Apocalyptic Industry

From the top, I apologize for the extreme lateness of my posting.  It seems, though, that every time I’ve sat down to write, I’ve done my usual procrastinating-web search to glance through the usual places in search of interesting diversions to read and, surprise surprise, everywhere I look is a story of the apocalypse.  I wanted to only write about The Albertine Notes, but then I recalled a line from very early in the text, when the narrator first meets Cassandra: “I’d had enough with the Hasidim and the Baptists and their rants about end-times [emphasis original].  The problem was that Albertine, bitch goddess, kept giving conflicting reports about which end-times we were going to get,” (143). Continue reading

Localizing the Apocalyptic

I have been looking forward to The Road for some time not so much for the novel itself, I’ll confess, but so that after I read the book, I can watch the film, and then see all the local places I grew up around, with Viggo Mortensen pushing a cart and wielding a gun through them.  As a Pittsburgher, you are, in some sense, innately in touch with the apocalyptic, or perhaps post-apocalyptic.  Pittsburgh is a place where, between 1980 and 1984 alone, 50,000 steelworkers lost their jobs, as the economy hemorrhaged and the region seemed doomed.  Today, in most ways, the economy has recovered quite well, with the region as a whole experiencing an unemployment rate below the national average.  Yet feelings of impending doom are embedded in the Pittsburgh psyche, and much of this is due to the scars of decades of heavy industry followed by a total collapse of that.   Continue reading

Where Do They Go From Here?

While reading The Road at Starbucks, someone came up to me and said, “That book is so boring.” I had to disagree. He was referring to the stylistics and the (he argued) over-done portrayal of “the human condition.” I feel that McCarthy is successful in his use of language in portraying a very real image of a post-apocalyptic world. The monotony of the language, the short sentences, and the sense of greyness that pervades the novel convey a very believable empty, threatening, and decaying post-apocalyptic world. Continue reading

Morality in the Turner Diaries

There is clearly a shift that takes place after the first half of the Turner Diaries. The first ten chapters highlights the struggle of the Organization while also showing us the building momentum of its members. After Turner is initiated into the Order, however, his conscious is completely shifted and membership in the Organization explodes. Continue reading

Rabbit-Frogs and Lukewarm Christians

Well, I can’t say I wasn’t warned about the Turner Diaries. From the introduction of the book to discussions in class, we were all sufficiently cautioned about the hatred that pervades the text. Nonetheless, it is still an important piece to analyze and what do you know? There is apocalyptic thought woven throughout. Continue reading

Paranoid Progression

The Turner Diaries offers truly fascinating, though incredibly difficult to imagine, insight into the dissociated and dualistic mind of a paranoid, fundamentalist. From the beginning of the novel it is evident that religious thought is working underneath what looks like an entirely politically themed plot. As I neared the end of the first section of the novel, I was actually very surprised at how completely religious the book began to sound. As Earl becomes more immersed in his role for the Organization we see the story shift from that of an impassioned bigot into the story of a fundamentalist soldier for the “army of God,” in his case the “army” for the Organization/Order. Continue reading

Thoughts stemming from your excellent posts

Q: You say that liberty must be practiced ethically?
MF: Yes, for what is morality, if not the practice of liberty, the deliberate practice of liberty?
Q: That means that you consider liberty as a reality already ethical in itself?
MF: Liberty is the ontological condition of ethics. But ethics is the deliberate form assumed
by liberty.
(Michel Foucault, ‛the ethic of care for the self as a practice of freedom: an interview with michel foucault on January 20, 1984,‛ Philosophy Social Criticism, Vol. 12 (1987), 115.)

I was rereading this interview the other day and it brought me back to some of the issues that we have been concerned with throughout the term. More specifically, it prompted me to think about the ways in which apocalyptic belief and practices shape our subjectivity in ways that are precisely not an “ontological condition of ethics.” Rather, in its absolutistic judgments, rigid gender and sexual prescriptions, hierarchical principles of power, and desire to become non-temporal, patriarchal apocalypse curbs liberty at every turn.

What then, can a post-apocalyptic imaginary achieve in fostering a break from these conditions? In light of your terrifically thoughtful responses to the films and my essay—which is greatly appreciated!—I think it will be useful for us to consider both postmodern apocalypse and post-apocalypse as two approaches that strive to undo the grounds of absolutism. What we need to keep in mind (from this perspective) is that we—as subjects or selves—are always shaped by the forces of power that circulate all around us and form our ideas and bodies and relationships. That doesn’t mean that we are entirely determined, however (as predestination says) but rather that our resistance to power relations can only be manifest in terms of those shaping forces.

We have seen from Rosen how postmodern apocalypse works to transform key elements of traditional apocalypse. The three films we have for discussion share a setting in which the apocalypse has happened and the characters dwell within a post-apocalyptic landscape. What is achieved in thinking about liberty and ethics from this imagined place and time?

October 21, the End is Near

Here is Harold Camping’s statement on his Oct. 21 prediction for the end of the world:
http://www.washingtonpost.com/local/harold-camping-reaffirms-october-date-for-the-end-of-the-world-says-may-21-date-was-invisible-judgment-day/2011/05/24/AFVsMhAH_story.html

I will be at the Doomsday Fest. How about you?
Lee

A “Rehumanized” God for a Disillusioned World

First, I must say that I was absolutely stunned by Alan Moore and Dave Gibbons Watchmen. I approached the book with a certain bias against “comic books.” How could this offer any sort of intellectual stimulation, I thought. When I started reading, and proceeded to read nearly 2/3 of the book in one sitting, though, I changed my mind. The novel is stunning visually, and I was amazed by how deep and exciting the content is. After completing the book and reading about Swamp Thing in Elizabeth Rosen’s Apocalyptic Transformatio: Sentient Vegetable Claims the End is Near! I am beyond compelled to read more of Moore! Continue reading