millenarianism
millenarianism A term used to refer to a religious movement which prophesies the coming of the millennium and a cataclysmic end of the world as we know it; or, more formally, which anticipates imminent, total, ultimate, this-worldly, collective salvation. Examples include Christadelphianism, Mormonism, Seventh Day Adventism, Fifth Monarchy Men, North American Indian Ghost Dance Movement, and Jehovah's Witnesses. As will be evident from this list of examples, these movements display great variation in the degree of activism expected among followers; the extent to which they are Messianic or charismatic; and the organizational structure of the movement as a whole.
Millennial movements occur inside all religions, including early
Christianity and
Islam, but also develop outside organized religions. Millenarianism therefore can take many different forms. However, it usually involves explosions of discontent, a rejection of the status quo, and the proposal that the coming millennium will see the installation of a new social order. This new society is usually constructed as
egalitarian and just. Millenarianism often develops in a colonial situation and can have grave consequences for the dominant political order. There is little chance of political compromise since the followers of millenarian movements are not afraid of death; for example, they have been known to run against the guns of an army, believing that the millennium is about to end anyway. Millennial doctrines are often anti-reproduction, and ban sexual intercourse and the planting of crops, since there will be no next year. There is always the tension within millenarianism between an other-worldly message with no earthly content and one where the divine returns into the political process to rule justly. Inevitably, the millennium does not come, and the movement collapses. It either fades away or part of the message is recovered and institutionalized–as in the case of Christianity.
The best-known modern examples of millenarianism are the so-called cargo cults in Melanesia. These usually believe that the ancestors or a culture hero are on their way back to this world in a magic ship to create a timeless order which has been interfered with by Europeans. There will be the return of a cargo of precious material goods to their rightful Melanesian owners, bringing about an era of universal happiness and plenty, where the colonized people will be liberated from White domination. Explanations of the emergence of these cults abound. Peter Worsley (
The Trumpet Shall Sound, 1957) argues that Melanesian cargo cults are not irrational ‘madness’, but are the result of frustrations caused by
colonialism. The movements are fundamentally opposed to
imperialism and use a religious idiom to attempt to explain the power of colonizers. This mystical power comes from the ability of Whites to intercept riches (cargo) bound for local peoples. Millenarianism is invoked as a last resort in dealing with this power when political opposition has failed. Alternative interpretations include those of Kenelm O. L. Burridge (
Mambu, 1960), who argues that cargo cults express certain moral and emotional imperatives in Melanesian society, and Peter Lawrence (
Road Belong Cargo, 1964), who offers a historical and structural account which emphasizes the ‘mismatch’ between Western and Melanesian norms of reciprocity and
exchange.
At a more general level, the numerous theories of millennial movements as a whole include interpretations in terms of relative
deprivation; those which see such movements as being rooted in the strains associated with rapid social
change; and some which emphasize the social isolation, disruption, and normlessness characteristic of situations of
anomie. A fairly representative selection of such accounts will be found in the collection edited by Sylvia L. Thrupp (
Millennial Dreams in Action, 1962).
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Disney's Carib Indian cannibals deserve boycott
Newspaper article from: Indian Country Today (Lakota Times); 4/20/2005; 700+ words
; ...worldwide. Some 3,000 Caribs live in the Carib territory on the...Williams of the Carib community in Dominica...stigmatized" Caribs for 500 years and...held prisoners by a Carib group were being...the first group of Caribs encountered - recorded...
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Black Carib bastion of freedom
Magazine article from: Americas; 5/1/1999; ; 700+ words
; ...as that of the Black Caribs of Saint Vincent. Their...an amalgam of Afro-Carib half breeds with runaways...after their arrival. The Caribs, however, were the...Vincent and Dominica, the Carib warriors issued forth...conquistadors (though the Caribs had the grace not to...
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BLACK CARIB BASTION of FREEDOM.
Magazine article from: Americas (English Edition); 5/1/1999; ; 700+ words
; ...as that of the Black Caribs of Saint Vincent. Their...an amalgam of Afro-Carib half breeds with runaways...after their arrival. The Caribs, however, were the...Vincent and Dominica, the Carib warriors issued forth...conquistadors (though the Caribs had the grace not to...
