Book Review: “Zombies in the Academy: Living Death in Higher Education”

Introduction

“Zombies in the Academy: Living Death in Higher Education,” edited by Andrew Whelan, Ruth Walker, and Christopher Moore, is not simply an anthology of essays concerning the creatures that have pervaded popular culture for decades. It is, instead, a bold multidisciplinary investigation into how the zombie metaphor may elucidate, critique, and potentially revolutionise our comprehension of contemporary academic life. This review examines the book’s key ideas, the organisation and manner of its contributions, and the distinctive, occasionally disconcerting insights it offers into the current situation of higher education.

Concept and Framework

The book is organised as an edited collection, comprising a series of pieces by various scholars who analyse different facets of the “zombie” metaphor in relation to academia. The zombie cliché, commonly found in horror films and video games, is here applied to the academic setting, where the distinctions between life and death, productivity and stagnation, as well as innovation and conformity, are perpetually redefined. Each essay utilises the lexicon of the undead to examine topics including bureaucracy, burnout, precarity, and the commercialisation of education.

The compelling nature of “Zombies in the Academy” lies in its rejection of a solitary or simplified interpretation of the metaphor. The contributors regard the zombie as a “polysemic figure”, with its meaning varying according to context. The zombie represents, at times, the exhausted faculty member, the apathetic student, the unthinking administrator, and the institution itself—an entity that trudges forward, deteriorating, using resources, yet never fully perishes or rejuvenates. The book’s versatility serves as both its strength and its difficulty; readers may feel simultaneously exhilarated and unsettled by its unwillingness to reconcile the contrasts it reveals.

The Themes and Arguments

  • Bureaucratic Fatigue and Academic Burnout: Numerous essays analyse the fatigue that permeates various university settings. The depiction of the zombie – exhausted, unyielding, incapable of repose – serves as a metaphor for the academic worker ensnared in the apparatus of perpetual committees, grant proposals, and performance assessments. The book examines, through vivid anecdotes and theoretical analysis, how institutional frameworks reduce dynamic intellectuals to become shadows of their former selves, perpetually pursuing yet never achieving intellectual fulfilment.
  • Precarity and the Casualisation of Academic Employment
  • The metaphor of the “living dead” is applied to individuals occupying the marginal realms of academia: adjuncts, sessional speakers, and graduate students. Their existence is characterised by ambiguity, transience, and a feeling of being neither within nor beyond the institution’s confines. The book compellingly links the perpetual quest for a permanent job with the zombie’s unquenchable appetite, which remains eternally unsatisfied.
  • Student Disengagement and the Demise of Critical Thought: A particularly disturbing element of the book is its portrayal of students as zombies – not as mindless consumers, but as victims of increasingly instrumentalist educational methodologies. The authors contend that the impetus to commodify education, quantify all aspects through metrics, and impose inflexible curricula deprives students of the curiosity and involvement that previously characterised the university experience. They question whether the academy can regain its critical acuity or if it will continue to progress in a state of “living death”.
  • The Corporatisation and Standardisation of the Academy
  • Through incisive research, the book reveals the ascent of managerialism, performance metrics, and the infiltration of corporate models into the core of the university. The zombies represent not merely individuals, but comprehensive systems – mechanisms that emphasise efficiency over creativity, conformity over disagreement, and survival over flourishing. Readers are prompted to evaluate whether the academy, now extensively dominated by neoliberal principles (such as the New Public Management), can achieve authentic rejuvenation.

Style and Approach

“Zombies in the Academy” is composed in an approachable yet intellectually demanding manner, integrating personal narrative, cultural critique, and scholarly theory. The editors have effectively curated a volume that is both accessible and profoundly engaged with the philosophical enquiries posed by its subject. The articles exhibit a range of tones, from sardonic and amusing to gloomy and incisive, illustrating the complex nature of their central metaphor.

The book’s transdisciplinary nature is another notable advantage. Contributors originate from sociology, literature, cultural studies, education, and philosophy, interlacing elements from various disciplines to construct a tapestry that is intricate and meaningful. The allusions to popular culture – films, television, and games – are not superfluous; rather, they enhance the reader’s comprehension of the zombie’s role in the communal imagination and within the confines of the institution.

Critical Reflections

Like any edited edition, the book’s merits are occasionally diminished by inconsistencies in the quality and depth of individual contributions. Certain chapters are remarkably innovative, presenting novel languages and conceptual frameworks for contemplating academic life; others may succumb to conventional grievances or jargon. Nonetheless, the collection’s general cohesion is preserved, mostly because of the editors’ meticulous arrangement and insightful introduction.

One significant issue is the potential overuse of the zombie metaphor, despite its productive nature. Occasionally, the reader may question whether the metaphor obscures the genuine challenges encountered by individuals in higher education. Does the vocabulary of the undead genuinely encapsulate the intricacies of burnout, precarity, and disengagement, or does it unintentionally diminish their significance? The book confronts these questions directly, redirecting them to the reader and encouraging additional discourse.

Impact and Relevance

Notwithstanding these reservations, “Zombies in the Academy” is a crucial intervention at a time when universities globally, such as Dalhousie University in Canada, are encountering unparalleled challenges. The COVID-19 pandemic, persistent austerity measures, and evolving political factors have exacerbated the challenges outlined within its pages. By emphasising the significance of metaphor and rejecting simplistic answers, the book provides readers with a framework for critically examining the circumstances surrounding the production and dissemination of information.

The volume’s significance transcends the academic sphere. Individuals employed in various areas, including healthcare and public service, may recognise the diagnosis of bureaucratic fatigue and systemic stagnation as disturbingly familiar. The book contributes to a wider discourse regarding the future of employment, creativity, and communal existence in the twenty-first century.

Conclusion

“Zombies in the Academy: Living Death in Higher Education” is a bold, thought-provoking, and even disconcerting examination of the modern university. The book employs the imagery of the undead to examine and rethink the circumstances of academic life. The articles compel readers to confront the “living death” jeopardising the vitality of education, while simultaneously presenting instances of hope – occasions when innovation and dissent penetrate the gloom of conformity.

This work is indispensable for those intrigued by the future of higher education or the capacity of metaphor to elucidate social reality. It is not for the timid; the shadow of the zombie is always close to lived experience. Within its pages, one discovers not just despair but also the potential for rejuvenation – a summons to oppose the forces that threaten to render us inert and to restore the academy as a locus of authentic thought, engagement, and transformation.

Reference

Whelan, A., Walker, R., & Moore, C. (Eds.). (2013). Zombies in the Academy: Living Death in Higher Education (1st ed.). Intellect. https://doi.org/10.2307/j.ctv36xw78w

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