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Yuen, Wayne, ed. The Ultimate Walking Dead and Philosophy: Hungry for More. Popular Culture and Philosophy. Chicago: Open Court, 2016. Added by: joachim (2/14/18, 12:15 PM) |
Resource type: Book Language: en: English ID no. (ISBN etc.): 978-0-8126-9905-0 BibTeX citation key: Yuen2016 Email resource to friend View all bibliographic details |
Categories: General Keywords: "The Walking Dead", Adaptation, Adlard. Charlie, Collection of essays, Horror, Kirkman. Robert, Philosophy, TV, USA Creators: Yuen Publisher: Open Court (Chicago) |
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Abstract |
In The Walking Dead, human beings are pushed to their limits by a zombie apocalypse and have to decide what really matters. Good and evil, freedom and slavery, when one life has to be sacrificed for another, even the nature of religion—all the ultimate questions of human existence are posed afresh as the old society crumbles away and a new form of society emerges, with new beliefs and new rules. The Ultimate Walking Dead and Philosophy brings together twenty philosophers with different perspectives on the imagined world of this addictive TV show. How can we keep our humanity when faced with such extreme life-or-death choices? Did Dr. Jenner do the right thing in committing suicide, when all hope seemed to be lost? Does the Governor, as the new Machiavelli, prove that willingness to repeatedly commit murder is the best technique for getting and keeping political power? Why do most characters place such importance on keeping particular individuals alive, especially children? What can we learn about reality from Rick’s haunting hallucinations? |