×
Convivium was a project of Cardus 2011‑2022, and is preserved here for archival purposes.
Search
Search
Abundant Hope for The Walking DeadAbundant Hope for The Walking Dead

Abundant Hope for The Walking Dead

Peter Stockland delves into the difficult question, "What is the possible meaning of life when the purpose of life has become simply more?"

Peter Stockland
1 minute read

There appears to be an intriguing narrative gap in AMC’s brilliant zombie apocalyptic series The Walking Dead. No one, in any episode for the first three seasons at least, ever goes to Costco.

At first blush, it looks like a basic flaw in story coherence. Though set in the very near future, The Walking Dead’s inhabitants have entirely abandoned our current arguments over inequitable income distribution and our dogmatic debates over the sanctity or profanity of trickle down economics. There is, after all, precious little time for such palaver in a world where some mysterious affliction has left the living and the undead alike scratching and clawing at each other for mere sustenance.

So, wouldn’t you think at least someone would swing by Costco to check whether the shelves still contain one final cello-wrapped package of 385 pork chops, an overlooked bag of 72 bundled bread loaves or that last, lonely, leftover 450-pound maple glazed ham? Certainly, it would seem natural that The Walking Dead’s zombies—the “walkers” or “biters” as they are alternatively called—should make an instinctive beeline for a Costco, if only to feel at home once more. If you need to ask why, you’ve never seen the show, never seen a zombie or never been in a Costco on a Saturday afternoon.

Read more:  http://www.cardus.ca/blog/2014/01/abundant-hope-for-the-walking-dead

You'll also enjoy...

Getting the Anti-Racism Agenda Right

Getting the Anti-Racism Agenda Right

There’s no question Canadians must call out systemic bigotry, Peter Stockland says, but he cautions we must also be systematic in making sure we call the right things by that name.

New Catholic Hymnal is Nothing to Sing About

New Catholic Hymnal is Nothing to Sing About

We tend to treat music like entertainment breaks from the serious phases of our church services, writes Convivium Publisher Peter Stockland. But music ought to be so much more. Today, Peter defends the core of music: to lift our hearts, and our voices, towards God's love.

Word, Worship, World

Word, Worship, World

Earlier this year, Convivium publisher Peter Stockland sat down with former Blackberry Chief Operating Officer Don Morrison in his Toronto home. While many might know of the highly successful Canadian telecom business, few likely know that one of its highest level executives was immersed in pursuing both international business success and reading religious classics. Morrison was engaging with not only with the likes of Steve Jobs and Bill Gates but also Thomas Merton, the Aga Khan and the Dalai Lama.