Unbuilding Jerusalem: Apocalypse and Romantic RepresentationCornell University Press, 1993 - 324 pages |
Contents
PARTI BUILDING JERUSALEM | 19 |
UNBUILDING JERUSALEM | 22 |
The Canonical Work of Revelation | 50 |
Apocalypse Disarmed | 85 |
Apocalypse and the EighteenthCentury Anglican State | 103 |
Apocalypse and the CitizenReader II | 122 |
CHAPTER THREE | 135 |
Revelation Representation and the Emergence of Democratic Discourse | 165 |
Common terms and phrases
aesthetic already apoc apocalyptic literature apocalyptic text argued authority Babel become Bible biblical Blake Blake's Book of Revelation canon century chapter Christian church claims conflict context criticism critique cultural Daniel deconstructive democracy democratic Demogorgon describes difference discourse divine end of history eschatological essay Ezekiel Farrer feminine formal apocalypse function heaven Hebrew human Hurd Hurd's idea ideal ideological imagine interpretation Isaiah Jerusalem John John's Joseph Mede Kiddusha language Last Judgment linguistic literary literature Logos M. H. Abrams Mary Shelley means Mede's metaphor metonymy millenarian Mouffe narrative novel Oxford Paine patriarchal plague poem poetry political Prometheus Unbound prophecy prophet radical readers relation represent representation Revelation's Revolution rhetoric Richard Hurd romantic Schüssler Fiorenza Scripture sexual Shelley Shelley's Sibyl significant social spatial structure sublime suggests symbolic Testament text's textual tion tradition transcendence unity University Press violence vision voice Warburton Whore of Babylon William Blake words writing Yahweh