Site Navigation
Categories:
Corporeal undead
Film genres
Horror
Pop culture words of Bantu origin
Mind control
Vodou
Zombies
Semi-protected
All articles with unsourced statements
Articles with unsourced statements since July 2008
Articles with specifically-marked weasel-worded phrases

Summary Of: Zombies

Stories of zombies originated in the... Zombies in popular culture... Zombies remain under the control of the bokor since they have no will of their own... presented a pharmacological case for zombies in two books... of the nature of the reports of Haitian Zombies is overly credulous... Zombies in popular culture... Zombies in popular culture... Zombies from George Romero... are quite different from both voodoo zombies and those of folklore... Modern zombies are typically depicted in popular culture as mindless... zombies are not depicted as thralls to masters... modern zombies are depicted in mobs and waves... s zombies appear capable of learning and very basic levels of speech as seen in the films... Modern zombies are closely tied to the idea of a... The ideas are now so strongly linked that zombies are rarely depicted within any other context... are still significant differences among the depictions of zombies by various media... zombies are depicted as being superhumanly quick and nimble... zombies are hypothetical persons who lack full... Romero tradition of using zombies as a social commentary... Discussion of zombies in film at NPR...

Encyclodia Page On: Zombies

These Are Links To Other Documents
Semi-protected | Zombie (disambiguation) | | | electrophysiologists | charged into the brain | corpse | Afro-Caribbean | spiritual | belief system | Vodou | sorcerer | popular device | horror fiction | George A. Romero | Night of the Living Dead | etymologies | West Indian | Kongo | Louisiana Creole | Haitian Creole | Bantu | speech | free will | Kimbundu | History of Haiti | bokor | Damballah Wedo | Niger-Congo | Kongo | folklore | Haiti | Zora Neale Hurston | drugs | medical | Wade Davis | Harvard | ethnobotanist | The Serpent and the Rainbow | tetrodotoxin | pufferfish | dissociatives | datura | Clairvius Narcisse | citation needed | TTX poisoning | Terence Hines | who? | psychogenic | amnesia | catatonia | psychological disorders | R. D. Laing | schizophrenia | Middle Ages | revenants | William of Newburgh | Walter Map | draugr | Norse mythology | China | Japan | Pacific | India | Persia | Arabs | Native Americans | Epic of Gilgamesh | Sumer | Ishtar | Gilgamesh | Bull of Heaven | Zombies in popular culture | | | George Romero | haunted attractions | Night of the Living Dead | White Zombie | George Romero | Day of the Dead | Land of the Dead | zombie apocalypse | contrasts between zombies | George A. Romero | John A. Russo | 28 Days Later | Dawn of the Dead (2004) | Dead Set | Philosophical zombie | philosophy of mind | consciousness | David Chalmers | philosophical zombies | Zombie walk | | | Zombie walk | Calgary | Canada | zombie walks | Zombie Squad | Skeptical Inquirer | Michael Page | Robert Ingpen | ISBN 0-14-010008-3 | ISBN 0-8047-1711-7 | Categories | Corporeal undead | Film genres | Horror | Pop culture words of Bantu origin | Mind control | Vodou | Zombies | Semi-protected | All articles with unsourced statements | Articles with unsourced statements since July 2008 | Articles with specifically-marked weasel-worded phrases |
This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Zombies".