When James Faubion visited the site of the Branch Davidian compound
after its conflagration, what he found surprised him. Though the
popular imagination had relegated the site's millennialist denizens to
the radical fringe, Faubion found not psychopathology but a sturdy and
comprehensive system for understanding the world. He also found, in
the person of Amo Paul Bishop Roden, a fascinating spokeswoman for
that system. Based on more than five years of fieldwork, including
extensive life-history interviews with Roden, Faubion interprets
millennialism as a ''master-pedagogy.'' He reveals it as
simultaneously a poetics, a rhetoric, a physics, an approach to
history, a course of training, a gnosis, and an ethics. Millennialism
resists the categories that both academic and popular analysts use to
discuss religion by melding the sacred and secular, the spiritual and
political, and the transcendental and commonsensical. In this respect,
and in others, millennialism is a premodern pedagogy that has grown
resolutely counter-modern. Yet, mainstream culture sees in it not a
critique of modernity but dangerous lunacy. This disjunction prompts
Faubion to investigate how the mainstream came to confine religion to
an inner and other-worldly faith--an inquiry that allows him to
account for the irrationalization of millennialism. Against this
historical background, we can discern the genealogy of Adventist
millennialism and make sense of contemporary religious events,
including the actions of a small group in the central Texas prairie.
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Millennialism Today
Produktdetaljer
ISBN
9780691188263
Publisert
2018
Utgiver
Vendor
Princeton University Press
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Digital bok
Forfatter