Pride and Prejudice and Zombies: Is Jane Austen Rolling in Her Grave?

Jane Austen’s Pride and Prejudice is an immortal text that has lived to see at least twenty-five adaptations and references within popular culture since its publication in 1813. Of all these films, novels, and other forms of media, one of the most divergent works is director Burr Steers’ 2016 film Pride and Prejudice and Zombies.

Based off a novel of the same name by Seth Grahame-Smith, the film closely follows the basic plotline of Pride and Prejudice, apart from the obvious addition of a zombie infestation. At first glance, such an addition likely appears absurd, especially to purist readers of Austen’s texts. But this adaptation arguably provides a new, valuable view of the themes in Austen’s original novel, proving it to be more than just another ridiculous zombie film. In fact, Pride and Prejudice and Zombies is a good starting point for discussing what is means to preserve the integrity of a text, especially when comparing a contemporary piece of popular culture to a work that has long been considered a part of the English canon. While the film includes some contemporary additions to Austen’s original Pride and Prejudice—including the flesh-eating undead—Pride and Prejudice and Zombies tackles the themes of feminism, the warzone of love and money, and the anxiety surrounding economics to a similar effect that Austen introduced to her audience in the beginning of the nineteenth century. By exploring how these themes interact, audiences may develop a better understanding of both the original text, and how it applies to the contemporary world.

Grahame-Smith’s 2009 novel Pride and Prejudice and Zombies was originally promoted as the work of an “anti-fan,” meaning Grahame-Smith did not have any interest in promoting or supporting Austen’s novel. In fact, the text was meant to act as a rebellion against Austen’s dominant cultural authority in the realm of literature, especially within the classroom. This notion elicited an angry response from Austen apologists and purists, and Grahame-Smith notes that he “faced the wrath of Austen fans on blogs.” That being said, the Sunday Times at the same time recognized the rise in Austen fans expressing their love for the new rendition, evidently finding merit in its new presentation of the classic story. This polarized response to the novel alone reveals that Grahame-Smith’s text—along with the film that followed—is more than a piece of arbitrary fan (or “anti-fan”) fiction.

Despite Grahame-Smith’s initial intentions with his novel, his stance on Austen was clearly changing when he was found “telling audiences at bookshop signings that they ought to be reading the original Austen.” This change came to fruition with the release of the interactive version of the novel made for tablets, which places Grahame-Smith’s rendition directly beside Austen’s original Pride and Prejudice. While the film is obviously not exactly the same as the novel, knowing this history of the book proves that the film cannot be entirely separated from Austen’s text—nor should it be. Instead, audiences should consider how the changes made in Pride and Prejudice and Zombies influence a contemporary reader’s interpretation of the text, and how the changes interact with the original themes Austen explored in the early nineteenth century. By doing this, readers and viewers will determine how well Pride and Prejudice and Zombies preserves the integrity of Austen’s original work. Before this can occur, one must first explore the intricacies of what it means to maintain the integrity of a novel, especially a novel that has been seriously studied for centuries.

So what does it mean to preserve the integrity of a piece? As previously referenced, a purist would likely assume a new rendition of an original work to be preserving the original work’s integrity when it matches the original as closely as possible. This view is made especially evident in the present day when audiences critique a film’s adaptation of a book based on how closely it follows the plot and character descriptions, down to the specific details. Purism also implies a greater respect for “high” culture texts over “low” culture, of which Austen fits the former and Grahame-Smith and Burr Steers’ work falls into the latter. By this definition, Pride and Prejudice and Zombies surely does not preserve the integrity of Austen’s Pride and Prejudice. But, as Camilla Nelson notes, fans defending both the new novel and the film have condemned this point of view, citing the fact that “in the early nineteenth century the relationship between high and low culture was far less rigid,” and in all likelihood Austen would appreciate the comedy if she were alive today.

So what other factors can be used to analyse the integrity of a work? One aspect that allows for a more general view of a piece is how closely the adaptation deals with its main themes. While the plot of a novel is undeniably important, the messages and subject matter derived from that plot is arguably even more important in the study of literature. In this case, Pride and Prejudice and Zombies can still be considered a work that preserves the integrity of Austen’s novel. As will be explored, the film has the same feminist undertones—with some added contemporary feminist ideals to appeal to a contemporary audience—deals with the same issues of love and marriage in relation to wealth, and provides a commentary on economic struggles, just as Austen was known for two hundred years ago. It is worth noting that the film does not proclaim to be presenting an exact rendition of Pride and Prejudice like other films have done, meaning it cannot be judged based on the same criteria. For the sake of this essay, in relating the film to Austen’s novel, “integrity” can be defined as the unifying elements of a text that exist outside of basic components like the plotline.

