ABSTRACT

This edited collection contributes to the study of conspiracy culture by analysing the relationship of literary forms to the formation, reception, and transformation of conspiracy theories.

Conspiracy theories are narratives, and their narrative form provides the structure within which their ‘readers’ situate themselves when interpreting the world and its history. At the same time, conspiracist interpretations of the world may then be transmediated into works of literature and import popular discourse into narrative structures. The suppression and disappearance of books themselves may generate conspiracy theories and become co-opted into political dissent. Additionally, literary criticism itself is shown to adopt conspiracist modes of interpretation. By examining conspiracy plots as literary plots, with narrative, rhetorical, and symbolic characteristics, this volume is the first systematic study of how conspiracy culture in American and European history is the consequence of its interactions with literature.

This book will be of great interest to researchers of conspiracy theories, literature, and literary criticism.

part |33 pages

Opening considerations

chapter 1|14 pages

Introduction

chapter 2|17 pages

‘Turning points'

Plots in conspiracy and literature

part Section 1|54 pages

Conspiracy theories about books and authors

chapter 4|18 pages

In pursuit of nationhood vis-à-vis Russia

The search for lost manuscripts in post-Soviet countries

chapter 5|17 pages

Conspiracy reading

New literary perspectives on paranoia in Thomas Pynchon

part Section 2|55 pages

Plotting: narrative forms of conspiracy

chapter 6|19 pages

‘The cash nexus'

Realism and conspiracy in Balzac and Dickens

chapter 7|20 pages

Conspiracy narratives in serialized comics

An exploration

part Section 3|55 pages

Fictional disclosures: conspiracy and the politics of truth

chapter 9|17 pages

Suspicious fictions

The fictionalizing acts in a conspiracist novel

chapter 10|15 pages

Half-truths

On an instrument of post-truth politics (and conspiracy narratives)

chapter 11|21 pages

Men make their own history

Conspiracy as counter-narrative in the German political field