There was a lot of interest in conspiracy studies after Trump in 2016, which was good for conspiracy theory study and also politics, esp. populism. We didn't find a lot on Christian engagement and had to piece that together from approaches to (US) eschatology, sectarianism, and expertise denial.
I saw recently there's a new book out called 'Weaponizing Conspiracy Theories' that would have been readily helpful for the ways they intentionally drive conflict. We also found very little in the way of mature Christian reflection on causes or responses, especially in ethics or conflict resolution.
We were mainly focused on tensions and conflicts in church situations, which we'd all seen in the pandemic. This was our end product in 2022... https://iscast.org/conspiracy/
When I was researching my dissertation I encountered this as well. I remember telling my supervisor what I had found with the John Birch Society and he looked at me like I had two heads then cheered me on. I had an amazing supervisor and he remains my strongest supporter of my work
It's incredible what a long run US conspiracism has gotten out of just a few basic ideas, remixed every twenty years or so with the villains and schemes being swapped in and out.
My supervisor was Dr. Scott Kline but he is not accepting students now. I know someone in Belgium is looking for post docs I'll look up their name maybe they are taking grad students too.
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Spouse is military, so we shuffle around a bit & it’s been hard to connect with someone in this area 😕