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Zombies: An Anthropological Investigation of the Living Dead

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“A compelling account of the zombi as an anthropological reality and evocative symbol of a state of dispossession, desperation, and death.”—Roger Luckhurst, author of Zombies: A Cultural History

“An adventurer’s anthropological quest offering a novel description of the contemporary zombie.”—Sarah J. Lauro, author of The Transatlantic Zombie: Slavery, Rebellion, and Living Death

“Displays an empathy for the cultural reality of the zombie in Haiti that delivers important insight on the island nation’s people and their lived realities.”—Christopher M. Moreman, coeditor of Race, Oppression and the Zombie: Essays on Cross-Cultural Appropriations of the Caribbean Tradition

Forensic pathologist Philippe Charlier—dubbed the “Indiana Jones of the graveyards”—travels to Haiti where rumors claim that some who die may return to life as zombies. Charlier investigates these far-fetched stories and finds that, in Haiti, the dead are a part of daily life. Families, fearing that loved ones may return from the grave, urge pallbearers to take rambling routes to prevent the recently departed from finding their way home from cemeteries. Corpses are sometimes killed a second time…just to be safe. And a person might spend their life preparing their funeral and grave to ensure they will not become a wandering soul after death.

But are the stories true? Charlier’s investigations lead him to Vodou leader Max Beauvoir and other priests, who reveal how bodies can be reanimated. In some cases, sorcerers lure the dead from their graves and give them a potion concocted from Devil’s Snare, a plant more commonly known as Jimsonweed. Sometimes secret societies use poudre zombi—“zombie powder”—spiked with the tetrodotoxin found in blowfish. Charlier eagerly collects evidence, examining Vodou dolls by X-ray, making sacrifices at rituals, and visiting cemeteries under the cloak of night.

Zombies follows Charlier’s journey to understand the fascinating and frightening world of Haiti’s living dead, inviting readers to believe the unbelievable.

160 pages, Kindle Edition

First published May 1, 2015

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Philippe Charlier

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Displaying 1 - 4 of 4 reviews
Profile Image for Abel.
Author 17 books102 followers
October 9, 2018
Interesante lectura, pero se echa en falta que se extienda un poco más en algunos (bastantes) capítulos. Ay.
Profile Image for adeline Bronner.
565 reviews8 followers
February 2, 2025
L’une des choses fascinantes de cette anthropologie est son côté brut. La récit de faits et témoignages directs avec peu d’interprétation ou de mise à distance. L’Histoire et la litterature, la psychologie et la sociologie feront le travail de perspective.
Etonnament reposant.
Profile Image for Jeffrey.
25 reviews6 followers
October 23, 2017
Was excited to read this book, and it is interesting, but I found myself feeling as though I was reading a fictional account of events - it didn't seem particularly anthropological. It also jumped around a good deal.
Displaying 1 - 4 of 4 reviews

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