Bloody Petticoats: Performative Monstrosity of the Female Slayer in Seth Grahame-Smith’s Pride and Prejudice and Zombies

Author:

Rushefsky Michelle L.1

Affiliation:

1. Independent Researcher, Pompano Beach, FL 33065, USA

Abstract

In 2009, Seth Grahame-Smith published Pride and Prejudice and Zombies, sparking a subgenre that situates itself within multiple genres. I draw from the rebellious nature of nineteenth-century proto-feminists who tried to reclaim the female monster as an initial methodology to analyze Grahame-Smith’s Elizabeth Bennet. I argue that the (white) women in this horror rewriting inadvertently become the oppressors alongside contextualized zombie theory. This article also explores Grahame-Smith’s Charlotte Lucas as a complex female monster, as she is bitten and turned into a zombie, which reflects in part Jane Austen’s Charlotte’s social status and (potential) spinsterdom. It is the mythos of the zombie that makes Grahame-Smith’s Elizabeth Bennet’s feminist subversion less remarkable. And it is Charlotte’s embodiment of both the rhetorical and the religio-mythic monster that merges two narratives: the Americanized appropriated zombie and the oppressed woman. Grahame-Smith’s characters try to embody the resistance of twenty-first feminist sensibilities but fail due to the racial undertones of the zombie tangentially present in Pride and Prejudice and Zombies.

Publisher

MDPI AG

Reference42 articles.

1. Auerbach, Nina (1982). Woman and the Demon: The Life of a Victorian Myth, Harvard University Press.

2. Austen, Jane (1996). Pride and Prejudice, Penguin Books.

3. Ayers, Mary Y. (2011). Masculine Shame: From Succubus to the Eternal Feminine, Routledge.

4. BBC (2020, January 05). Ding Dong! The Witch is Dead Enters Chart at Two. Available online: http://www.bbc.com/news/entertainment-arts-22145306.

5. Bishop, Kyle William (2010). American Zombie Gothic: The Rise and Fall (and Rise) of the Walking Dead in Popular Culture, McFarland & Company, Inc.

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