Conspiracy Culture: From the Kennedy Assassination to The X-files

Front Cover
Psychology Press, 2000 - History - 287 pages

Conspiracy theories are everywhere in post-war American culture. From postmodern novels to The X-Files and from gangsta rap to feminist polemic, there is a widespread suspicion that sinister forces are conspiring to take control of our national destiny, our minds, and even our bodies. Conspiracy explanations can no longer be dismissed as the paranoid delusions of far-right crackpots. Indeed, they have become a necessary response to a risky and increasingly globalized world, in which everything is connected but nothing adds up.
Peter Knight provides an engaging and cogent analysis of the development of conspiracy culture, from 1960s' countercultural suspicions about the authorities to the 1990s, where a paranoid attitude is both routine and ironic. Conspiracy Culture analyses conspiracy narratives about familiar topics like the Kennedy assassination, alien abduction, body horror, AIDS, crack cocaine, the New World Order, as well as more unusual ones like the conspiracies of patriarchy and white supremacy.
Conspiracy Culture shows how Americans have come to distrust not only the narratives of the authorities, but even the authority of narrative itself to explain What Is Really Going On. From the complexities of Thomas Pynchon's novels to the endless mysteries of The X-Files, Knight argues that contemporary conspiracy culture is marked by an infinite regress of suspicion. Trust no one, because we have met the enemy and it is us.

 

Selected pages

Contents

Introduction CONSPIRACYTHEORY
1
CONSPIRACYCULTURE
23
PLOTTING THE KENNEDY ASSASSINATION
76
THE PROBLEM WITH NO NAME FEMINISM AND THE FIGURATION OF CONSPIRACY
117
FEAR OF A BLACK PLANET BLACK PARANOIA AND THE AESTHETICS OF CONSPIRACY
143
BODY PANIC
168
EVERYTHING IS CONNECTED
204
AFTERWORD
242
NOTES
245
INDEX
283
Copyright

Other editions - View all

Common terms and phrases

About the author (2000)

Peter Knight is Lecturer in American Studies at the University of Manchester.