Description
America appeared on the European horizon at a moment of apocalyptic expectation and ambition. Explorers and colonizers imagined the land to be paradise, the New Jerusalem of the Bible's Book of Revelation. This groundbreaking volume explores the conceptualization of America as the New Jerusalem from the time of Columbus to the Puritan colonists, through U.S. expansion, and from the eras of Reagan to Trump.
While the metaphor of the New Jerusalem has been useful in portraying a shining, God-blessed refuge with open gates, it has also been used to exclude, attack, and criminalize unwanted peoples. Yii-Jan Lin shows how newspapers, political speeches, sermons, cartoons, and novels throughout American history have used the language of Revelation to define immigrants as God's enemies who must be shut out of the gates. This book exposes Revelation's apocalyptic logic at work in the history of Chinese exclusion, the association of the unwanted with disease, the contradictions of citizenship laws, and the justification for building a U.S.-Mexico wall like the wall around the New Jerusalem.
This book is a fascinating analysis of the religious, biblical, and apocalyptic in American immigration history and a damning narrative that weaves together American religious history, immigration and ethnic studies, and the use of biblical texts and imagery.
About the Author
Yii-Jan Lin is a historian of ideas and biblical texts and the author of The Erotic Life of Manuscripts. She is associate professor of New Testament at the Yale Divinity School. She is based in New Haven, CT.
Reviews
"Brilliantly unsettling, Immigration and Apocalypse definitively establishes the significance of the New Testament's closing book to the entrenchment of American white supremacy. Ranging from ancient Mediterranean and early Christian studies to U.S. immigration history, Lin's book challenges us to divest from the murderous romance of apocalyptic exceptionalism-before it is too late."-Dan-el Padilla Peralta, author of Undocumented: A Dominican Boy's Odyssey from a Homeless Shelter to the Ivy League and Divine Institutions: Religions and Community in the Middle Roman Republic
"A must-read for our times, this deeply original book excavates the legacies of the Book of Revelation in shaping dominant U.S. imaginations around immigration with particular attention to discourses of disease, citizenship, and the border wall."-Jacqueline M. Hidalgo, author of Latina/o/x Studies and Biblical Studies
"Once you have read this groundbreaking book, you will not see either American immigration policy or the book of Revelation in the same way. Any conversation about immigration in America that aims to be helpful must now start with Immigration and Apocalypse."-Willie James Jennings, Yale University
"Yii-Jan Lin creatively and astutely uses the Book of Revelation to read US immigration history, highlighting how Revelation's New Jerusalem has functioned as a founding myth to establish and reinforce an American sentiment of exceptionalism."-Tat-siong Benny Liew, College of the Holy Cross
Book Information
ISBN 9780300253184
Author Yii-Jan Lin
Format Hardback
Page Count 296
Imprint Yale University Press
Publisher Yale University Press