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T h e Po l it ic al Ec o no my o f
Zombies
BY JOHN POW E RS
http://airshipdaily.com/the-political-economy-of-zombies
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I first heard what zombies meant in terms of politics sometime back in the mid-'80s,
right about the time Margaret Thatcher told the world, "There is no alternative." I was in
high school and hungry for an alternative. I read counter-culture classics like The
Dharma Bums and tertiary tales like The Electric Kool-Aid Acid Test. I looked to sci-fi
like Stranger in a Strange Land and Neuromancer, as well as the pseudo-philosophy of
The Fountainhead and Atlas Shrugged.
I did not look to zombies. To my mind the voodoo drum mesmerism of prewar movies
like White Zombie reflected the xenophobia, fear-mongering and racism of America's
apartheid past. I remember my high school friends trying to convince me of the merits
the Vietnam-era Night of the Living Dead, telling me that the film wasn't racist but a
comment on racism. I wouldn't take the bait. I lumped George Romero's now-classic
zombie film with the B&W crap that preceded it, and dismissed the more recent R-rated
full-color zombie splatter-fests as gory torture porn. I told myself I had more refined
tastes. The monsters I was fascinated with in the 1980s were vampires.2
I remember thinking that my friends' interest in zombies was not just grotesque, it was
nostalgic. Zombies were the dregs of a past I wanted nothing to do with. Giving
credence to that idea was something I had learned about the meaning of zombies versus
vampires: When Republicans are in the White House, Americans tend to fixate on
vampires the idea being that vampires are an expression of an anxiety that was under
threat of a parasitic elites. When Democrats are in the White House, zombies loom large;
here the idea is that zombies express a fear of the unwashed masses, of mob rule.
That political meaning is an implicit memory. I have no idea when I heard that, who
might have told me or in what context I would have learned it, but it was worth
remembering because it meant my interest in vampires made me a man of my times.
And it's worth mentioning not because it was wrong or right, but because whether or
not zombies ever represented Americans' fear of the unrestrained unwashed, they don't
anymore.
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Zombies in Revolt
The first time I was cognizant that zombies might no longer mean what I had grown up
being told they meant was during the unexpected sight of Occupy Wall Street protesters
dressed as zombies taunting the 1%. I was familiar with the phenomenon of zombie
walks absurdist flash mob street theater so I wrote the association off to protesters
making a pun on "zombie capitalism." But looking back, I no longer think so.
Sometime in the years leading up to September 17, 2011, zombies had gone from being
associated with a terror of mob rule to the promise of release from an inescapably allencompassing system. To be clear: Zombies were not being equated with corporate
capitalism they had become the revolution itself. Zombies had become the alternative
to the system with no alternative.
As a movement, Occupy is notoriously hard to pin down. No one person can wholly
speak for a movement that is built on the concept of a leaderless, non-hierarchical
order. But the anthropologist David Graeber, who is a self-described anarchist and was
an active participant in Occupy Wall Street protests, is someone who can be fairly
described as one of the protest movement's intellectual guiding lights, so his ideas are a
good place to begin looking for meaning.
Although I have no idea what zombies mean to Graeber, I have a pretty clear idea what
he thinks about capitalism and although he may be an anarchist, on the subject of
capitalism he's no naif. He wrote an entire book on the history of credit, modestly titled,
Debt: The First 5000 Years.
To begin, Graeber is careful to make the distinction between markets, which are
ancient; capitalism, which is modern; and the particular strain of capitalism that the
Occupiers were protesting, which is even more recent, beginning about the time Danny
Boyle and other New Wave zombie guys and gals were coming of age. In his essay, "A
Practical Utopian's Guide to the Coming Collapse," Graeber explains:
The last thirty years has come to be known as the age of neoliberalism one
dominated by a revival of the long-since-abandoned nineteenth-century
creed that held that free markets and human freedom in general were
ultimately the same thing.
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When Joss Whedon made the case for Mitt Romney being the candidate "to put this
country back on the path to the zombie apocalypse," he was lampooning the R.O.I.
nihilism of Romney's neoliberalism because, for a great many people, acting "as if return
on investment were the only measure of success" is nihilism. As Graeber explains, most
of us need to believe in some form of redemptive purpose to give our actions meaning,
but capitalism "doesn't work if you have a universal horizon." According to Graeber, the
conceptual divide is even wider, because while most of us have a need to believe in a
redemptive future, neoliberals need to believe in a looming catastrophe.
