Millennium III, century XXI : a retrospective on the future / Peter N. Stearns.

As a new century and millennium approach, the world braces itself for a frenzied outpouring of popular excitement, tabloid predictions, and religious hysteria, all egged on by a strong dose of mass media attention. Fortunately, historian Peter Stearns has supplied the antidote with this witty and in...

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Bibliographic Details
Online Access: Full Text (via Taylor & Francis)
Main Author: Stearns, Peter N.
Other title:Millennium three, century twenty one.
Format: eBook
Language:English
Published: Boulder, Colo. : Westview Press, 1996.
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Summary:As a new century and millennium approach, the world braces itself for a frenzied outpouring of popular excitement, tabloid predictions, and religious hysteria, all egged on by a strong dose of mass media attention. Fortunately, historian Peter Stearns has supplied the antidote with this witty and insightful look at earlier millennial fevers and turn-of-the-century neuroses. By examining this past, he provides a useful perspective on the millennial hype coming in the nearly future.
And even if you don't really expect the world to end, the question remains: Can we survive the media's millennium?
To understand how we came to count and care about the passage of large units of time, it is crucial to consider not only the configuration of calendars but also Christian thinking about the millennium. Stearns outlines the biblical basis for millennial prophecies, describes later church doctrines, and explores the manifestations of religious millennial excitement, with an emphasis on the vigorous tradition still thriving in the United States, from the Millerites of the 1840s to today's Branch Davidians.
What actually happened the first time the world crossed the threshold of a new millennium? We're sure to hear some gripping stories about outbreaks of mass hysteria in the Dark Ages, but they aren't true, and it's important to understand where the myth originated and why it persists. Then there's the century to consider. The advent of the twentieth century, our most recent precedent, was marked by complex mixtures of optimism and despair.
The book analyzes this odd coalescence of moods and then considers its relevance to present attitudes - which seem interestingly different from those experienced by our great-grandparents. Finally, we are sure to hear some provocative forecasting by prophets and journalists alike. Stearns concludes by making some predictions of his own about these prognostications, unmasking how they are done and offering useful ways to sort out which ones are reasonable and which are bunk.
Physical Description:1 online resource (xi, 193 pages)
Bibliography:Includes bibliographical references and index.
ISBN:9780429498930
0429498934
Source of Description, Etc. Note:Source of description: Print version record.