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American Conspiracy Theories 1st Edition Joseph E Uscinski Joseph M Parent

  • SKU: BELL-36405576
American Conspiracy Theories 1st Edition Joseph E Uscinski Joseph M Parent
$ 31.00 $ 45.00 (-31%)

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American Conspiracy Theories 1st Edition Joseph E Uscinski Joseph M Parent instant download after payment.

Publisher: Oxford University Press
File Extension: PDF
File size: 3.1 MB
Pages: 240
Author: Joseph E. Uscinski, Joseph M. Parent
ISBN: 9780199351800, 9780199351817, 0199351805, 0199351813
Language: English
Year: 2014
Edition: 1

Product desciption

American Conspiracy Theories 1st Edition Joseph E Uscinski Joseph M Parent by Joseph E. Uscinski, Joseph M. Parent 9780199351800, 9780199351817, 0199351805, 0199351813 instant download after payment.

We are living in an age of conspiracy theories, whether it's enduring, widely held beliefs such as government involvement in the Kennedy assassination or alien activity at Roswell, fears of a powerful infiltrating group such as the Illuminati, Jews, Catholics, or communists, or modern fringe
movements of varying popularity such as birtherism and trutherism. What is it in American culture that makes conspiracy theories proliferate? Who is targeted, and why? Are we in the heyday of the conspiracy theory, or is it in decline?
Though there is significant scholarly literature on the topic in psychology, sociology, philosophy, and more, American Conspiracy Theories is the first to use broad, long-term empirical data to analyze this popular American tendency. Joseph E. Uscinski and Joseph M. Parent draw on three sources of
original data: 120,000 letters to the editor of the New York Times and Chicago Tribune from between 1890 and 2010; a two-wave survey from before and after the 2012 presidential election; and discussions of conspiracy theories culled from online news sources, blogs, and other Web sites, also from
before and after the election. Through these sources, they are able to address crucial questions, such as similarities and differences in the nature of conspiracy theories over time, the role of the Internet and communications technologies in spreading modern conspiracy theories, and whether
politics, economics, media, war, or other factors are most important in popularizing conspiratorial beliefs. Ultimately, they conclude that power asymmetries, both foreign and domestic, are the main drivers behind conspiracy theories, and that those at the bottom of power hierarchies have a
strategic interest in blaming those at the top-in other words, "conspiracy theories are for losers." But these "losers" can end up having tremendous influence on the course of history, and American Conspiracy Theories is an unprecedented examination of one of the defining features of American
political life.

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