When Prophecy Never Fails
Myth and Reality in a Flying-Saucer Group
Tumminia, Diana G.,
Lecturer, Department of Sociology,
California State University at Sacramento
Print publication date: 2005
Published to Oxford Scholarship Online: July 2005 Print ISBN-13: 978-0-19-517675-9 doi:10.1093/0195176758.001.0001 |
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Abstract:
This ethnography details the UFO religion, Unarius Academy of Science, and their belief system, which includes visions, channeling, dreams, myths, healing, past-life therapy, and recovered memories. From the theoretical perspective of the social construction of reality, it analyzes the way members create their own social world of contact with extraterrestrials. Based on lengthy field research, the everyday life and history of one of America’s oldest contactee groups is described. The text explicates the lives of the founders, Ernest and Ruth Norman, who claimed to be Space Brothers from higher realms of knowledge that offer a celestial science to Earth. Max Weber’s theory of charisma is used to analyze Ruth Norman, who led the group as Uriel the Archangel, Goddess of Love. Since Unarius had a failed millennial prophecy of spaceships landing in 2001, the author compares them to the group Leon Festinger studied in the 1950s. In looking at the interpretive methods Unarius used to explain success rather than failure, the text discusses the reasons why prophecies rarely fail in the eyes of believers.
Keywords: millennial prophecy, Leon Festinger, charisma, contactee, belief, channeling, UFO, myths, past-life therapy, social construction of reality Table of Contents
Introduction
1.
Seekers and Setting
2.
How Prophecy Never Fails
3.
The Process of Mythmaking
4.
The Content of Unarian Mythology
5.
Being a Good Student
6.
Students and the Reality of Past-Life Therapy
7.
In the Dreamtime
8.
Death and Transition
9.
Preparation for the Landing
10.
How Prophecy Endures
Appendix
Bibliography
Index
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