Monsters and The Moral Imagination
Monsters and The Moral Imagination
Monsters and The Moral Imagination
The reasons for this increased monster culture are hard to pin
down. Maybe it's social anxiety in the post-9/11 decade, or the
conflict in Iraq—some think there's an uptick in such fare during
wartime. Perhaps it's the economic downturn. The monster
proliferation can be explained, in part, by exploring the meaning of
monsters. Popular culture is re-enchanted with meaningful
monsters, and even the eggheads are stroking their chins—last
month saw the seventh global conference on Monsters and the
Monstrous at the University of Oxford.
http://chronicle.com/article/Monstersthe-Moral/48886/ Page 1 of 7
Monsters and the Moral Imagination - The Chronicle Review - The Chronicle of Higher Education 6/5/11 10:27 PM
http://chronicle.com/article/Monstersthe-Moral/48886/ Page 2 of 7
Monsters and the Moral Imagination - The Chronicle Review - The Chronicle of Higher Education 6/5/11 10:27 PM
thump, and if so, would I bring the butcher knife or the fireplace
poker? What will I do when I am vulnerable?
You can't know for sure how you will face a headless zombie, an
alien face-hugger, an approaching sea monster, or a chainsaw-
wielding psycho. Fortunately, you're unlikely to be put to the test.
http://chronicle.com/article/Monstersthe-Moral/48886/ Page 3 of 7
Monsters and the Moral Imagination - The Chronicle Review - The Chronicle of Higher Education 6/5/11 10:27 PM
http://chronicle.com/article/Monstersthe-Moral/48886/ Page 4 of 7
Monsters and the Moral Imagination - The Chronicle Review - The Chronicle of Higher Education 6/5/11 10:27 PM
Shapiro fell to the pavement and cried out, "Why are you doing
this?" Standing over him, Silva plunged the knife into Shapiro's
chest, beneath his left shoulder. "You killed my mother" was the
incoherent response that Silva offered his victim. Silva then pulled
the knife out of Shapiro and rode off on a bicycle. He was soon
apprehended and jailed.
Was Silva a monster? Not exactly. He was a mentally ill man who
snapped and seemed to think that his mother had been wronged
and felt some obscure need to avenge her. (She was, in fact, in a
nearby hospital at the time, being treated for diabetes.) But from
the perspective of raw experience, this horrifying event shares
many qualities with the imagined monster attack. Shapiro and his
unfortunate company were suddenly presented with a deadly,
irrational, powerful force that sent them reeling for mere survival.
And yet the victims demonstrated an impressive ability to reach out
and help each other. While the victims were leaping away from
Silva's angry knife blade, I suspect that he was for them, practically
speaking, a true monster. I would never presume to correct them
on that account. In such circumstances, many of us are sympathetic
to the use of the monster epithet.
http://chronicle.com/article/Monstersthe-Moral/48886/ Page 5 of 7
Monsters and the Moral Imagination - The Chronicle Review - The Chronicle of Higher Education 6/5/11 10:27 PM
http://chronicle.com/article/Monstersthe-Moral/48886/ Page 6 of 7
Monsters and the Moral Imagination - The Chronicle Review - The Chronicle of Higher Education 6/5/11 10:27 PM
doesn't prove that monsters don't exist. In the case of the American
torturer at Abu Ghraib and the Taliban beheader in Afghanistan,
both epithets sound entirely accurate.
So this Halloween season, let us, by all means, enjoy our fright fest,
but let's not forget to take monsters seriously, too. I'll be checking
under my bed, as usual. But remember, things don't strike fear in
our hearts unless our hearts are already seriously committed to
something (e.g., life, limb, children, ideologies, whatever).
Ironically then, inhuman threats are great reminders of our own
humanity. And for that we can all thank our zombies.
http://chronicle.com/article/Monstersthe-Moral/48886/ Page 7 of 7