Feminism

One of these unifying elements is the connotation of feminism laced throughout both Austen’s Pride and Prejudice and Steers’ Pride and Prejudice and Zombies. Though Austen’s reputation as a feminist is up for debate, there are undeniable aspects of Pride and Prejudice that promote feminist ideals such as female independence, strength, and solidarity. For instance, Lizzie is often cited as a feminist heroine in her disinterest in marriage, along with her insistence on taking part in physical activities like walking to the Bingley’s estate—a characteristic often discouraged and deemed unladylike in Austen’s time. This physical strength is amplified in Pride and Prejudice and Zombies, where women of high class are marked by both their refined femininity and their expertise as warriors against the undead. The ability to strike a balance between these seemingly opposing characteristics is an impossible standard for women to achieve, as Lizzie remarks in the film: “A woman is either highly trained or highly refined. One cannot expect both in such times.” This comment directly mirrors Lizzie’s critique of Darcy’s expectations of women in Austen’s original, where she holds that she “never saw such capacity, and taste, and application, and elegance … united.” The film therefore uses the zombie plotline to emphasize this critique of expectations placed upon women from Pride and Prejudice in a way that preserves Austen’s original message. The fact that Lizzie and Darcy in the film engage in combat with each other and “discover that they are equally matched” further serves as a counter to the historical patriarchal idea that women do not have the same skills as men, which is mirrored less physically in the novel when Lizzie and Darcy find themselves equally matched in terms of wit.

One significant and notable change that occurs between the original novel and the film is Lady Catherine’s character by the end of the story. While in Austen’s novel, Lady Catherine appears to hold anti-feminist beliefs—such as when she critiques Lizzie’s family for having all five daughters “out” at once —by the end of the film she and Lizzie team up to fight the ultimate enemy: the zombies. This turning point occurs in the film when Lady Catherine arrives to threaten Lizzie and they fight, resulting in the women finding themselves equally matched and Lady Catherine stating, “I don’t know which I admire more … your skill as a warrior, or your resolve as a woman.” While this change is momentous in the audience’s understanding of Lady Catherine, it promotes female solidarity above all else. This concept is not unheard of in Austen’s novels; in fact, it is arguable that the most important relationship in Pride and Prejudice is not the one between Darcy and Lizzie, but rather between Lizzie and her sister Jane. The film also echoes this concept at the end, when it shows both sisters getting married on the same day, standing side by side as if they were getting married to each other. This greater emphasis on female solidarity in the film is a more contemporary feminist idea—as seen with the rise in intersectionality—and therefore is used to bring Austen’s feminist concepts to the twenty-first century for contemporary audiences to fully appreciate. Feminism is clearly a significant theme in Pride and Prejudice, and Pride and Prejudice and Zombies uses aspects of its added zombie plot to support the integrity of Austen’s original feminist concepts.

Marriage and Economics

Steers’ film also contributes constructively to the debate over marriage as a union based on love or economics that is present in almost every Austen novel, especially Pride and Prejudice. Austen is known for her concentration on wealth and status in her novels—as seen through the social divide between Darcy and Lizzie and how that affects their relationship—and Nelson argues that “the material possession of wealth and class actually assumes an increased importance” in Pride and Prejudice and Zombies, as seen through the obvious divisions between characters based on who has access to dojos, who has more time to train, and where the characters received their training—that is, Japan for the wealthy, China for the less so. Cy Frost provides insight into how economics play a role in the marriage plot of Pride and Prejudice, such as how Lizzie’s refusal of Collins’ proposal and Darcy’s first proposal is incomprehensible to them because “they calculate their proposals to be economically unrefusable” due to her lack of inheritance—they do not take emotional affection as largely into account as she does. That being said, Lizzie’s feelings for Darcy change when she witnesses the spectacular Pemberley estate, which “suggests Austen’s endorsement of a marriage based on both romantic and materialist foundations.” This compromise is also seen in Pride and Prejudice and Zombies when Lizzie’s friend Charlotte’s choice to marry Collins for primarily financial reasons is not contested by Lizzie—instead, while she does not agree with it, she embraces quickly as another possible way to be happy in marriage. While this is a slight change from the novel, where Lizzie’s frustration with Charlotte is more evident, it more strongly supports Austen’s presentation of the compromise between love and money in marriage, as Frost suggests, thereby preserving the original novel’s integrity.

