‘How Much Do I Want the Apocalypse to Happen and Just Wipe this All Clean?’: The Use of Apocalyptic Narratives by Non-religious Youth

Authors

  • Julia Cook University of Melbourne

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.1558/jasr.31628

Keywords:

apocalypse, future, religion, time, youth

Abstract

Although the ways in which young adults relate to their own futures has been studied at length, the question of how they perceive the long-term, societal future has received comparatively less attention. This article considers how young adults relate to the long-term, societal future with reference to the concept of apocalypse. It draws on an analysis of 28 interviews in which religious and non-religious young adults were asked to discuss their perceptions of the long-term future. By comparing the eschatological depictions cited by religious respondents to the wider sample’s views of the future, the findings of this study highlight the presence of a secular apocalyptic narrative. Moreover, while many of the non-religious respondents’ understandings of apocalypse were derived from popular culture, this narrative was utilised in ways that extended beyond entertainment-based functions, and could be used to provide insight into the ways in which they related to the societal future.

Author Biography

  • Julia Cook, University of Melbourne
    Julia Cook is a recently completed PhD candidate in Sociology at the University of Melbourne. Her PhD project considered how young adults in Melbourne, Australia perceived and related to the long-term, societal future, and how they coped with related feelings of uncertainty in the context of their everyday lives. She is currently working on her first book, which is informed by this research. Her work has been published in several well-respected journals, and she has tutored and lectured in areas such as the sociology of youth, the sociology of risk and uncertainty, and sociological theory. She is currently employed as a Research Fellow at the Youth Research Centre, located at the University of Melbourne. Her research interests include the sociology of youth, time, risk and uncertainty, and religion.

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Published

2017-07-19

Issue

Section

Articles

How to Cite

Cook, J. (2017). ‘How Much Do I Want the Apocalypse to Happen and Just Wipe this All Clean?’: The Use of Apocalyptic Narratives by Non-religious Youth. Journal for the Academic Study of Religion, 30(1), 52-72. https://doi.org/10.1558/jasr.31628

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