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Island beer. (Carib lager beer)(includes related article)
Magazine article from: Modern Brewery Age; 9/18/1995; ; 700+ words
; Carib beer returns to the U.S. market, but it's the real...and elsewhere in the Caribbean basin, a favored brand is Carib, a golden lager beer brewed by Trinidad's own Carib Brewery. The authentic Carib beer is now making its debut...
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CULTURE-CARIBBEAN: CARIBS RETRACE ANCESTORS' OCEAN JOURNEY
News Wire article from: Inter Press Service English News Wire; 9/21/2000; ; 700+ words
; ...among the travellers. Caribs from Guyana, St Lucia...make contact with the Carib-Garifuna-Kalinago...Belize. The Dominican Caribs are anxious to contact...reconnection between the Caribs of the southern Caribbean...circle of unity with the Carib tribe and draw attention...
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Sea kings of the Antilles. (the Carib Indians)
Magazine article from: Americas (English Edition); 7/1/1992; ; 700+ words
; ...everybody knows about the Caribs is that they were cannibals...a hastily abandoned Carib village, and came upon...that touched at the Carib islands often picked...escaping from slavery in Carib beds and fields. The Caribs also brought back men...
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Phonetime Invests in Carib-tel as Jamaica Deregulates; Strategic Investment as the Caribbean Marketplace Opens Up to Competition.
Business Wire; 6/26/2002; 700+ words
; ...signed a Memorandum of Understanding with Carib-tel (Caribbean) Ltd., a private telecommunications...operate telecommunications equipment for Carib-tel in Kingston, Jamaica. In exchange...receive a 10-percentage equity stake in Carib-tel and a seat on its Board of Directors...
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Ruins of absence, presence of Caribs: (post)colonial representations of aboriginality in Trinidad and Tobago.(Book review)
Magazine article from: Journal of the Royal Anthropological Institute; 12/1/2006; ; 700+ words
; ...and funding for the Caribs, and with the...traditional' figure of the Carib Queen, symbolically...is that the Arima Caribs themselves tend to...the emergence of 'Carib' as a powerful but...intimately associated with Carib identity. Forte...way in which the Caribs of Arima have been...
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Dominica's Carib Indians to investigate allegations of illegal baby adoptions
News Wire article from: AP Worldstream; 5/30/2005; ; 397 words
; ...director, Francis Joseph. "The Carib council and government should...The letter also says that Carib families "are forced and coerced...Caribbean to have a remaining Carib community, is home to about 3,000 Caribs. Most of their ancestors died...
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Dominica's Carib Indians reject planned portrayal as cannibals in Disney sequel to 'Pirates of the Caribbean'
News Wire article from: AP Worldstream; 2/13/2005; ; 433 words
; ...the film, including some Caribs. Carib Chief Charles Williams...committed to the cause of the Carib people." Dominica is home to about 3,000 Caribs, the only place in the Caribbean to have a remaining Carib community. Most of their...
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Carib of Dominica
Encyclopedia entry from: Encyclopedia of World Cultures
Carib of Dominica ETHNONYMS: Carifuna, Garifuna, Island Carib Orientation Identification. The Carib of Dominica constitute much of what remains of the Native American occupants of the Lesser Antilles at the time of Columbus. Having migrated...
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Maroni Carib
Encyclopedia entry from: Encyclopedia of World Cultures
Maroni Carib ETHNONYMS: Cari ñ a, Galibi, Kara ï b The Maroni Carib are Carib speakers who live near the mouth of the Maroni River, which separates Suriname from French Guiana. They live in several villages (5 ° to...
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Barama River Carib
Encyclopedia entry from: Encyclopedia of World Cultures
Barama River Carib ETHNONYM: Carib Orientation Identification. The Barama River Carib bear the name of a waterway in Guyana's North West District. They refer to themselves as "all the men and women." They are aware that other Carib peoples...
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Caribs
Book article from: The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition
...skin) and fasting. The Carib language was spoken only...taken as wives by the Carib men. Fishing, agriculture...domestic activities. The Caribs were expert navigators...into Guatemala. A few Caribs survive on a reservation...island of Dominica. The Carib, or Cariban, languages...
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Carib
Book article from: The Oxford Pocket Dictionary of Current English
...Guiana, Suriname, Guyana, and Venezuela. 2. the Cariban language of this people. Also called Galibi . • adj. of or relating to the Caribs or their language. ∎ of or relating to Island Carib or Black Carib.
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