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Cultural Sociology

Publication date: 2017-03-01
Volume: 11 Pages: 113 - 129
Publisher: Sage Publications Ltd.

Author:

Harambam, Jaron
Aupers, Stef

Keywords:

identification, conspiracy, conspiracy theories, conspiracy theorists, labelling, categorization, stigma, stigmatization, conspiracy culture, resistance, identity, Social Sciences, Sociology, AGE, 1608 Sociology, 2002 Cultural Studies, 4410 Sociology, 4702 Cultural studies

Abstract:

Despite their popularity and normalization, the public image of conspiracy theory remains morally tainted. Academics contribute by conceiving of conspiracy theorists as a coherent collective: internal variety is sacrificed for a clear external demarcation. Drawing on ethnographic fieldwork in the Netherlands, we explore variation in the conspiracy milieu through people’s own self-understanding. More particularly, we study how these people identify with and distinguish themselves from others. The analysis shows that they actively resist their stigmatization as ‘conspiracy theorists’ by distinguishing themselves from the mainstream as ‘critical freethinkers’. The trope ‘I am not a conspiracy theorist’ is used to reclaim rationality by labelling others within the conspiracy milieu the ‘real’ conspiracy theorists. Secondly, their ideas of self and other make three groups apparent: ‘activists’, ‘retreaters’ and ‘mediators’. Conspiracy culture, we conclude, is not one monolithic whole, but rather a network of different groups of people, identifying with different worldviews, beliefs, and practices.