Otterbein Aegis Spring 2010

Page 114

Aegis 2010

114

Book Review >>> Jonna Stewart

Pride and Prejudice and Zombies Austen, Jane and Seth Grahame-Smith. Philadelphia: Quirk Books, 2009. 359 pp.

In Pride and Prejudice and Zombies, Seth Grahame-Smith uses an interesting new technique for satirizing the Victorian culture: zombies. Grahame-Smith took Austen’s original story and added zombie and ninja action, which was absurd enough to reveal the absurdity of the cultural backdrop that it was thrown against. Mostly, Grahame-Smith satirizes the Victorian predomination of marriage, even against the onset of an epidemic of a disease that turns the people of their beloved country into the walking dead. Within the amusing discussion guide that follows the story, the author inquires of the readers: “Some critics have suggested that the zombies represent the authors’ views toward marriage-an endless curse that sucks the life out of you and just won’t die. Do you agree, or do you have another opinion about the symbolism of the unmentionables?” (359)..The author does wittingly make the meaning behind the symbolism quite clear in the reader’s discussion guide, but he also uses his wit throughout the novel. He replaces the well-known first line of the novel about the search for marriage with a line about a zombie’s similar search for brains, “It is a truth universally acknowledged that a zombie in possession of brains must be in want of more brains” (13). Though the Bennet sisters are warriors who are highly trained in the deadly arts within this version of the classic story, the issue of their need to marry is still a main concern, especially with their mother who appears even more insensible than usual under the circumstances. Grahame-Smith writes, “The business of Mr. Bennet’s life was to keep his daughters alive. The business of Mrs. Bennet’s was to get them married” (15). Marriage was such a major concern for Victorian society and a frequent theme in Victorian literature, and this novel illustrates an entertaining way of questioning these concerns. This novel could be considered a nuisance to some Austen fans, but it is written in a spirit that is not far off base from the spirit with which Austen wrote her Northanger Abbey, which mocked and satirized the genre of the gothic novel. A fan of zombie pop culture and classic literature might assume that this novel is the perfect mixture. It may depend on how strongly the reader feels about the original novel. Although one who is more familiar with the themes of Victorian literature and Austen in particular will be able to understand the satire, they will also be able to pick out the differences in the style of context easily, which could be distracting. Pride and Prejudice and Zombies may be more entertaining to someone who was less familiar with the original text. I found that the majority of the amusement that I experienced throughout my reading came from Austen’s original content. However, GrahameSmith’s rewrite of the final confrontation between Lady Catherine and Elizabeth Bennet is extremely entertaining. In fact, to some Austen fans who do not wish to read this novel due to any offense it may give them, I would suggest they would enjoy this scene, and it would


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Articles inside

World of Literary Obsession – Stephanie Freas What it Is-Ashley Butler

16min
pages 120-132

Pride and Prejudice and Zombies – Jonna Stewart

4min
pages 114-115

Don’t Let the Bastards Get You Down – Christine Horvath

5min
pages 112-113

One Teacher in Ten: LGBT Educators Share Their Stories – Vianca Yohn

4min
pages 116-117

The Man Who Loved Books Too Much: The True Story of a Thief, a Detective, and a

4min
pages 118-119

Her Fearful Symmetry – Danielle Wood

4min
pages 110-111

The Other – Jennifer Rish

4min
pages 108-109

The Forever War – Justin McAtee

5min
pages 106-107

A Critique of Lafont’s Response to the Cognitive Dishonesty Objection – Larsa Ramsini

30min
pages 87-96

Armageddon in Retrospect – JT Hillier

8min
pages 99-101

Wetlands – Will Ferrall

4min
pages 104-105

When Everything Changed: The Amazing Journey of American Women from 1960 to

4min
pages 97-98

Atmospheric Disturbances – Boris Hinderer

5min
pages 102-103

The Nazi Ideology of German Womanhood – Eryn Kane

14min
pages 81-86

A Plagued Nation: A Psychoanalytic and Thematic Exploration of Charles Burns

38min
pages 62-80

My Body is a Pebble”: Death Drive, Repression, and Freeing the Self in Sylvia Plath’s

22min
pages 10-16

Creative Integrity Despite Oppression: Soviet Realism and Shostakovich’s Symphony

19min
pages 33-39

Uncovering the Politics of Hierarchy in Arundhati Roy’s The God of Small Things

34min
pages 40-51

China’s Quest for Natural Resources: The Environmental Impact on Africa – Will Ferrall

23min
pages 17-25

Ethnocentrism and Prejudice in Politics: Deconstructing the Myth of the Shi’a Crescent

26min
pages 52-61

Soviet, Japanese, and American Relations with China, 1949-1972: China’s Quest for

20min
pages 26-32

No

15min
pages 5-9
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