Ebook
Why are zombies consuming the popular imagination? This book--part social analysis, part theological critique, and part devotional--considers how the zombie can be a way to critically situate our culture, awash with consumer products. Matthew Tan considers how zombies are the endpoint of social theory's exploration of consumer culture and its postsecular turn towards an earthly immortality, enacted on the flesh of consumers. The book also shows how zombies aid our appreciation of Christ's saving work. Through the lens of theology and the prayer of the Stations of the Cross, Tan incorporates social theory's insights on the zombie concerning postmodern culture's yearning for things beyond the flesh and also reveals some of social theory's blind spots. Turning to the Eucharist flesh of Christ, Tan challenges the zombie's secularized narrative of salvation of the flesh, one where flesh is saved by being consumed and made to die. By contrast, Jesus saves by enacting an alternative logic of flesh, one that redeems the zombie's obsession with flesh by eucharistically giving it away. In doing so, Jesus saves by assuming the condition of the zombie, redirecting our logic of consumption and fulfilling our yearning for immortality.
"Exploring the popular meme concerning all things Zombie,
Matthew Tan follows their shambling steps from the Enlightenment
anxiety concerning death, to the attempt to gloss over death in
this our hyper-consumerist and increasingly virtual world. He finds
that haunting our world is a loss of the sense of the sacramental.
If you want to know what it is the new Christian cultural critique
is saying, this is the book for you."
"In what is both an engaging and academic work of cultural
critique, Matthew Tan traces out the way in which the modern
anxiety over death plays itself out in popular memes such as the
Zombie. Tan is part of new wave of Christian cultural
critique--informed, critical, and orthodox--and his conclusion is
that in a world that has lost the sense of the sacramental we end
up in a consumer culture that feeds on itself and not on
Christ."
"Redeeming Flesh is both an entertaining and informative
work that represents the new wave in Christian cultural critique.
If you want to know what contemporary Christian commentators are
saying in their engagement with hyper-consumer culture then this is
an excellent place to begin. Tan is orthodox but not given to
nostalgia, for he understands that if we are to bring the world
back to its senses then we ought to look deeper into its popular
culture."
Robert Tilley, lecturer in Biblical Studies, The Catholic Institute
of Sydney; author of Benedict XVI and the Search for
Truth
"Whereas people used to scare themselves with ghost stories about
disembodied spirits, now Western culture fascinates itself with
tales of soulless bodies. Tan's book masterfully blends analysis of
how zombie fandom discloses uncomfortable truths about the roles of
both body and soul in consumer culture with a daring theological
agenda, in which the potential for Christian witness to reclaim its
scandalously embodied nature shines forth. This book is theology of
culture written at the very highest level."
--Robert Saler, Christian Theological Seminary
"Matthew Tan makes zombies come alive in Redeeming Flesh. He
shows that, when given their cultural and literary due, zombies
show us how to live, that is, to live after death. After reading
this text, which blends together textual analysis, psychoanalytic
wit, and theological insight, one cannot look to either
christological devotion, liturgy, or zombie phenomena without
seeing them in each other. Living as the undead never sounded like
such good news."
--Silas Morgan, Loyola University Chicago
Matthew John Paul Tan is the Felice and Margredel Zaccari Lecturer in Theology and Philosophy and director of the Centre for the Study of Western Tradition at Campion College Australia in Sydney. He is also a sessional lecturer in Theology at the John Paul II Institute for Marriage and Family in Melbourne, as well as an adjunct faculty member at the School of Theology and Philosophy at the University of Notre Dame Australia.