
(An) Archiving after the Apocalypse: The Death Drive, Representation, and the Rise and Fall and Rise of Civilization in Miller’s A Canticle for Leibowitz
Author(s) -
Ji Hyun Lee
Publication year - 2010
Publication title -
strategies of critique
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
ISSN - 1916-7210
DOI - 10.25071/1916-7210.30979
Subject(s) - miller , the holocaust , cold war , civilization , revelation , representation (politics) , fall of man , art history , art , history , philosophy , literature , theology , political science , law , politics , archaeology , ecology , biology
The notion of a nuclear apocalypse incites our imagination and terror as much as any biblical cataclysm—perhaps even more so, for, unlike the flood in Genesis or John’s vision of the end of the world in the Book of Revelation, a nuclear holocaust can be actuated by human hands. Certainly the prospect of a worldwide nuclear war influenced an entire generation of authors during the Cold War, including the American Walter M. Miller, Jr., who in 1959 wrote A Canticle for Leibowitz, a novel that envisions life after the ostensible end of the world—that is, after a devastating global nuclear war [read full article]...