“Still Cool as a Zombie”: Community, the Zombie Aesthetic, and the Politics of Belonging
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. The Zombie and the Zombie Film
3. Community through the Zombie Film
“Oh, Great! Nobody’s Special!”—Jeff Winger, “Epidemiology”
Troy will hold on until he is broken emotionally, fortunately, this will not be hard. He gets distracted by loud noises, the color red, smooth jazz, shiny things, food smells, music boxes, bell-bottoms, boobs, barking dogs, and anyone saying “Look, over there!” He’s insecure about his level of intelligence. His greatest vulnerability of all is his emotional frailty. It’s incredibly easy to make him cry, and he’s incredibly ashamed of that fact”.
Early television really reflected a very narrow representation of non-white characters. And a lot of the earlier characters were caricatures and racist depictions in many ways … In the ‘80s, The Cosby Show depicted a Black affluent family who were different from the way that Blacks were mostly portrayed in mainstream TV at the time. But in the show, issues were not dealt with in a very racially specific way … As you get more representation, the representation gets more varied, more complex.
Troy: I don’t get it. How do you do it?Jeff: Well, I’m wearing a $6000 suit, and you spent three days making cardboard robot armor.Troy: Saying they feel sorry for you?Jeff: I’m saying I remind girls less of taking their little brothers to Comic-Con.
4. The Zombie Film through Community
Dean: Are you crazy? How are you going to survive those zombies?Troy: I’m gonna be a nerd.
5. Conclusions
Funding
Data Availability Statement
Conflicts of Interest
1 | In 2011, Salon interviewed Harmon. When asked about Season 2’s “self-conscious, metafictional, at times almost abstract kind of direction,” Harmon characterizes his work as an homage. According to Harmon, “Homage means you’re actually worshiping something and obeying it” (Seitz 2011). By contrast, “spoof” or “satire,” at least for Harmon, is far less affectionate, affectionate being the operative word here. |
2 | Of course, this is not always the case. For example, the horror-comedy Shaun of the Dead (2004) plays with this trope. |
3 | It is important to acknowledge the Eurocentrism of this position. For example, later in this section, I will describe the zombie’s Haitian folk origins. |
4 | For example, vampires seamlessly pass as alive, which is what makes them dangerous in so much vampire fiction. By contrast, the zombie cannot pass, which heightens its contradictory ontology. |
5 | This narrative arc appears in other media and scholarship. For a classic example, consider Joseph Campbell’s “Refusal of the Call” in The Hero with a Thousand Faces. Incidentally, Harmon’s “Story Circle,” that is to say his narrative philosophy, looks unmistakably Campbell-esque. |
6 | Donald Glover leaves the show after six episodes in Season 5. While the show makes oblique references to Troy, his arc ends when he leaves. |
7 | The only time the show challenges this is in Troy’s Season 3 arc when he discovers he has an aptitude for air conditioner repairs. However, unlike Annie, Troy seems to possess an unstudied gift for air conditioner repairs. |
8 | A significant influence on my reading of this dynamic between Troy and Jeff is what psychoanalytic thinker Jacques Lacan calls the big Other. In “On Freud’s ‘Trieb’ and the Psychoanalyst’s Desire,” Lacan suggests, “Desire is desire for desire, the Other’s desire...for desire comes from the Other” (Lacan 1999, pp. 723–24). Many psychoanalytic theorists have clarified what Lacan means when he theorizes this concept. Slavoj Žižek describes the big Other as “the constitutive alienation of the subject in the symbolic order,” and he continues by suggesting, “the big Other pulls the strings, the subject doesn’t speak, he ‘is spoken’ by the symbolic structure” (Žižek 1999). For Todd McGowan, this figure structures the subject’s desire because “the subject’s desire is a desire to figure out what the Other wants from it” (McGowan 2013, p. 87). Moses May-Hobbs simplifies the concept by calling it “the universal stand-in for authority in Lacan” (May-Hobbs 2023). In many ways, Jeff operates as this supreme authority for the other members of the study group, but Troy, both in this episode and across the show, seems to feel it the most. |
9 | As I discuss in the following paragraph, Troy momentarily conforms to Jeff’s aesthetic only to abandon it in the episode’s final act. |
