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Hardcover The Year 2000: Essays on the End Book

ISBN: 081478030X

ISBN13: 9780814780305

The Year 2000: Essays on the End

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...

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Revisiting and Reviewing the End

The editors of *The Year 2000: Essays on the End*, Charles Strozier and Michael Flynn, have collected 26 exceptional essays, capturing the variety of millennial sentiments prevalent in American culture. Significantly, many of the essays deal with their subject's millenarianism as a latent, disguised, or defensive aspect of that subject. Strozier and Flynn, both psychologists, have managed to make the psychology of endism a recurrent theme of this collection although no piece is explicitly psychological in its analysis. The relationships among individuals, society, and the sense of impending end or transformation at various times and places are typically set forth in rather straightforward prose, investigating interesting subjects which speak for themselves.The book is divided into four sections: Religion, Apocalyptic Violence, Politics, and Culture. By no means are these divisions airtight; several essays could fall into other sections, which only illustrates the enormous complexity of the issues these authors treat. But the book as a whole is served well by the "atomistic" approach. One can read a single essay -- the one on Waco by Strozier himself, for example -- and quickly glean the pertinent facts about the confrontation and the context in which it occurred. But then Margaret Thale Singer's "On the Image of 2000 in Contemporary Cults" expands the picture a bit more; the indirect consequences of history after Waco are illustrated by J. William Gibson's "Is the Apocalypse Coming? Paramilitary Culture after the Cold War"; and the particular millennial culture that thrives in Texas Michael Erard investigates in "Millennium, Texas."So while all the bases are covered, the true pleasures of this collection are in the unexpected connections and examples. Phillip Charles Lucas describes the change in millenarian expectations from New Age spirituality to Orthodox Christianity by the Holy Order of MANS. Lois Ann Lorentzen depicts the core beliefs of Earth First! as logically in the same ideological range as those of a David Koresh or Aum Shinrikyo. The conservative movement's aggressive endism receives thorough exposure, as Lee Quinby dismantles the masculine future envisioned by the Promise Keepers, while Michael Barkun and Sara Diamond lay bare the frightening assumptions of the racial and evangelical foci of the far right, respectively.Three of the sections contain one or two provocative philosophical essays. In the Religion section, Bernard McGinn and Marie L. Baird offer thoughts on spirituality in the third millennium. In Politics, Jean Bethke Elshtain explores the notion that our own drive toward the future represents a fear of limitations imposed upon us by nature in "The Flight from Finitude." And Jean Baudrillard, in the Culture section, offers a maddening, yet somehow beautiful and insightful, post-Everything view of the millennium in "Hysteresis of the Millennium". Perhaps it is this no
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