Javascript must be enabled to continue!
Imagining the End
View through CrossRef
Imagining the End provides students and general readers with contextualized examples of how the apocalypse has been imagined across all mediums of American popular culture. Detailed entries analyze the development, influence, and enjoyment of end-times narratives.
Imagining the End provides a contextual overview and individual description and analysis of the wide range of depictions of the end of the world that have appeared in American popular culture. American writers, filmmakers, television producers, and game developers inundated the culture with hundreds of imagined apocalyptic scenarios, influenced by the Biblical Book of Revelation, the advent of the end of the second millennium (2000 CE), or predictions of catastrophic events such as nuclear war, climate change, and the spread of AIDS. From being ""raptured"" to surviving the zombie apocalypse, readers and viewers have been left with an almost endless sequence of disasters to experience.
Imagining the End examines this phenomenon and provides a context for understanding, and perhaps appreciating, the end of the world. This title is composed of alphabetized entries covering all topics related to the end times, covering popular culture mediums such as comic books, literature, films, and music.
ABC-CLIO
Title: Imagining the End
Description:
Imagining the End provides students and general readers with contextualized examples of how the apocalypse has been imagined across all mediums of American popular culture.
Detailed entries analyze the development, influence, and enjoyment of end-times narratives.
Imagining the End provides a contextual overview and individual description and analysis of the wide range of depictions of the end of the world that have appeared in American popular culture.
American writers, filmmakers, television producers, and game developers inundated the culture with hundreds of imagined apocalyptic scenarios, influenced by the Biblical Book of Revelation, the advent of the end of the second millennium (2000 CE), or predictions of catastrophic events such as nuclear war, climate change, and the spread of AIDS.
From being ""raptured"" to surviving the zombie apocalypse, readers and viewers have been left with an almost endless sequence of disasters to experience.
Imagining the End examines this phenomenon and provides a context for understanding, and perhaps appreciating, the end of the world.
This title is composed of alphabetized entries covering all topics related to the end times, covering popular culture mediums such as comic books, literature, films, and music.
Related Results
Imagination in Community Engagement
Imagination in Community Engagement
Imagining is a sociocultural process, wrought of interactions, relationships, and provocations. This chapter presents theory and illustrations of that process as relational imagini...
Imagining Vernacular Histories
Imagining Vernacular Histories
Imagining Vernacular Histories is centered on the idea of engaging with indigenous African cosmologies that signal at pluriversality. In conversation with Toyin Falola’s reading of...
How Imagination Gives Rise to Knowledge
How Imagination Gives Rise to Knowledge
Though philosophers such as Wittgenstein and Sartre have dismissed imagination as epistemically irrelevant, this chapter argues that there are numerous cases in which imagining can...
Imagining Women's Property in Victorian Fiction
Imagining Women's Property in Victorian Fiction
Abstract
Imagining Women’s Property in Victorian Fiction reframes Victorian women’s changing economic rights and their representation in nineteenth-century novels to...
Imagining AI
Imagining AI
Abstract
AI is now a global phenomenon. Yet Hollywood narratives dominate perceptions of AI in the English-speaking West and beyond, and much of the technology itsel...
The imagining of community in the arts of Guatemala
The imagining of community in the arts of Guatemala
David B. Greene, Arts and society, 2010, Edwin Mellen Press...
Rethinking Mahler
Rethinking Mahler
Gustav Mahler’s anniversary years (2010–11) have provided an opportunity to rethink the composer’s position within the musical, cultural and multi-disciplinary landscapes of the tw...

