In
my first year on the speech team I focused on Impromptu and
Extemporaneous, because they required the least preparation. With
Impromptu you have five minutes to prepare and give a speech on the
topic they give you (generally recommended that you use 30 seconds to
prepare and speak for four minutes and thirty seconds). With Extemp, you
get your topic and have 30 minutes to prepare to speak for 6 or 7
minutes, and it is always on current events.
Anyway,
I remember at one tournament I was going through the current events
file and reading an article on Haiti. The opening, talked about how
wolves were such a scary part of life in Europe, that it made sense that
werewolves became a fear—something deadly disguised as someone like
you. However in Haiti the worst part of life was the hard labor, and so
the fear of being reanimated and needing to continue to work afterwards
as a zombie was a logical fear for them.
I
don’t think I used it for the speech I was preparing, but it made an
impression on me where I would think of scary stories in terms of the
psychology behind them. When we toured the Winchester House, and they
explained that her husband died of tuberculosis and her baby died of
failure to thrive, it totally made sense to me that she became convinced
of the supernatural, because to have all of your family waste away,
with no visible reason, would make you crazy. The only thing that would
have made more sense is if she had become obsessed with vampires instead
of ghosts.
So,
I have thought about those things in the past, and of course I have
been thinking about zombies a lot now, and the new thing that I have
been thinking about is the fear of infection. The worst thing for me
about zombies (besides the grossness) is the loss of your identity, and
that happens both with the traditional Haitian zombies and the Romero
flesh-eating zombies. Death is one thing, and un-death but still as
yourself is another thing, but not being you anymore is the worst.
Thinking
about the infection got me thinking that this is very common with our
classic monsters. Vampires turn you into vampires. Lycanthropes turn you
into lycanthropes. Sometimes maybe they just kill you, but there is
that possibility of conversion, and usually with some loss of control.
The werewolf may be fine in man form, but usually in wolf form does not
know what he is doing. The vampire may not want to kill others, but the
hunger is so strong.
And
those are monsters that people actually believed in. Now, at the time,
people may have been more concerned about being killed outright than
turned into a monster. Maybe the loss of self issues happened as we got
more modern, and individualistic. My point is, it is reasonable to worry
about your own capacity for evil, and it is reasonable to worry about
being corrupted.
Over
the next few posts I will be covering religion and politics, and I may
call out a few things as evil, but my main concern is going to be with
people throwing away good pieces of themselves, and doing it for bad
reasons, and not realizing the bargain that they make. People sell their
souls way too cheaply.
But
for now it is a matter of metaphor, and one that’s good for this time
of year. Did you know that Dr. Jeckyll didn’t want to overcome his good?
He wanted to free his bad so it wouldn’t bother him anymore. And even
when he saw that it was not working the way he intended, and was causing
harm, he kept it up until he couldn’t stop.
Happy Halloween.
2 comments:
I hadn't considered that angle about why we have the cultural monster legends we do. I like this.
Honestly, even though the article obviously stuck with me, it resonated more later when I was reading My Antonia, and there is a story about wolves in Europe, and I had never realized exactly how scary they were.
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