Academia.edu no longer supports Internet Explorer.
To browse Academia.edu and the wider internet faster and more securely, please take a few seconds to upgrade your browser.
2008, Seforim blog
…
2 pages
1 file
https://seforimblog.com/2008/03/we-have-discussed-on-multiple-occasions/
Is the Illuminati real? XNT LTRS CDBHD SGD ZMRVDQ ENQ XNTSRDKE.
2014
Please read the following candidate‘s declaration, and tick the adjacent boxes to confirm that you have complied with each statement. Then complete the cover sheet below in full. Failing to do either will result in your assessment being delayed and/or returned to you for resubmission. Please raise any queries regarding this form with your academic tutor well in advance of submission. CANDIDATE’S DECLARATION I confirm that no part of this submitted material, except where clearly quoted and referenced, has been copied from material belonging to any other person (e.g., from a book, article, lecture handout, web site, or another candidate). I am aware that it is a breach of university regulations to copy the work of another without clear acknowledgement, and that attempting to do so will render me liable to disciplinary proceedings. I confirm that, for Practical Reports, where appropriate and feasible, client consent for the writing up of clinical work has been sought and obtained. If c...
Preface to issue 23-24 of _Lexia_, on the semiotics of conspiracy theories
The Sociological Review, 2000
Online Journal of Communication and Media Technologies, 2018
This article examines new forms of narrative in the internet age through examining the website ClickHole. Through parodying and satirizing sites like BuzzFeed, ClickHole (an offshoot of the famous parody entity The Onion) thrives on the creation and dissemination of absurd headlines and accompanying stories. These not only commenting widely on cultural obsessions with things like pop culture figures and social causes, but also point to an innovative take on the place and form of narrative in the age of the internet.
The International Encyclopedia of Anthropology, 2021
Conspiracy theories are one way of dealing with gaps between hopes and reality, between the visible and the hidden, and between expert and lay knowledge. They are meaning systems that either explain or make sense of specific events or of social, political, or economic systems of power. Conspiracy theories assume that some actors intentionally conspire to harm others for their own benefit. Often they are linked to feelings of persecution against a way of life; against whole ethnic, racial, or religious groups; or against specific groups. They frequently address fundamental questions about the presence of good and evil, and purport to unveil hidden forces in the world. Thus, they are often connected to cosmologies in ways that make for interesting anthropological scrutiny.
Studiose litteras in picturis attendere. Estudi i edició de les inscripcions de la pintura valenciana (1238-1579), 2022
ЕтноАнтропоЗум/EthnoAnthropoZoom, 2005
The Review of Higher Education, 2013
Near Eastern Archaeology, 2023
The Journal of Specialised Translation, 2023
Journal of South American Earth Sciences, 2020
American Behavioral Scientist, 1971
Engineering Structures, 2017
Biology of Blood and Marrow Transplantation, 2012