In the growing body of research seeking to understand QAnon, the phenomenon has been studied through multiple and varied academic perspectives. These include QAnon’s role in the spread of disinformation,[^4] its popularity amongst religious…[^10]: DICKSON, E. J.: The FBI Declared QAnon a Domestic Terrorism Threat — and Conspiracy Theorists Are Psyched. Released on 2nd August 2019. [online]. [2022-05-22]. Available at: <https://www.rollingstone.com/culture/culture-features/qano…
Annette Markham
scholar · 2 mentions across 1 reading
In this course
Markham appears only as a passing reference in the course materials, cited in a footnote about academic research perspectives on QAnon without direct quotation or elaboration of their specific theoretical contribution. Without fuller context from the readings, it's difficult to determine precisely how their work frames questions of disinformation, belief systems, or networked conspiracy in relation to the course's concerns with AI, cybernetics, and social systems.
Mentioned in 1 reading
Appears alongside
People mentioned in the same passages — sorted by co-occurrence weight.