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Americans have long been enthralled by visions of the apocalypse.
Will the world end through nuclear war, environmental degradation,
and declining biodiversity? Or, perhaps, through the second coming
of Christ, rapture of the faithful, and arrival of the Antichrist-a
set of beliefs known as dispensationalist premillennialism? These
seemingly competing apocalyptic fantasies are not as dissimilar as
we might think. In fact, Lisa Vox argues, although these secular
and religious visions of the end of the world developed
independently, they have converged to create the landscape of our
current apocalyptic imagination. In Existential Threats, Vox
assembles a wide range of media-science fiction movies, biblical
tractates, rapture fiction-to develop a critical history of the
apocalyptic imagination from the late 1800s to the present.
Apocalypticism was once solely a religious ideology, Vox contends,
which has secularized in response to increasing technological and
political threats to American safety. Vox reads texts ranging from
Christianity Today articles on ecology and the atomic bomb to Dr.
Strangelove, and from Mary Shelley's The Last Man to the Left
Behind series by Tim LaHaye and Jerry B. Jenkins, demonstrating
along the way that conservative evangelicals have not been as
resistant to science as popularly believed and that scientists and
science writers have unwittingly reproduced evangelical
eschatological themes and scenarios in their own works. Existential
Threats argues that American apocalypticism reflects and propagates
our ongoing debates over the authority of science, the place of
religion, uses of technology, and America's evolving role in global
politics.
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