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Perspectives on Political Science
Consent, Revolution, and the End of the World: America’s Apocalyptic Fixation as Politics
Americans have a complicated, obsessive relationship with what we term a “political apocalypse.” A political apocalypse is the idea of the destruction of civil society and subsequent return to a state of nature. Americans are at once terrified of and drawn toward this concept. American popular culture is replete with examples of this draw. We argue that ideas foundational to the American Regime (i.e. the state of nature and consent-based government) help explain the nature of this fixation. By examining the writings of Locke, Tocqueville, and Lincoln, we conclude that the American urge to participate in the initial act of governmental consent partly manifests itself as a fascination with stories depicting the end of the United States government.