articleAmerican EthnologistJul 17, 2007Closed access

Prophecy and the near future: Thoughts on macroeconomic, evangelical, and punctuated time

Johns Hopkins University

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Abstract

A view from 1950s and 1960s Britain suggests that the public culture of temporality in the United States has shifted from a consequential focus on reasoning toward the near future to a combination of response to immediate situations and orientation to a very long‐term horizon. This temporal perspective is most marked in the public rhetoric of macroeconomics, but it also corresponds in remarkable ways to evangelicals' views of time. In this article, I trace the optionality and consonance of this shift toward the relative evacuation of the near future in religion and economics by examining different theoretical positions within each domain. In conclusion, I suggest that the near future is being reinhabited by…

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Authors

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Topics & keywords

Keywords
  • Temporality
  • Punctuated equilibrium
  • Rhetoric
  • Perspective (graphical)
  • Debt
  • TRACE (psycholinguistics)
  • Horizon
  • Time perspective
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