I like some zombie stuff - the first season of The Walking Dead and the book "World War Z" are favorites of mine. I've never really understood the oversaturation of it, though, and I've never much cared for stuff in the vein of the 2000s Dawn of the Dead, though I did find 28 Days Later an interesting take since it was an actual disease.
I do find the term "toxic individualism" to be pretty amusing though.
I can't really put my finger on what the appeal is for me, exactly, other than drama. I know with some people they like to think that they'd totally be one of the survivors or whatever. Personally I think if I had enough time to think and thought the world as I knew it had no chance of coming back, I'd probably just off myself. What point would there be in continuing to fight for life and limb in a world like that?
Zombie Fiction and Toxic Individualism
Re: Zombie Fiction and Toxic Individualism
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Re: Zombie Fiction and Toxic Individualism
Its the chance to be exceptional and use skills you excel in that you normally don't get to use in everyday life.FaxModem1 wrote: ↑Thu Nov 15, 2018 10:24 pm Zombie fiction can be anything, from Romero's "Humanity is evil and needs to die", to the film Fido's "Conformity and denial of differences are bad", to Snyder's............... but mostly, zombie fiction is 'civilization ending disaster, only this time it's zombies'. This can lead to various types of stories, but the one that found it's audience is, "Being prepared will make you survive".
Essentially, preppers.
There is an appeal to the individualism of the zombie apocalypse. The air is still the same, the water is still the same, the food is still there, and there's no radiation. Heck, all the electronics and modern conveniences still exist as well. You are still competing with the population, but now you can get away from them and enjoy life how you want to. You don't have to deal with the numerous paperwork, or working a 9 to 5. If you want, you can just conquer a mansion, grab some supplies, build some walls, and boom, you're king of the mountain.
At least, that's the appeal of the fantasy. In reality, if such a thing happened, you're probably one of the countless millions who are already dead and a zombie.
Why is this appealing?
Because in reality, they seem to lack agency. They're either in a dead end job, or a student, or settled down somewhere. And the best they can do is working a dead end job to pay the bills. It's an appeal to frontier fiction, only with it being possible in modern day. Same way that westerns were the heyday programming of the 1950s and 1960s.
Now, whether this is toxic or not is debatable. But I think it's a symptom of a rather sizable group of people being unsatisfied with their lot in life, and not seeming to have the possibility to make a change in it.
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Re: Zombie Fiction and Toxic Individualism
By Zombieland are you referring to the currently airing Anime?
My favorite Zombie related thing is School Live.
My favorite Zombie related thing is School Live.
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Re: Zombie Fiction and Toxic Individualism
I think "Zombieland" refers to the comedic zombie survivor movie from about ten years ago. Had Woody Harrelson in it.
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Re: Zombie Fiction and Toxic Individualism
Ugh, I couldn't get through that movie. The closest thing to a likeable character in it was the redneck bastard and his quest for the right kind of twinkie.
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Re: Zombie Fiction and Toxic Individualism
I found it entertaining. Didn't take itself seriously in the least, and had some fun with the genre and its tropes. Fun fact about the twinkie is that they had to make a special vegan one because of the actor.
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Re: Zombie Fiction and Toxic Individualism
The issue is that is all that zombie fiction and such can turn to given the seeming dislike to honestly face the situations survivors would be in. Everything would devolve into a hunter-gatherer society (only now with predators to seriously threaten our survival as a species) where the whole comes before anyone else. Modern ideas of individuality and freedoms would have to be thrown away asap and those who throw them away quicker have the best (still slim) chances of survival.Imperator-zor wrote: ↑Thu Nov 15, 2018 8:59 pm Besides the stupidity of the military failing to wipe out an mob of shambling dead fuckers frankly there is some rather unpleasant thematic stuff in this whole set up. It's a highly antisocial worldview, possibly to the point of sociopathy. Individualism taken to the extreme of rejecting a pillar of humanity on par with intelligence, cooperation. No one human built society, it was build by myriad humans working in concert for thousands of years. Being able to make metal tools is a great skill to have and especially for a group of humans to have, but to do so you need ore, fuel, a forge and food on hand so you can master your skill. It's also hypocritical as Zombie Survivalists don't run into the woods and hunt deer with stone tipped spears. No they scavenge foodstuffs from shopping malls, ammo from gunstores and whatnot. Things that were made by an industrial society which could only exist because millions of humans get along.
It's simply too uncomfortable and nasty a world to face that would have to have women pregnant all the time to battle attrition and everyone's needs ignored for what would keep the whole going.
I gave up on the Walking Dead years ago precisely because I thought it was finally going to face this after they escaped from the old guys farm and the lead guy yelled at the survivors that "this isn't a democracy anymore", only for the next season to undermine whatever hope I had in such a development coming to be.
In the end, the only thing I can take from zombie fiction is that no one in the modern world has the guts to face what life would be like if thrown back 10,000 years needing to live hand to mouth again.
That's an honest admission and one that describes the above I said. In the end all suicide comes down to "I don't want to deal with this".
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Re: Zombie Fiction and Toxic Individualism
Yeah, I know a Libertarian, like Admiral X, who thinks "life at all costs" is of paramount importance. I disagree, naturally. I think it depends on if the quality of that life is worth living. Then again, my friend is too focused on math. He sees all of life in terms of numbers and statistics. He's like an Arctic breeze in terms of warmth and empathy.
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Re: Zombie Fiction and Toxic Individualism
Yuke, you need to take a break or something. X's position he posted was the exact opposite of what your describe and would be more akin to my own given that nothing gets better without life continuing on living.Yukaphile wrote: ↑Thu Nov 22, 2018 7:02 am Yeah, I know a Libertarian, like Admiral X, who thinks "life at all costs" is of paramount importance. I disagree, naturally. I think it depends on if the quality of that life is worth living. Then again, my friend is too focused on math. He sees all of life in terms of numbers and statistics. He's like an Arctic breeze in terms of warmth and empathy.
I could see many taking such positions, that without the modern way of a life, or even a decent quality of life, we shouldn't continue to struggle on living and making things better. Had that been the choices of our ancestors we wouldn't be here to have built all of what we did. In that way we are midgets standing in the shadow of giants despite all we've accomplished. Since when it comes down to it, they are the ones that would have it within them to keep going and make the future possible despite everything they'd suffered while doing so while we'd rather take the ball and go home rather than endure even a small portion of the suffering that involved the great chain of being working its way down to our pampered lives.
I personally think part of appeal of post-apocalyptic fiction and zombie stuff is a bit of flight of fancy with the raw, naked face of survival that would strip away everything in our world down to what really matters. Instead of the societal games we play and the hierarchies we've established, everything is reduced back to simply instinctual relationship we have with the world where all is laid out for us to deal with, it just takes the guts to see if we can, or die trying.
I understand that appeal even if we all now how short our lives would be in such a world, in that it would reveal who we really were, in much the same way much Western fiction revolved around such scenarios.
Last edited by Beastro on Thu Nov 22, 2018 7:42 am, edited 1 time in total.
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Re: Zombie Fiction and Toxic Individualism
That's my position too. The quality of life is important. I didn't mean that's X's position. I just know a Libertarian who holds similar positions, but this is where he and X diverge. Sorry. Should've clarified.
"A culture's teachings - and more importantly, the nature of its people - achieve definition in conflict. They find themselves, or find themselves lacking."
— Kreia, Knights of the Old Republic 2: The Sith Lords
— Kreia, Knights of the Old Republic 2: The Sith Lords