Graeber argues that this pessimism is structural; it serves a crucial purpose within
capitalism: to stave off over-optimism. He argues that the capitalist game to buy low
and sell high is a speculative game, but in order for the game to be played, the players
need to believe in some sort of looming catastrophe; the function of that catastrophe is
to prevent speculation from becoming infinite speculation. (Greaber gives the example
of the 2008 global financial collapse as the result of unbridled speculation.) In other
words, capitalism needs an apocalypse.3
To illustrate his point, Graeber uses the example of the 19th-century Chicago
industrialists4 who built their mansions along an "incredibly beautiful street."5
They built there, he was told, "because all of the late 19th century capitalists were so
convinced that a revolution was going to happen any week and that they were all going
to be hanging from trees. So they all relocate to the place where they could easiest
evacuate." The road they built their mansions along led to the closest army base.6
As the threat of a communist revolution faded, Graeber argues a series of plausible and
looming catastrophes (nuclear war, ecological collapse, global climate change) have
taken over the function of staving off infinite speculation. But, as we all know (again, see
the 2008 global financial collapse), those existential threats have not been enough.
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Zombies in Hollywood
In the 19th century, arcades and factories were the cathedrals of capitalism. In the 20th
century, skyscrapers were.7 The cathedrals of the current neoliberal era are blockbuster
movies.8
Those who direct, produce and star in these films are the Abbot Sugers of our age. They
attract enormous resources and oversee the overarching symbolic programs those
resources are put to.
Traditionally, Medieval sculpture was decorated carvings of demons and souls in
torment. The imagery was really graphic (horror fans would be right at home), and there
are two different ways to interpret these images of Hell. The first and more conventional
reading is that Hell is the stick: The carvings of demons and suffering souls at the
entrances of cathedrals were there to warn the illiterate masses to behave.
The second, less conventional reading is that Hell is the carrot. This idea is that the men
who would have carved those images would have themselves been illiterate peons and
that, rather than illustrating the dangers of damnation to the illiterate masses, what we
are looking at are fantasies of revenge. Those Medieval carvings of Hell are remarkable
for showing the naked flesh of ladies and lords burned and skewered right next to sinful
peasants and bondsmen. As Jules Michelet explained: "The medieval peasant would
have burst but for his hope in the Devil." Hell is one of the earliest artistic visualization
of a democratic justice; zombies are the most recent.
This conceptual divide in interpretations of Medieval sculpture sets the stage for a
curious relationship between those who produce Hollywood blockbusters and those
who watch them. Hollywood producers belong to the class of speculators who, in order
to participate in the system within which they thrive, need to dread catastrophe but
the audiences who pay to see those films have no such need.
For movie audiences, the mainstream, the 99%, catastrophes aren't something to dread;
they are something to look forward to. They are a catharsis, a conceptual clearing of the
deck. They are the implosion of the banking towers at the end of Fight Club, they are the
destruction of the White House in Independence Day, they are the wholesale
destruction of the entire global map in 2012. While part of the fun can be watching the
spectacle of catastrophe itself, it is also what the catastrophe means.
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The joy of premillennial zombie movies was centered around violence, gore, torture and
horror, but those films also contained the seed of a New Wave: the utopian image of
having the world to yourself. Danny Boyle's great innovation in 28 Days Later was to
push the violence, viscera and terror into the background, and to pull the utopia to the
fore. He did this by concentrating not on the catastrophe itself, but starting his film in
the aftermath. Without the aid of digital technology, Boyle famously showed Cillian
Murphy wandering alone through downtown London. (Boyle evidently used pretty girls
to hold lorry drivers out of the shot while filming early in the morning without permits.)
I remember seeing Boyle's film when it came out in theaters. I went to see it, not
because it was a zombie movie, but despite that. Everyone I knew was buzzing about the
opening scene in London. It was that image that got me and a lot of other "not into
zombies" guys and gals to go see 28 Days Later. It was that same image that got people
excited to see I am Legend: It was Manhattan emptied. It was the end of buying and
selling. For the majority of us who live within the capitalist system but aren't of the
neoliberal breed of capitalist, catastrophe means no more mortgage payments, no cell
phone surveillance, never again having to bicker over what is or isn't a preexisting
condition. Catastrophe voids all obligation, makes the world anew.
