The Zombie Group! discussion
What do the dead remember?
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If you've ever been close to someone who is dying, you have probably experienced a degree of that horror - the knowledge that the other person is aware of what is about to happen. I find that almost unfathomable.

I suppose I would argue that the reason many people are not a fan of "intelligent" zombies is perhaps because they don't adhere to the modern zombie archetype, possibly confusing our unconscious with whom to direct the "gaze" towards.
Furthering my line of thinking would be the zombie archetype in regards to semiotic analysis: we automatically associate this archetype with certain images and behaviours. When this contradiction happens, we become uncomfortable, or dislike that these images are not portraying what we expect.
haha, do I even make sense?!!

Having said that, and again sticking to a medical paradigm, folks get sick and pass through a number of a stage. This is what makes the zombie stories tragic as well as horrifying. As the infected get sicker, they experience memories that they know they'll forget.

If anything I'd say the thing that separates the majority of most zombie lit from most zombie movies is in Zombie lit the survivors make it and the zombies don't win out.

Ruby - if you're never on the survivors' side, maybe you should try my Hater books. They're not strictly zombie novels (although people often class them as such). They'll seriously mess with your allegiances!

I think it means you are a very interesting individual!! lol! I'd be interested to hear an elaboration on your allegiance.

I like the idea of a few zombies retaining some personality/memories -- much like Bub from "Day." Or they start out retaining a lot more (and maybe being able to run, jump, etc.) but then slide further into classic, brain-dead, flesh-grabbin' zombiedom.
There was a movie a few years back that dealt with the slide into it, I think... "I, Zombie" or something like that? It's been on my to-watch list for awhile.
Books mentioned in this topic
Hater (other topics)The Passage (other topics)
Dead of Night (other topics)
Autumn (other topics)
But what does fascinate me - both as a writer and a reader - is trying to imagine how much the dead remember.
In Romero's Day of the Dead, we had the introduction of the unforgettable Bub who, with 'help' from Dr Logan, began to remember aspects of the person he used to be. In Land of the Dead, he took the concept a lot further with the zombies returning to where they used to live and their old routines.
In Jonathan's new book, Dead of Night: A Zombie Novel, he puts a fascinating new spin on the relationship between the zombie and the person they were before death. In my Autumn books, the dead begin as dumb creatures, barely able to control themselves, but over the course of the series they regain some semblance of intellect (but they don't drive cars or chat to each other...!).
I think the idea that zombies are able to think and remember, but are physically unable to express their fears/thoughts/desires etc. is both fascinating and terrifying. Imagine that - being conscious and remembering who you were, and yet being unable to do anything about it. With no way of communicating, you're trapped in your own body, feeling yourself slowly decay...