The Eschatology of Global Warming in a Scottish Fishing Village


Autoria(s): Webster, Joseph
Data(s)

01/03/2013

Resumo

In Gamrie, an Aberdeenshire fishing village home to 700 people and six millennialist Protestant churches, global warming is more than just a 'hoax': it is a demonic conspiracy that threatens to bring about the ruin of the entire human race. Such a certainty was rendered intelligible to local Christians by viewing it through the lens of dispensationalist theology brought to the village by the Plymouth Brethren. In a play on Weberian notions of disenchantment, I argue that whereas Gamrie's Christians rejected global warming as a false eschatology, and environmentalism as a false salvationist religion, supporters of the climate change agenda viewed global warming as an apocalyptic reality and environmentalism as providing salvific redemption. Both rhetorics – each engaged in a search for 'signs of the end times' – are thus millenarian.

Identificador

http://pure.qub.ac.uk/portal/en/publications/the-eschatology-of-global-warming-in-a-scottish-fishing-village(d4a88b3b-8106-45f4-8db6-bba161378505).html

http://dx.doi.org/10.3167/ca.2013.310106

Idioma(s)

eng

Direitos

info:eu-repo/semantics/restrictedAccess

Fonte

Webster , J 2013 , ' The Eschatology of Global Warming in a Scottish Fishing Village ' Cambridge Anthropology , vol 31 , no. 1 , pp. 68-84 . DOI: 10.3167/ca.2013.310106

Tipo

article