for an acknowledgement from me that I’ve received your essay. No acknowledgement within 24 hours means I haven’t received your essay, which will have negative consequences.
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‘Abjection’ and ‘Bare Life’
The Serpent and the Rainbow
The film features a vast majority of elements of objection and bare life. Garland & Christopher
(274) indicate that in 1978, Christophe, a Haitian man, dies in French hospital as voodoo parade
marches along his window. He's buried the Catholic traditional way, and during the event, a
mysterious man in black, who was outside the window as Christophe died is present. When the
body is lowered to the grave, the eyes open and sends tears down the cheeks Garland &
Christopher (277). Years later, Dennis Alan, an anthropologist takes a drink from herbs in
Amazon forest, and immediately he experiences a hallucination of the same man who was
dressed in black during Christophe's funeral, among many corpses in the bottomless pit.
From Boston, Alan is funded to look for a drug used to create zombies and there in the forest he
finds Christophe who was buried seven years earlier but now alive. The mysterious man who
attended the funeral in black warns Alan to leave Haiti before being tortured and send to streets.
He later goes to back to Boston with an excellent report regarding the drugs for making zombies.
When he comes back to Haiti, he's sprayed with zombie powder, and he dies. Later on, he wakes
up in his coffin, and Christophe rescues him Garland & Christopher (281). Peytraud (man in
black during the funeral) turned the two characters into zombies whose lives are between lives
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are between ordinary human life and death. In the long run, Alan defeats Peytraud and sends his
soul to hell. While leading bare zombie lives, Peytraud and related zombies were very inhuman;
committing all sorts of crimes, one being to kill people and convert them to Zombies. Christophe
and Alan experienced a bare life, not of their own but und...