The film’s incorporation of the zombie war plot also relates to the theme of the quest for marriage as a form of war within Austen’s novel. This is especially seen in the diction surrounding marriage within Pride and Prejudice, such as when Lizzie’s father says to her, “Let me congratulate you on a very important conquest.” The term “conquest” is often associated with the assumption of military control during war, making it a notable word to be used in reference to marriage. This war imagery in relation to love is emphasized in Pride and Prejudice and Zombies, such as when Lizzie says, “I’ve been training for this my whole life,” and her meaning is slightly ambiguous in how it can be interpreted to mean training to kill zombies or to land a man. In the film, Darcy culminates this combination of love and war in his admission of his love to Lizzie when he writes, “Of all weapons in the world, I now know love to be the most dangerous,” mirroring the internal war Darcy experiences in Austen’s novel regarding his care for Lizzie. The zombie war plot of Pride and Prejudice and Zombies is therefore more than an absurd add-on; it is used to emphasize the emotional and financial struggle of the characters in their quest for marriage within Austen’s Pride and Prejudice.

Zombies and Economics

A closer examination of the zombies in Pride and Prejudice and Zombies reveals an even stronger correlation between the flesh-eating undead and the role economics play in Austen’s tale. Adam Cohen, in his review of the film, reflects on how “monster stories are a projection of … collective anxieties.” Cohen references the recent popularity of vampire films and their relationship to the money-sucking business owners in capitalism, then notes the turn to zombies as less sleek and more “bluntly menacing,” especially in their relation to the apocalypse. Zombies therefore represent a far more threatening economic pattern, often associated with the instability of war and revolution. This instability is certainly appropriate to relate to the economics and politics of Austen’s time. As Kevin O’Rourke describes, the French National Convention declared war on Great Britain in 1793, commencing a persistent warfare that did not halt until 1815. This long period of unrest had a significant impact on trade worldwide, including when the Convention “prohibited the importation of large classes of British goods, and in October it banned all British manufactured goods.” These wars seriously disrupted trade to Britain, causing economic instability to rise, not to mention the rise in anxiety over a potential revolution by the poor within Britain, all at the same time Austen was writing and editing Pride and Prejudice.

Pride and Prejudice and Zombies clearly references these occurrences within the zombie plot. For example, at the beginning of the film the audience learns that the zombie outbreak was spread due to trade, causing all trade to Britain to halt and a wall to be built around London to keep the zombies—possibly referring to the revolutionaries—out. The zombies can also be seen to symbolize another economic struggle of Austen’s time: the problems surrounding the issue of inheritance, especially for the younger sons of the family. In the film, Wickham is discovered to be a zombie, for which he blames Darcy: “If I had the living your father intended me I never would have been in the army. I never would have been infected.” Wickham is therefore “infected” by having to make his own income by joining the army. Wickham’s becoming a zombie also represents the downfall of financial greed and a lack of economic responsibility, which Wickham possesses in both Austen’s novel and the film. The zombies in Pride and Prejudice and Zombies act as symbolism for the economic anxieties of Austen’s historical era, and do so in a way that contemporary audiences can enjoy in relation to other current zombie films, making them the perfect addition to connect Austen’s original novel with twenty-first century readers and viewers.

Steers’ Pride and Prejudice and Zombies, through the addition of the zombie plot, provides a new, contemporary look at Austen’s original novel, and yet still preserves the novel’s integrity by emphasizing Pride and Prejudice’s key themes. By using the zombie plot to enhance the feminist undertones, the debate over love and money in marriage, and the economic anxieties and issues within Austen’s novel, this film proves that a contemporary rendition of a classic text does not have to remain within the constraints of that text in order to do it justice. In fact, Pride and Prejudice and Zombies confirms that an adaptation can actually strengthen key aspects of the original in ways that allow contemporary audiences to identify with it and interact with it in more comprehensive and nuanced ways.

What do you think? .