Conspirituality: Wellness, Disinformazione e l'Alt-Right
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Ciao! Oggi il lato più inquietante del wellness online: come spazi di self-care su social promuovano disinformazione anti-vax, teorie del complotto come QAnon e radicalizzazione verso l'estrema destra. Trattiamo di di TikTok/Instagram che spingono contenuti tossici, influencer non qualificati e il "wellness-to-fascism pipeline" – una "tempesta perfetta" di iper individualismo e sfiducia nelle istituzioni! Buon ascolto :)
Bibliografia:
- Ball, James (2022). "The Other Pandemic: How QAnon Contaminated the World".
- Podcast: "Cospirituality".
- Thompson, April (Australian National University, 2023). "TikTok uses interest in politics to target anti-vaccine content".
- DeFino, Jessica. "The Unpublishable" (Substack series on beauty/wellness industry).
- Ages, Alexandra (202?). "The Alt-Right’s Co-Optation of Wellness Subculture at the Intersection of Health, Purity, and Ideology".
- Wiseman, Eva (2021). "Conspirituality: the dark side of wellness and how it all got so toxic".
- Ward, Charlotte & Voas, David (2011). "Is Conspirituality a New Religious Movement?".
- Kale, Sirin. "The wellness industry is booming – but is it doing more harm than good?"
- Criado Perez, Caroline (2019). "Invisible Women: Exposing Data Bias in a World Designed for Men".
- Knight, Peter (University of Manchester). Intervista/studio su "New Age e teorie del complotto".
- Radicalisation Awareness Network (RAN, EU, 2021). "Conspiracy Theories and Right-Wing Extremism".
- Centre for Countering Digital Hate (2020). "Anti-vax accounts gained 7.8 million followers".
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