10 | According to Bruce Fink’s Lacanian psychoanalytic account, “Man learns to desire as an other, as if he were some other person” (Fink 1995, p. 54). |
11 | At least in this episode, the show ignores the vampire’s parasitic associations. In addition to clumsily adorning himself in vampire signifiers, Troy is not parasitic like Jeff. Troy’s failure to masquerade as a vampire is more of a success than anything else because it highlights yet another difference between him and Jeff. |
12 | The episode conveniently resolves the zombie plot by lowering the temperature in the building. Doing so breaks the rancid meat-induced zombie symptoms, and everyone returns to normal but with a collective amnesia regarding the zombie narrative we just witnessed. |
13 | Jeff certainly changes and evolves throughout the show’s six seasons, but as this episode suggests, he is far from the heroic protagonist the pilot episode predicts he will be. |
14 | As a white, cis-gendered, straight, and able-bodied man, his history is unmistakably different from the history many Black people know. |
15 | Wynter contrasts the final brother with the final girl, but as he sees it, the final girl’s “birthright is ‘normality’ and it is this ‘normality’ she fights for, a fight her survival signifies” (Wynter 2022, p. 147). Since the final brother comes to realize normality is an illusion, he cannot then fight for something that cannot exist in the social order as currently constituted. |
16 | If Community is a bildungsroman, then it belongs to Troy. Other primary characters certainly change, grow, and evolve, but the lion’s share of this change, growth, and evolution belongs to Troy. |
17 | Because Community is a sitcom, it adheres to sitcom conventions. Once they neutralize the zombie threat, everyone experiences collective amnesia. This allows for a reset, and while the characters may forget the particulars of this episode, the writers and showrunners do not. |
18 | Early affect theorists focus on categorizing and organizing what they understand as different affects and the intensities these affects carry for the subject. In this respect, affect theory began as a clinical preoccupation. While understanding the genesis of any theoretical framework is often interesting and necessary, I avoid doing so here. Instead, I focus on relatively recent affect theorists because their theoretical interventions work better with larger social phenomena and complement the critical frameworks I find more useful for this essay. See Silvan Tompkins’s work Affect, Imagery, Consciousness (1962). |
19 | For anyone familiar with Marx, this sounds counter-intuitive. |
20 | Ruti understands her analysis from a constructivist rather than a “traditionally humanistic perspective” (Ruti 2006, xiiin2). Ruti rejects the idea that subjectivity has “an enduring kernel” and instead sees subjectivity as “socio-culturally and normatively constituted through complex processes of language acquisition and socialization” (Ruti 2006, xiiin2). |
21 | Ruti even suggests that in psychoanalysis, the signifier humanizes us. She writes that “Lacan privileges the signifier as the humanizing principle that propels the subject into the realm of sociality and meaning-production” (Ruti 2006, p. 120). In short, the lack Lacan associates with the subject’s relationship to the signifier is the very thing that animates the subject into action. |
22 | As opposed to the indeterminacy I describe at the beginning of this section. |
23 | Troy and Abed share a high five, which they do frequently, while Annie sits at the study table, apparently reading a book. |
24 | As I have argued, Troy is a far more suitable protagonist for this show, but he remains lacking, too. For example, “Mixology Certification” is about Troy’s first legal alcoholic beverage, but this becomes a plot point because Troy’s family misled him about his age for most of his life. |
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Cox, C.A. “Still Cool as a Zombie”: Community, the Zombie Aesthetic, and the Politics of Belonging. Humanities 2024, 13, 117. https://doi.org/10.3390/h13050117
Cox CA. “Still Cool as a Zombie”: Community, the Zombie Aesthetic, and the Politics of Belonging. Humanities. 2024; 13(5):117. https://doi.org/10.3390/h13050117
Chicago/Turabian StyleCox, Colin A. 2024. "“Still Cool as a Zombie”: Community, the Zombie Aesthetic, and the Politics of Belonging" Humanities 13, no. 5: 117. https://doi.org/10.3390/h13050117
APA StyleCox, C. A. (2024). “Still Cool as a Zombie”: Community, the Zombie Aesthetic, and the Politics of Belonging. Humanities, 13(5), 117. https://doi.org/10.3390/h13050117