Diseased Cinema

Plagues, Pandemics and Zombies in American Movies

Robert Alpert, Merle Eisenberg, Lee Mordechai

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Discusses how the depiction of diseases in movies has changed over the last century and what these changes reveal about American culture
  • Examines disease movies as a genre that has emerged over the last century and includes pandemic and zombie films
  • Reveals the changes to the genre’s narratives over three broad time periods: the beginning of film through the 1980s, the 1990s through the mid-2000s, and the late 2000s and afterward
  • Investigates the evolution of disease movies through three perspectives: historically notable films, remakes, and franchises
  • Analyses disease movies in the context of the development of American, global capitalism and the fragmentation of the social contract
  • Explains the role of disease movie narratives in the American experience of Covid

American movies about infectious diseases have reflected and driven dominant cultural narratives during the past century. These movies – both real pandemics and imagined zombie outbreaks – have become wildly popular since the beginning of the 21st century.

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Dedications

Preface

Introduction

1. Early Disease Movies: American Norms and Containment

2. Disease Movies in Transition: Globalization and Imagined Containment

3. Post-Apocalyptic Disease Movies: Pandemics and Posthumanity

4. Remaking Humanity: The Body Snatchers

5. Popularizing the Pandemic: The Resident Evil Franchise

6. Movie Myths: the Covid Pandemic

Conclusion

Bibliography

The book delivers a fresh look at the ever-growing number of American pandemic movies and their apocalyptic and post-apocalyptic mythology.

Christos Lynteris, University of St Andrews

Diseased Cinema tracks the cinematic fascination with disease throughout the history of film, showing how depictions of communicable disease mutate to reflect changing social and political concerns and how they, in turn, shape expectations about and the experience of actual disease outbreaks. An important work that reveals the power of cinema and the figure of disease to shape a cultural imagination.

Priscilla Wald, Duke University
Robert Alpert is an Adjunct Instructor at Fordham University where he has taught courses on computers and robots in film, movies and the American experience, and media law. He haswritten extensively on movies, including on directors, such as Chaplin, Meyers, and Bigelow, as well as on other topics, such as gender, the Hollywood idiom, and the politics of science fiction. His publications can be found in Jump Cut, Senses of Cinema, and CineAction. Alpert received his M.F.A. in Film from Columbia University. He also received a J.D. from New York University and practiced intellectual property law for over 30 years.

Merle Eisenberg is an Assistant Professor of History at Oklahoma State University and a founding faculty member of the Oklahoma State Pandemic Center. He has published articles in journals including The American Historical Review and Past & Present. His work has also appeared in The Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, which received press coverage in CNN, Fox News, USA Today, and the NY Post. He has also appeared on CNN to discuss historical pandemics and regularly teaches courses on plagues and pandemics in history. Along with Lee Mordechai, he is the co-founder and co-host of the Infectious Historians podcast

Lee Mordechai is a Senior Lecturer at the Hebrew University of Jerusalem and the Associate Director of Princeton University’s Climate Change and History Research Initiative. He has published over twenty academic articles, including two in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, and two in the leading history journals, The American Historical Review and Past & Present. He has taught several courses on epidemics, including a seminar that uses the current draft of the proposed book. Along with Merle Eisenberg, he is the co-founder and co-host of the Infectious Historians podcast.

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