Zombie’t around the bush (Zombie facts)


Happy Halloween Readers,

Zombies, aka the walking dead, don't exist in the real world (bath salt zombies don’t count), but they have been a big part of pop culture and show up time and again in history and folklore. Zombie stories have been found all over the world, including Europe, Asia, North America, Africa, and the Middle East—though Haiti has been the source of modern zombie stories. The "zombie apocalypse" concept, in which the civilised world is brought down by a global zombie infestation has become a staple of modern art.

The modern zombie has its roots in Haitian culture even the term Zombie has its roots in Haitian culture in Haitian French the word is zombi and in Haitian Creole its zonbi. In Haitian culture, a zombie is a dead body reanimated through various methods, most commonly magic. 

After the Haitian Revolution and the end of French colonialism, the zombie became a part of Haiti’s folklore. The myth evolved slightly and was embedded into the Voodoo religion, with Haitians believing zombies were corpses reanimated by shamans and voodoo priests were being used for free labour or to carry out immoral tasks. The zombies of the Haitian Voodoo religion were a splintered representation  of slavery, mixed with occult trappings of sorcerers and necromancy. There are still laws in Haiti that prevent people from making another person a zombie.

A new version of the zombie, different from the Haitian folklore zombies, has also emerged in popular culture during the latter half of the twentieth century. The modern depictions of the reanimation of the dead do not necessarily involve magic but often invoke science fictional methods such as radiation, mental diseases, pathogens and scientific accidents.
This new modern "zombie" inspiration is taken largely from George A. Romero's seminal film Night of the Living Dead, the word zombie is not used in Night of the Living Dead but was applied later by fans

The zombies in the film and its sequels, such as Dawn of the Dead and Day of the Dead and inspired works, such as Return of the Living Dead are usually hungry for human flesh, although it wasn’t till Return of the Living Dead that the popular concept of zombies eating brains was introduced. Zombies represent all the darkness about the human condition. The fear of zombies often stems from real human fears regarding unfamiliar or chaotic forces in the world.

Random Fact 
The very first zombie movie ever made is the 1932 American film White Zombie. It was also the first horror movie that was not a silent film, as well as the first independent horror film to star Bela Lugosi, an icon of horror cinema

My Favourite Zombie Films
Shaun of the Dead
Scooby-Doo on Zombie Island
Zombieland
Life After Beth
The Girl with All the Gifts
Resident Evil

TV shows
iZombie

Books
Pride and Prejudice and Zombies by Seth Grahame-Smith
The Girl with All the Gifts by Mike Carey
This Moral Coil by Emily Suvada
This Cruel Design by Emily Suvada
Kill or Cure by Pixie Britton

Bath bomb shout out to HexBomb
Lx

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