A Brief History of the End of the World

A Brief History of the End of the World

Paperback (24 Aug 2006)

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Publisher's Synopsis

Most people's concept of the 'end of the world' comes from the book of Revelation. Alternative apocalypses can be found in the Zoroastrianism of ancient Persia, in ancient Hindu scriptures and Norse myths. Today, there are an estimated 25 million Christian fundamentalists in the US who believe it will come with the 'Rapture'; others point to an ecological catastrophe, a pandemic of some kind or nuclear and biological warfare.

What happens when, in the grip of apocalyptic prophesy, individuals and groups see themselves as the 'elect' and above conventional mores? As with the Ranters of the English Civil War, it can lead to comedy. But it can also lead to sinister extremism - the Nazis recast it as the Third Reich; latter-day doomsday cults such as the Waco Branch Davidians believed that they too were divinely elected - and could kill in the name of the coming apocalypse.

The world today is in the grip of an apocalyptic struggle between the neo-Conservatives in America and a supposed global network of Islamic fundamentalists. For fundamentalist Christians in the West, the war is a 'crusade', for al-Qaeda and other militant Islamists it is a jihad; for both, it is a struggle against absolute evil. From its Biblical beginnings to suicide bombers, via the Vikings, the French Revolution, the Pilgrim Fathers, Hitler's apocalyptic rhetoric, asteroids and Hollywood, Pearson shows that as long as human beings seek to make sense of the world in which they live, endings will continue to have a future.

Book information

ISBN: 9781845291600
Publisher: Little, Brown
Imprint: Robinson
Pub date:
DEWEY: 001.9
DEWEY edition: 22
Number of pages: 320
Weight: 260g
Height: 200mm
Width: 130mm
Spine width: 20mm