But until now, zombie movies have all been limited catastrophes the farmhouse or
mall standing in for the whole world. These synecdoches have been excuses to show
violent gory deaths, opportunities to lambaste the underbelly of human nature.
Although both 28 Days Later and I am Legend depicted a zombie apocalypse on a large
scale, World War Z is the first film that attempts to show zombies as a realistic global
catastrophe in its entirety. But unlike the pleasure that Danny Boyle showed the zombie
catastrophe aftermath to be, the cathedral builders of World War Z served us what they
thought we wanted: a joyless and pointedly non-revolutionary catastrophe. (World War
Z SPOILER: )
The problem for Hollywood may be systemic. Blockbusters like I am Legend and World
War Z cost hundreds of millions of dollars to produce, distribute and publicize. That
requires the backing of vast amounts of capital or, more pointedly, the backing of
capitalists. Cathedrals, no matter how wily the stone carvers9 or progressive the Abbot
Sugars,10 are going to reflect the dominant political attitudes of their society's ruling
ideology; for Hollywood blockbusters, that is neoliberalism.
Graeber believes that neoliberalism, judged as a political project, has "succeeded
magnificently in convincing the world that capitalism and not just capitalism, but
exactly the financialized, semi-feudal capitalism we happen to have right now is the
only viable economic system." As he sees it, the political project of neoliberalism is to
ensure that "under no conditions can alternatives, or anyone proposing alternatives, be
seen to experience success."
If Graeber is right, the likelihood of a revolutionary zombie apocalypse blockbuster film
is slight. So it may be that representing a zombie catastrophe as the opening onto an
alternative world, a world better than today's, is something that can only be pointed to
by smaller "indie" films like 28 Days Later or satires like Zombieland. And actually
imagining a utopia is altogether beyond what any filmmaker could find financing to
do.11
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Zombies in Literature
So to understand zombies as revolution, we have to turn away from blockbusters. To
understand the zombie protesters marching on Wall Street, we need to look at more
than empty streets. For me, it wasn't until I read Colson Whitehead's Zone One that I
began to feel the shape what the zombie catastrophe had come to mean, and it wasn't
until I finished reading Max Brooks's World War Z that I could name it for what it was.
That's not to say Whitehead and Brooks wrote similar stories; their novels couldn't be
more different.
Zone One is a zombie dystopia. Some will argue that all zombie stories are dystopias, but
that's not what I mean. I mean that Whitehead manages to show us what is good about
zombie fantasies by withholding it. "If you want a picture of the future," George Orwell
wrote in 1984, "imagine a boot stamping on a human face forever." If you want to
understand Zone One, imagine the corporate shareholders of Timberland collecting
their licensing fees on the trademarked sole of that boot every time it stomps on a
human face forever.
Like 28 Days Later, Whitehead skips the catastrophe, but he takes the neoliberal political
project to its conclusion. He imagines the capitalists fighting not to save the world, but
to save capitalism as the world crumbles. Whitehead's protagonist, Mark Spitz, is
surrounded by the material abundance of mass human extinction. Zone One casts into
sharp contrast how important the supermarket scene in 28 Days Later is, along with the
montage of mall pillage in Dawn of the Dead and in what is possibly the finest
moment of all ecstatic wealth destruction in the zombie movie canon there is the
destruction of a Southwestern themed gift shop in Zombieland. Whitehead's Spitz never
has the opportunity to experience anything like that level of anarchic release. Spitz isn't
even supposed to break glass.
In Whitehead's imagination, the forces that be the remnants of the U.S. government
still holding on to power and working to beat back the zombies and restart the world
have founded their efforts on preserving pre-apocalypse property rights. Spitz is part of
a cleanup crew searching a largely zombie-free downtown Manhattan for undead
stragglers. That should be a party right?12
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In Max Brooks's World War Z novel, there are no shopping sprees, no gift shop
decimations or mall orgies. But unlike Zone One, World War Z is a "eucatastopia." Allow
me to back into an explanation of that ungainly term slowly, beginning with the end, the
part that rhymes with "utopia." Utopia is a neologism. It was a pun derived from the
Greek that simultaneously meant "good/no place." The problem with creating a good/no
place is something the first utopian, Sir Thomas More, understood very well: Utopias
requires severing all ties with the past. In More's original 1516 Utopia, this was achieved
by digging a wide, deep trench, cutting off what once was once a peninsula to create an
island on which a benevolent dictator created the ideal society. In World War Z, the
zombies are the trench. The trench is revolution. The first story Brooks tells us is of a
zombie outbreak that takes place in a nameless village on the outskirts of the Three
Gorges Reservoir in China.13 While diving for salvage in the flooded remains of his
family's village, a boy is bitten and brings the contagion back to land. Whether or not the
boy is a true "patient zero" we never learn for sure. The true origin and exact mechanism
of the zombie plague is left obscured by Brooks, but the transformation is slow enough
that the threat spreads like a meme and breaks out like a revolution.
