Friday, December 26, 2008

"Living With the Undead"

I just finished famed vampire-hunter Liam McInnis' new book Living with the Undead: Anti-Vampire America since the Attacks of October. His explanation (in the preface) of the difference between European and American vampirism is interesting:

Vampires have always existed. For ages, tales of the bloodsucking immortals—nightmare creatures from the far edge of human consciousness—have frightened children and travelers away from the Dark. In late 19th century Europe, several spectacular vampire attacks provoked public attention and concern; the Victorian press gave Undead sightings as much breathless attention as they gave the exploits of serial killers; and for a time the infamous (and possibly mythical) Dracula rivaled the notoriety of Jack the Ripper. We in the US were slow to recognize the danger. Allied governments suspected vampire involvement in the early conflicts of the 20th century, particularly with Hitler’s Werewolves after the Second Were War, but decades passed before relevant WWII reports were declassified, published, and discussed in the media. More secretive than other major groups—the partially assimilated Fey populations, for example, or the North American lycanthrope clans (which have admittedly made progress in controlling the Change with medication)—the few vampires in the U.S. kept to the shadows, concealing their predation and avoiding publicity. Rumored Undead activity was left to the dubious defensive expertise of local ward-crafters, magicians, or exorcists. Official law enforcement seldom dealt with them. Certainly they were not viewed as serious threats to national security.

Vampires, however, have been documented—if sporadically—in the New World from the time of the European conquest. Visitors to Rio or São Paolo, or to certain Caribbean islands, are routinely advised to take precautions against vampires, as against voodoo or intestinal parasites. New Orleans has titillated tourists with rumors of the Undead since her inception as a city.

But after the new Millennium came the Attacks of October. And everything changed.

No comments: