Contents: Annette M. Holba/Kylo-Patrick R. Hart: Introduction – Terri Toles Patkin: The Day After the End of the World: Media Coverage of a Nonevent – Gary Baines: Apocalypticism in American Folk Music – Jason T. Clemence: Empty All Along: Eraserhead, Apocalypse, and Dismantled Masculine Privilege – Jörn Ahrens: How to Save the Unsaved World? Transforming the Self in The Matrix, The Terminator, and 12 Monkeys – Kylo-Patrick R. Hart: Diversity, The Doom Generation, and the Apocalypse – Annette M. Holba: Occultic Rhetoric in the Buffyverse: Apocalypse Revisited – Christian Lundberg: The Pleasure of Sadism: A Reading of the Left Behind Series – Mark J. Porrovecchio: Apocalypse Documented: An Audiovisual Representation of September 11, 2001 – Brent Yergensen: Exploring Science as Salvation in Apocalyptic Films – Terence McSweeney: Apocalypto Now: A New Millennial Pax Americana in Crisis? – Corey Anton: Futuralness as Freedom: Moving toward the Past that Will-Have-Been.
The Editors: Kylo-Patrick R. Hart received his Ph.D. from the
University of Michigan, and is Chair of the Department of
Communication and Media Studies at Plymouth State University. He is
the author or editor of several books about media, including The
AIDS Movie: Representing a Pandemic in Film and Television, Film
and Sexual Politics, and Film and Television Stardom.
Annette M. Holba is Assistant Professor in the Department of
Communication and Media Studies at Plymouth State University. She
has published Philosophical Leisure: Recuperative Praxis for Human
Communication; Lizzie Borden Took an Axe or Did She?; Philosophies
of Communication: Implications for Everyday Experience; and
numerous articles on topics pertaining to philosophy of
communication.
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