The Year 2000: Essays on the End

The Year 2000: Essays on the End

The Year 2000: Essays on the End

The Year 2000: Essays on the End

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Overview

A fascinating collection of predictions for the end-times in the year 2000

The Year 2000 is at hand. The end of the millennium means many things to many people, but it has significance for almost everyone. A thousand years ago, monks stopped copying manuscripts and religious building projects came to a halt as panic swept Europe. Today, anxiety about global warming, government power, superviruses, even recycling, is on some level rooted in the fear of irreversible cataclysm. In a landscape shadowed by racial conflict, technological upheaval, AIDS, and nuclear weapons, we reasonably fear the end of history. 2000 looms large in our religious, political, and cultural imagination. But while 2000 brings dread it also raises the prospect of transformation. There is hope to be found in the apocalyptic.

This panoramic volume explores how the Year 2000 operates in contemporary political discourse, from Black evangelical politics to radical right-wing rhetoric. One section is devoted specifically to apocalyptic violence, analyzing twentieth-century cults and cultural movements, from David Koresh—who renamed his Waco compound Ranch Apocalypse and perished in a modern-day Armageddon that fueled the millennialist angst of other extremist groups—to environmental campaigns like Earth First! that also rely on the language of violence and imminent doom in their greening of the Apocalypse.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780814780312
Publisher: New York University Press
Publication date: 08/01/1997
Edition description: New Edition
Pages: 354
Product dimensions: 6.00(w) x 9.00(h) x 0.94(d)

About the Author

The author and editor of numerous books, including Apocalypse: On the Psychology of Fundamentalism in America, Charles B. Strozier is Professor of History at John Jay College and the Graduate Center, City University of New York.

Michael Flynn is Lecturer in Psychology at York College, City University of New York, and, with Charles Strozier, co-editor of Trauma and Self and Genocide, War, and Human Survival. He received his Ph.D. in Psychology from the University of Chicago.
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