2021
DOI: 10.1093/jaarel/lfab053
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Magic and Politics: Conspirituality and COVID-19

Abstract: Why do people find conspiracy theories attractive, convincing, or useful? In this article, I analyze conspirituality—that is, the relationships between New Age spirituality and conspiracy theories—in Italy during the COVID-19 lockdown. After distinguishing between conspiracy-believing and belief in conspiracies, I claim that conspiracy-believing could be understood as an aesthetic (sensory and artistic) practice. In doing so, I offer a novel interpretation on conspiracism that complements current scholarship w… Show more

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Cited by 31 publications
(22 citation statements)
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“…Some of the reporting has highlighted how religious communities—in times of lock-down and strict social-distancing rules—have found alternative ways of worshipping. Others have focused on the supportive role religious communities have played for those who have been struggling during the pandemic 2 or, in this journal, on religious communities whose responses to the pandemic are characterized by conspirituality ( Parmigiani 2021 ). Few studies, however, have paid attention to religious interpretations of the Covid-19 pandemic.…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Some of the reporting has highlighted how religious communities—in times of lock-down and strict social-distancing rules—have found alternative ways of worshipping. Others have focused on the supportive role religious communities have played for those who have been struggling during the pandemic 2 or, in this journal, on religious communities whose responses to the pandemic are characterized by conspirituality ( Parmigiani 2021 ). Few studies, however, have paid attention to religious interpretations of the Covid-19 pandemic.…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…(Con)spiritual individuals and movements also identify themselves in opposition not just to elite authorities but to the mainstream more generally, including mainstream media, religious, medical, agricultural, scientific and political institutions, and the dominant culture of capitalism (Asprem and Dyrendal 2015;Bramadat 2017;Campbell 1972;Gauthier 2020;Harambam and Aupers 2021;Parmigiani 2021;Ward and Voas 2011). While these critiques of modernity and reason have historical antecedents in Romanticism and Western esotericism and occultism (Asprem and Dyrendal 2015), they intensified during the 1960s counter-culture movement, evident in the proliferation of new religious and spiritual movements, and again in the 1990s New Age.…”
Section: Opposition To Mainstream Culturementioning
confidence: 99%
“…While these critiques of modernity and reason have historical antecedents in Romanticism and Western esotericism and occultism (Asprem and Dyrendal 2015), they intensified during the 1960s counter-culture movement, evident in the proliferation of new religious and spiritual movements, and again in the 1990s New Age. In this way they form a 'dissensus'-'both cognitive and affective'-of those who exclude themselves from the 'common sense' of the majority (Parmigiani 2021: 511 quoting Rancière 1999, relying more on post-secular, experiential, 'ways of knowing' than rational beliefs (Harambam and Aupers 2021; Parmigiani 2021). This is evident in statements such as Pascoe/Max's view that the 'COVID scamdemic' is not real, and 'only really held together by the mainstream news… and fear'.…”
Section: Opposition To Mainstream Culturementioning
confidence: 99%
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