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Original scientific paper

https://doi.org/10.15291/sic/2.12.lc.4

Narrativizing Trauma in the Apocalypse: Christianity and Burial in AMC’s The Walking Dead

Scott Pearce ; Deakin University, Australia


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Abstract

This paper examines the role of narrativization as a form of improvised trauma treatment in the first six seasons of AMC’s The Walking Dead. The Walking Dead explores a modern America that has been decimated by a traumatic event. This event, a zombie apocalypse, results in the permanent loss of infrastructure and social services. What remains in this unpredictable landscape for survivors is a reliance on Christian narratives, expressed through pious characters and burial rituals that strive to provide meaning and purpose in the new world. Survivors perform burial rituals to preserve a connection to the pre-apocalyptic world and to narrativize trauma, both personal and collective. This paper contends that The Walking Dead uses the context of cultural trauma not to reflect on or critique nationalist agendas and ideologies but to identify the past as a robust repository for the future.

Keywords

The Walking Dead, trauma, narrative, emplotment, Christianity, burial

Hrčak ID:

279347

URI

https://hrcak.srce.hr/279347

Publication date:

19.6.2022.

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