Apocalypse and Anniversary: America’s Bicentennial

Research output: Chapter in Book/Report/Conference proceedingBook chapterResearchpeer-review

Standard

Apocalypse and Anniversary : America’s Bicentennial. / Goddard, Joseph.

Terminus: The End in Literature, Media and Culture. ed. / Brian Russell Graham ; Robert W. Rix. Aalborg Universitetsforlag, 2013. p. 81-107 (Interdisciplinære kulturstudier, Vol. 5).

Research output: Chapter in Book/Report/Conference proceedingBook chapterResearchpeer-review

Harvard

Goddard, J 2013, Apocalypse and Anniversary: America’s Bicentennial. in BR Graham & RW Rix (eds), Terminus: The End in Literature, Media and Culture. Aalborg Universitetsforlag, Interdisciplinære kulturstudier, vol. 5, pp. 81-107, The End: Terminus in Literature, Media and Culture, Aalborg, Denmark, 02/05/2012. <http://www.irgic.cgs.aau.dk/digitalAssets/50/50234_abstracts-for-terminus.pdf>

APA

Goddard, J. (2013). Apocalypse and Anniversary: America’s Bicentennial. In B. R. Graham , & R. W. Rix (Eds.), Terminus: The End in Literature, Media and Culture (pp. 81-107). Aalborg Universitetsforlag. Interdisciplinære kulturstudier Vol. 5 http://www.irgic.cgs.aau.dk/digitalAssets/50/50234_abstracts-for-terminus.pdf

Vancouver

Goddard J. Apocalypse and Anniversary: America’s Bicentennial. In Graham BR, Rix RW, editors, Terminus: The End in Literature, Media and Culture. Aalborg Universitetsforlag. 2013. p. 81-107. (Interdisciplinære kulturstudier, Vol. 5).

Author

Goddard, Joseph. / Apocalypse and Anniversary : America’s Bicentennial. Terminus: The End in Literature, Media and Culture. editor / Brian Russell Graham ; Robert W. Rix. Aalborg Universitetsforlag, 2013. pp. 81-107 (Interdisciplinære kulturstudier, Vol. 5).

Bibtex

@inbook{1dbe74d97c6f4ec5928a267885ee8f15,
title = "Apocalypse and Anniversary: America{\textquoteright}s Bicentennial",
abstract = "“Apocalypse and Anniversary” trains its focus on the environments surrounding the planning of the American Bicentennial, initiated in 1966 and cumulating in the July 4, 1976 celebrations. Domestic conflict, fuelled by the war in Vietnam, Watergate, social revolution, sexual revolution, generational revolution, systemic estrangement, and a collapse in national self-belief, combined to such an extent during the period 1966-76 period that the aims and goals of the celebrations as expressed by politicians, policymakers, and ordinary people were profoundly changed. Initial consensus around a forward-looking celebration of American progress broke along with an American self belief based in the modern era, to be replaced with backward-looking scrambles and constructions for unity in a less-troubled past. This search focused on a common story as a unifying force in American history. Researching and interrogating government documents, news-media, magazines, and popular culture, this essay scrutinizes the role of the bicentennial celebrations in fashioning a new heritage consensus and reworking Americans{\textquoteright} perceptions of their past in response to the apocalyptic era preceding the festivities. Apocalypse in this essay is not used in a final sense, but in terms of the passing followed by the propagation of different national self conceptions. A reexamination of the effects of the1976 U.S. Bicentennial is timely, as the debate on how to plan and celebrate the nation{\textquoteright}s 250th anniversary begins. ",
keywords = "Faculty of Humanities, Amerikas 200 {\aa}rs dag, bicentennial celebrations, national self conceptions, America 1966-76",
author = "Joseph Goddard",
year = "2013",
month = dec,
language = "English",
isbn = "978-87-7112-119-3",
series = "Interdisciplin{\ae}re kulturstudier",
publisher = "Aalborg Universitetsforlag",
pages = "81--107",
editor = "{Graham }, {Brian Russell } and Rix, {Robert W.}",
booktitle = "Terminus",
note = "null ; Conference date: 02-05-2012 Through 03-05-2012",

}

RIS

TY - CHAP

T1 - Apocalypse and Anniversary

AU - Goddard, Joseph

PY - 2013/12

Y1 - 2013/12

N2 - “Apocalypse and Anniversary” trains its focus on the environments surrounding the planning of the American Bicentennial, initiated in 1966 and cumulating in the July 4, 1976 celebrations. Domestic conflict, fuelled by the war in Vietnam, Watergate, social revolution, sexual revolution, generational revolution, systemic estrangement, and a collapse in national self-belief, combined to such an extent during the period 1966-76 period that the aims and goals of the celebrations as expressed by politicians, policymakers, and ordinary people were profoundly changed. Initial consensus around a forward-looking celebration of American progress broke along with an American self belief based in the modern era, to be replaced with backward-looking scrambles and constructions for unity in a less-troubled past. This search focused on a common story as a unifying force in American history. Researching and interrogating government documents, news-media, magazines, and popular culture, this essay scrutinizes the role of the bicentennial celebrations in fashioning a new heritage consensus and reworking Americans’ perceptions of their past in response to the apocalyptic era preceding the festivities. Apocalypse in this essay is not used in a final sense, but in terms of the passing followed by the propagation of different national self conceptions. A reexamination of the effects of the1976 U.S. Bicentennial is timely, as the debate on how to plan and celebrate the nation’s 250th anniversary begins.

AB - “Apocalypse and Anniversary” trains its focus on the environments surrounding the planning of the American Bicentennial, initiated in 1966 and cumulating in the July 4, 1976 celebrations. Domestic conflict, fuelled by the war in Vietnam, Watergate, social revolution, sexual revolution, generational revolution, systemic estrangement, and a collapse in national self-belief, combined to such an extent during the period 1966-76 period that the aims and goals of the celebrations as expressed by politicians, policymakers, and ordinary people were profoundly changed. Initial consensus around a forward-looking celebration of American progress broke along with an American self belief based in the modern era, to be replaced with backward-looking scrambles and constructions for unity in a less-troubled past. This search focused on a common story as a unifying force in American history. Researching and interrogating government documents, news-media, magazines, and popular culture, this essay scrutinizes the role of the bicentennial celebrations in fashioning a new heritage consensus and reworking Americans’ perceptions of their past in response to the apocalyptic era preceding the festivities. Apocalypse in this essay is not used in a final sense, but in terms of the passing followed by the propagation of different national self conceptions. A reexamination of the effects of the1976 U.S. Bicentennial is timely, as the debate on how to plan and celebrate the nation’s 250th anniversary begins.

KW - Faculty of Humanities

KW - Amerikas 200 års dag

KW - bicentennial celebrations

KW - national self conceptions

KW - America 1966-76

M3 - Book chapter

SN - 978-87-7112-119-3

T3 - Interdisciplinære kulturstudier

SP - 81

EP - 107

BT - Terminus

A2 - Graham , Brian Russell

A2 - Rix, Robert W.

PB - Aalborg Universitetsforlag

Y2 - 2 May 2012 through 3 May 2012

ER -

ID: 137981851