Pursuing the millennium: dissent, apocalypse and the golden age
Peter Howard
8 points
* Two lectures and one tutorial per week
* First semester
* Clayton and Peninsula
Objectives Students successfully completing this subject should have gained a sound knowledge of the complex relationship of apocalyptic thought to religious, social and political change, and therefore to dissent and revolution, between 100 and 2000 CE. They ought also to have a grasp of the relationship of apocalyptic thought to utopianism as well as to historical understandings of time and history.
Synopsis This subject explores, in a variety of historical contexts from the first to the twentieth centuries, the fascination of the belief - recently manifested at Waco (1993), Tokyo (1995), Oklahoma City (1995) - that the end of the world is at hand and that in its wake will appear the inexhaustively fertile world of the Golden Age. The subject will investigate the origins of such millenarian thought in the first-century Eastern Mediterranean world and the Apocalypse of John, before surveying how and why the images therein evoked caught not only the medieval imaginatioin (as seen in both literature and art) but also moderns like Karl Marx. Special attention will be given to charting the complex relation of apocalyptic traditions to religious, social and political change, and therefore to dissent and revolution. The subject will conclude with contemporary concepts of ecology, time and change and the promise of the modern metropolis.
Assessment second year Essay writing exercise (400 words): 5%
*
Presentation and essay (1200 words): 25%
* Two tutorial reports (300 words
each): 10%
* Essay (1800 words): 35%
* Examination (2 hours): 25%
*
Optional 2000-word essay in place of examination.
Assessment third year Literature survey (900 words): 20%
* Two
tutorial reports (300 words each): 10%
* Research essay (2500 words): 45%
* Examination (2 hours): 25%
* Optional 2000-word essay in place of
examination.
Recommended texts
The Apocalypse of John (New Revised Standard Version is recommended)
Cohn N The pursuit of the millennium OUP, 1970
O'Leary S D Arguing the Apocalypse: A theory of millennial rhetoric OUP, 1994
Olsen T Millennialism, utopianism and progress U Toronto P, 1981
Pocock J G A Politics, language and time Methuen, 1971
Thrupp S (ed.) Millennial dreams in action: Studies in revolutionary religious movements Schocken Books, 1970
Published by Monash University, Clayton, Victoria
3168 Copyright © Monash University 1996 - All Rights Reserved - Caution Authorised by the Academic Registrar December 1996 |