David Graeber argues that, "In the wake of a revolution, ideas that had been considered
veritably lunatic fringe quickly become the accepted currency of debate." This is the
transformation that Brooks's narrative convincingly imagines. Most of us think of
revolution as localized events, as discrete political upheavals that can be and are laid out
as legible narratives. But Graeber argues that revolutions are a "planetwide
transformations of political common sense." Things that might look like they start in a
plaza, like Zuccotti Park or Tahrir Square, or in one city, like Boston or Paris, have far
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Zombies in Utopia
The sci-fi author and self-described "accidental utopian" Kim Stanely Robinson has
made a career of trying to imagine utopias. In his latest novel, 2312, he imagines a future
in which the Earth is still mired in tradition, hierarchy and inequity, an environmental
and economic sinkhole. Meanwhile, throughout the rest of the solar system, a utopian
trans-human, non-capitalist society thrives. The book culminates with Robinson
imagining a peaceful global revolution sweeping Earth. 2312 is a great book. Robinson is
one of my all-time favorite authors, and his imagination of that future revolution is
striking in its originality but it also struck me as upside down. I don't like to think of
myself as a doctrinaire thinker, but Robinson's imagined velvet revolution left me
uneasy or at least unsatisfied. 2312 tells the story of a revolution literally handed down
from above: conceived, planned and then dropped from space on an unsuspecting
populace below. As much as I liked the book, I found the way Robinson conceived of
revolution to be a disturbingly top-down, almost neoconservative vision.14
To be fair, Robinson is a Northern Californian progressive and set himself a difficult
challenge. He was aware that revolutions, as often as not, devolve into violence and
thuggery, and he wanted to imagine a peaceful transformation. And Robinson freely
admits that realistically imagining how utopias might come about is not easy:
We can't imagine the bridge over the Great Trench, given the world we're in,
and the massively entrenched power of the institutions that shape our lives
and the guns that are still there under the table. Indeed right on the table.
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Zombies in Eucatastopia
Eucatastrophe is a neologism cooked up by the language scholar and fantasy novelist J.
R. R. Tolkien. By affixing the Greek prefix , which means "good," to catastrophe, he
coined the word to mean "the sudden happy turn in a story which pierces you with a joy
that brings tears (which I argued it is the highest function of fairy-stories to produce)."
Tolkien believed that "the Resurrection was the greatest 'eucatastrophe' possible in the
greatest Fairy Story."
I'm confident that Tolkien would not have liked the idea of using the Reign of Terror as
an example of the eucatastrophic (partly because he seems too much of a Brit and
Anglican to have put the French Revolution alongside the Resurrection), but revolution
was the very first thing I thought of when a friend explained the term to me recently.
And after reading Max Brooks' World War Z novel, I can't see zombies as anything but
revolution or, to use Tolkien's word, a eucatastrophe: a sudden turn away from a very
plausible doom.
Brooks's novel ends with the world in shambles. The catastrophe has passed over us,
and survivors are beginning to rebuild. The whales are gone, the oil fields of Saudi
Arabia have been destroyed, a number of nuclear exchanges have taken place, and
Lhasa is the most populous city in the world. Throughout the book, Brooks manages to
deliver the sort of reversals of fortune we cherish in our catastrophes. At least part of
Brooks's project is a global Saturnalia: A thinly disguised Josh Bolton has been reduced
to shoveling shit as part of an effort to develop an experimental biofuel, Cuba has
become the world's economic powerhouse, the U.S. authorities have abandoned
neoliberalism and have returned to the tools of the New Deal.
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John Powers is a sculptor who lives and works in New York. He writes about art and culture on his blog, Star
Wars Modern.
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