Palgrave MacMillan
American Apocalyptic: Beliefs, Rituals, and Expressions of Doomsday Culture in the Us
American Apocalyptic: Beliefs, Rituals, and Expressions of Doomsday Culture in the Us
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In this book, Juli Gittinger argues that America's fascination (obsession?) with the apocalypse is a synthesis of religion, popular culture, and politics in a way that is particular to the US and consonant with mythological-historical narratives of America. As a result, we can identify American apocalypticism as a sort of religion in itself that is closely tied to "civil religion," that has a worldview and rituals that create identifiable communities and connects American mythology to apocalyptic anxieties. Gittinger discusses how various cultures and groups form as a result of this obsession, and that these communities form their own rituals and responses in various forms of "prepping" or survivalist practices. She lays out an argument for a broad eschatology prevalent in the US that extends beyond traditional religious designations to form an apocalyptic worldview that is built into our narrative as a country, as well as furthered by popular culture and media's contributionto apocalyptic anxieties. Subsequently, Gittinger uses case studies of apocalyptic events--current or speculative--that reveal how our anxieties about the end of the world (as we know it) inform our culture, as well as religious narratives that emerge from such crises.
Author: Juli L. Gittinger
Binding Type: Hardcover
Publisher: Palgrave MacMillan
Published: 07/19/2024
Pages: 175
Weight: 0.83lbs
Size: 8.27h x 5.83w x 0.50d
ISBN: 9783031561597
2024 Edition
