Apocalypse: From Antiquity to the Empire of ModernityISBN: 978-0-7456-4509-4
Paperback
296 pages
July 2009, Polity
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"This learned and provocative study will long remain central in the discussions to follow."
Contemporary Sociology
"Hall's mastery of this literature enables him to construct of a new theory of modernity that has an explanatory power that is clear and compelling. Apocalypse is a dense work, rich in detail and information, that is well worth reading."
Journal for the Scientific Study of Religion
"A masterly account of a phenomenon that, far from passing out
with the coming of modernity,seems intent on re-charging it with
its own turbulent passions."
European Journal of Social Theory
"An extraordinarily erudite and readable book about the
apocalyptic imaginary and its range over three millenia."
Review of Politics
"In this brilliantly conceived study, Hall not only presents a
fascinating array of images about the end of time from antiquity to
the present, but also forces us to rethink the role of apocalyptic
thinking in the human imagination. This mind-bending study shows us
that there is an apocalyptic strand to modernity and history, and
will affect our own way of thinking about the global future."
Mark Juergensmeyer, University of California, Santa
Barbara
"This is a necessary book. Theoretically sophisticated,
historically erudite, Hall explains the contemporary crisis in a
new way. Conflicts between the religious and the secular have given
way to confrontations between sacred and profane. Apocalypse has
entered fully into modern history, and it may be here to
stay."
Jeffrey C. Alexander, Yale University
"The apocalyptic imagination, the idea that historical time
could come to an end is indeed a fascinating one. Moreover, as we
learn from John R. Hall's impressive study, this idea itself has a
history which he traces across the centuries from Ancient Babylonia
to contemporary America and Islamic radicalism. The book represents
a highly illuminating analysis of the reality and power of social
imaginations of time and the end of times."
Martin Riesebrodt, University of Chicago
"Anyone who has ever wondered 'What on earth is the world coming
to?' should read Apocalypse. Few will fail to learn much
from this masterly tour de force as John Hall takes us on a
sometimes astonishing, occasionally chilling, and always gripping
journey through history, explaining how alternative visions of time
can herald alternative versions of The End."
Eileen Barker, London School of Economics