The document discusses themes from the TV series The Walking Dead, including:
1) It analyzes how the infected survivor characters in the show experience both an internal illness and external apocalyptic world, tending to dehumanize themselves in order to survive.
2) However, the characters also sometimes embody an "impossible humanhood" through moments of feeling.
3) These moments help explain humanhood despite the characters' infected conditions, either through education/openness as seen in a example scene, or because being human is an "impossible event that happens."
Presentation by Andreas Schleicher Tackling the School Absenteeism Crisis 30 ...
Anthropology Of The Infected In The Walking Dead
1.
2. • SinceThe Sopranos (HBO, 1999-2007)
we have lived in a golden age of TV
fiction (quantity and quality) (Sepinwall,
2013)
• TV series are contemporary extensions
of the model of construction of
imaginaries proposed by Hollywood to
Western civilization (Pérez, 2011: 13)
• Reasons for success: subscription cable
networks, transmedia products (TV,
web, social networks, videogames,
books, etc.), easy access (the Internet),
etc.
The Power OfTV series
3. • Cinematic quality (casting, screenplay,
direction,…).
• Responds to our present-day fascination
with zombies: comics -Marved zombies,
The Walking Dead, Crossed-, films -28 days
later (2002), 28 weeks later (2007), Dawn of
the Dead (2004), Zombieland (2009),
Shaun of the Dead (2004), World War Z
(2013)-, videogames -Resident Evil-, apps -
Zombiebooth, Zombies Run-, cartoons -
Simpson, Spongebob-, toys and dolls -
Monster high-,TV series -Dead Set (2008),
Les revenants (2012), In the flesh (2013).
• Very successful in AMC (4 seasons until
now).
TheWalking Dead: A ParadigmaticTV
Series
4. • Metanarratives and ideologies have
fallen apart during postmodernity
(Lyotard, 1979)
• This situation has provoked anomia
in individuals (Durkheim, 1983): 1)
Psychological malaise due to
meaningless existence; 2)
Individualism and social
atomization.
• How can the postmodern self
manage the individual meaning of
life? How can our society remain
unified?
A Postmodern Problem
5. • Social imaginaries are those images or arrays of
images that we share socially at the conscious or
unconscious level and which let us establish
normalcy/abnormalcy and real/unreal criteria.
• Myths are crystallizations of certain social
imaginaries that help us find meaning in our lives and
that have the power to create society.
• Two kind of myths: a) founding myths (rational and
religious metanarratives) and b) micro-mythologies
(identity through consumption)
• Micro-mythologies: 1. reenchant our lives provoking
feelings of intensity; 2. generate new tribes
(Maffesoli, 1990).
• Examples: celebrities, football teams, adverts, logos,
video-clips,TV series…
Your daily dose of drama:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9OIJRMqYAA0
Postmodern Micro-mythologies
6. • TWD is a postmodern micro-
mythology that has had an
important social impact.
• Every myth includes its own
anthropology.
• Thesis: The infected survivor
image is the main contribution
of this TV series to
anthropology.
TheWalking Dead:The Infected Survivor
7. Postmodern spectators experience two processes in viewing any TV
series:
a) Alignment: “concerns the way a film gives us access to the actions,
thoughts and feelings of the characters” (Smith, 1995: 6)
The Novelty OfThe Infected Survivors
8. b) Allegiance: “concerns the way a film attempts to marshal our sympathies
for or against the various characters in the world of fiction” (Smith, 1995: 6).
The Novelty OfThe Infected Survivors
9. Identification levels between spectator and
infected survivors:
• Anthropology: Searching for happiness or
welfare = Searching for a place to live in
peace
• Materialist society (crisis, 9-11,…) +
predominant economic and scientific
discourse: life = survival (without impossible
things).
• Postmodern society: a) anxiety (anomia) =
continuous fight for survival; b) inability to
rely on metanarrative = infection.
• According to Kirkman’s explanation, TWD
will never end. There will not be a catharsis.
The secret of our addiction to this TV series
is our identification with the infected
(through moments of feeling)
The Novelty OfThe Infected Survivors
10. a) TWD focuses on the infected condition of different
characters which can be seen in their behaviour.
b) This infection is inside (illness) and outside
(apocalyptic world)
c) The survivors tend to dehumanize themselves
trying to survive (Shane)
d) Nevertheless, there are some moments when
certain characters embody an impossible
humanhood (because of their infection and
duress).
e) But… How can we explain this humanhood or
these moments of humanhood if the infected
condition (measured, calculated,…) seems to make
it impossible?
f) Two possibilities: a) Education (Dale); and/or b)
Openness to something that happens: “An
unexpected event is the only hope” (Montale)
Humanhood AndThe Infected Survivors
11. • A boy who belongs to a violent group of
survivors that has attacked the
protagonists has been captured.
• The protagonists cannot put him in jail
because there are no prisons.
• If he escapes, he can tell his group where
the protagonists are living, which is
extremely dangerous.
• The protagonists vote and decide to kill
him in order to solve the problem.
• Dale is the only one who opposes this
measure, defending the traditional value
of every person…
• Let’s see what happens in min. 35 (second
season, 11st episode)
Example OfThis OpenessTo Something
That Happens
12. There is something in our experience of humanhood that surpasses our economic
and scientific model of reasoning. In certain moments we can experience this
human thing, though it remains contradictory to our logocentric model of
reasoning.
These moments of feeling help us to perceive the surplus of which humanhood
consists.
The Impossible Happens
13. Example of derridean paradox: We experience
forgiveness. What is it? Forgiveness free
doesn’t accept an economy but there is always a
reason to forgive a reason to forgive means an
exchange, because you forgive in order to obtain
something so, there is an economy which
means that forgiveness is not possible or that the
only way to get forgiveness is to forgive something
that is unforgivable, because there is no economic
reason to forgive the unforgivable but…
something that is unforgivable cannot be forgiven
because in our language the unforgivable is
something you are not able to forgive so, again,
we can conclude that forgiveness is impossible. (But
we experience forgiveness) (Derrida, 2002)
The Impossible Happens
14. So, we are all infected, but we experience that we are human. To be human
is a given impossible event that happens. But we need an open reason to
acknowledge it.
The Impossible Happens
15. (If you want to know more about this and you can read Spanish, don’t
hesitate to read my book)
The End