EVERYDAY APOCALYPSE: The Sacred Revealed in Radiohead, the Simpsons, and Other Pop Culture Icons
David Dark, . . Brazos, $13.99 (160pp) ISBN 978-1-58743-055-8
"Apocalypse"—as a genre and as a mind-set—is commonly misunderstood, as something hidden in the back of the Bible and characterized by a gnostic or nihilistic disdain for anything earthly or human. So says Dark, a teacher of English at Christ Presbyterian Academy in Nashville, arguing persuasively that genuine apocalypse, informed by Scripture and the rest of biblical tradition, isn't hidden. It can be seen in books and music and on screens large and small. As the first chapter argues, apocalypse isn't primarily about destruction or fortune telling, but about the future pushing into the present, "cracking the pavement of the status quo... announcing a new world of unrealized possibility." The remaining chapters report on what Dark sees as he looks at pop culture through the wide-angle lens of God's ultimate purposes for all of creation. Dark is a close reader not only of pages (Shakespeare and Flannery O'Connor), but tunes (Radiohead and Beck), and film (
Reviewed on: 11/25/2002
Genre: Nonfiction
Open Ebook - 160 pages - 978-1-4412-3170-3