Thursday, October 9, 2014

Apocalypse as an individual event

“The end of the world is not once and for all, but recurring,” (Plate). The apocalypse is something that has shown up for years in pop culture. For decades, directors have built entire stories around an apocalypse. We’ve seen it in movies like Godzilla, Independence Day, After Earth, and even in satirical films like This is the End. The common theme that runs through all of these movies is that there is a grand ending of the world. This is a concept that people have considered as a real possibility for years. “Prophets” are people who have been in contact with the divine in order to receive and relay messages to the general population. These prophets, often times, are the ones who relay the ideas of the apocalypse and when it is going to happen. However, all of the speculation thus far has been wrong since the world has yet to end. Why is it, though, there is only one apocalypse and one world in these situations?
On September 11, 2001, the World Trade Center collapsed and it looked a little too familiar because scenes like that had been portrayed in movies in the past. Even though this wasn’t the end of “the” world, it was the end of many individual worlds. One of the issues that I have with the pop culture portrayal of apocalypses is that they are seen as a singular event that will kill off the entire population of earth. However, I think that apocalypses happen every day on a smaller scale. Each day, people are dying and people are losing loved ones. These individual devastations are apocalypses in themselves because they mark the end of an era for that individual. This resembles the typical idea of an apocalypse because even though it isn’t mass destruction, it is the end of something for someone. Therefore, I think it is important for us to realize that an apocalypse does not only mean the end of “the” world, because in reality there are infinitely many worlds. Each person has so many of their own worlds, and when one of those comes to an end, that represents that person’s own, individual apocalypse. Also, an apocalypse doesn’t have to occur because of aliens or monsters. Instead, it can be happening from disease or global warming or natural disasters, which are things that affect society every day. For example, every day more than 1,500 Americans die of cancer. Sickness is one example of a real life apocalypse that is happening each day, and as Plate stated, is recurring.


(This photograph looks just like cities in apocalypse movies, however it is actually a real photo from a city that was affected by an earthquake.)

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