Homeland Mythology: Biblical Narratives in American CultureSince 9/11, America has presented itself to the world as a Christianist culture, no less antimodern and nostalgic for an idealized past than its Islamist foes. The master-narrative both sides share might sound like this: Once upon a time, the values of the righteous community coincided with those of the state. Home and land were harmoniously united under God. But through intellectual pride (read: science) and disobedience (read: human rights), this God-blessed homeland was lost and is now worth every drop of blood it takes, ours and others’, to recover. For Americans, the prime source for this once-and-future-kingdom myth is the Bible, with its many narratives of blessings gained, lost, and regained: the garden of Eden, the covenant with Abraham, the bondage in Egypt, the exodus under Moses, the glory of David and Solomon’s realm, the coming of the promised Messiah, his crucifixion, resurrection, and ascension into heaven, his apocalyptic return at the end of history, and his establishment of the earthly kingdom of God. As Homeland Mythology shows, these biblical narratives have, over time, inspired a multitude of nationalist narratives, myths ingeniously spun out to justify a number of decidedly unchristian policies and institutions—from Indian genocide, the slave trade, and the exploitation of immigrant workers to Manifest Destiny, imperial expansionism, and, most recently, preemptive war. On March 25, 2001, George W. Bush shared a bit of political wisdom: “You can fool some of the people all of the time—and those are the ones you have to concentrate on.” The cynical use of religion to cloak criminal behavior is always worth exposing, but why our leaders lie to us is no longer a mystery. What does remain mysterious is why so many of us are disposed to believe their lies. The unexamined issue that this book addresses is, therefore, not the mendacity of the few, but the credulity of the many. |
From inside the book
Արդյունքներ 32–ի 1-ից 5-ը:
When they turn away and no longer hear him, they enter the space of the They, those who are to be spoken not to, but about— behind their backs, as it were. To be third persons was, from God's point of view, to be cast off and abandoned: ...
This is also true when we turn our thoughts from our brief life span to the life span of our species. Over a period of several million years, our ancestors extended the strength and skill of the human body by the invention of wood, ...
These religions promised direct access to the gods, unmediated by political authority, but they maintained a collaborative relationship with the secular state, to which they offered conditional legitimacy, receiving in turn conditional ...
... government performs rites of civil religion and does so by promulgating a uniquely politic genre of narrative, a variety of the talking cure that I will call “ethnic myth.” The. Uses. of. Ethnic. Myth. Once we turn our ...
When the first Bush administration tried to mobilize public opinion in 1990 to turn back Iraq's invasion of Kuwait, it packaged its appeal in mythic terms that the linguist George Lakoff then characterized as the “Fairy Tale of the Just ...
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Բովանդակություն
Myths of Curses Myths of Blessings | |
Narratives of the Night | |
Abduction Narratives | |
Homeland Nostalgia and Holy | |
Secular Modernism Biblical Style | |
Notes | |
Bibliography | |
Index | |
Այլ խմբագրություններ - View all
Homeland Mythology: Biblical Narratives in American Culture Christopher Collins Դիտել հնարավոր չէ - 2013 |
Homeland Mythology: Biblical Narratives in American Culture Christopher Collins Դիտել հնարավոր չէ - 2007 |