The listing, "I'll Love You Until the Zombies Get You" Necklace, Choice of Chain, Plus Bonus Earrings, Unisex has ended.
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"I'll Love You Until the Zombies Get You"
This necklace is antique gold tone w/a 20 or 24 inch traditional chain, or a 20 inch ball chain (dog tag style). Plus Bonus gold tone Vampire Fang or silver tone Dagger Earrings.
The English word "zombie" is first recorded in 1819, in a history of Brazil by the poet Robert Southey, in the form of "zombi". The Oxford English Dictionary gives the origin of the word as West African, and compares it to the Kongo words nzambi (god) and zumbi (fetish). One of the first books to expose Western culture to the concept of the Vodou zombie was The Magic Island by W.B. Seabrook in 1929. This is the sensationalized account of a narrator who encounters voodoo cults in Haiti and their resurrected thralls. Time Magazine claimed that the book "introduced 'zombi' into U.S. speech". Zombies are featured widely in Haitian rural folklore, as dead persons physically revived by the act of necromancy of a bokor sorcerer (the bokor is a witch-like figure to be distinguished from the houngan priests and mambo priestesses of the formal Vodou religion). Zombies remain under the control of the bokor as their personal slaves, since they have no will of their own. Avenging zombies would feature prominently in the early 1950s EC Comics such as Tales from the Crypt, which George A. Romero would later claim as an influence. George A. Romero's reinvention of the monster for his 1968 film Night of the Living Dead led to several zombie films in the 1980s and a resurgence of popularity in the 2000s. Modern depictions of zombies do not necessarily involve magic but invoke a virus as the cause of the zombie pandemic. The "zombie apocalypse" concept, in which the civilized world is brought low by a global zombie infestation, has become a staple of modern pop culture. .
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Halloween, witch, voodoo