The following distills the essence of my responses to questions from a vaccine (and Covid) skeptical friend. I share it in case it’s useful for others (and because it updates a few things I’ve written before on the topic). I’m not an epidemiologist and the comments on the science of the pandemic are those of […]
Posts Tagged ‘anti-vaxx’
Letter to a vaccine skeptic
Posted in Cultural politics, Science & society, tagged Anomalies, anti-vaccination movement, anti-vaxx, climate crisis, conspiracies, conspiracy culture, conspiracy theories, conspiratistics, conspiratology, COVID-19, emergency brake, Letters to..., pandemic politics, pandemic response, vaccine science on April 12, 2021 | 1 Comment »
More conspiratology: the internet as monochord & storm machine
Posted in Media ecology, Spirit matter, tagged affect, affective contagion, alt-left, alt-right, alternative health, Anomalies, anti-vaccination movement, anti-vaxx, complementary health, conspiracies, conspiracy culture, conspiracy theories, conspiratistics, conspiratology, conspirology, digital media, disinformation, emotional contagion, emotional surge protection, George Floyd, George Floyd protests, illiberalism, infowar, media ecology, media politics, mediasphere, monochord, New Age culture, New Age movement, populism, post-truth, QAnon, Robert Fludd, social media, Trump, Wu Ming Foundation on June 2, 2020 | 5 Comments »
At a time when the U.S. itself appears on the brink of collapse — with riots in the streets, a pandemic crippling the country’s heath care system and wreaking havoc on its economy, a president tweeting out nods of recognition to his QAnon fan base and hinting at “the Storm” that is coming — the sense-making apparatus of digital media is rife with opportunities for disinformational entrepreneurs to make headway in various directions. […]
The internet is like a huge instrument — a hyper-complex, Robert Fluddian monochord, that works by allowing for an infinity of connections through which flow the sounds and vibrations of human emotional and affective contagion. When protests erupt across the country over the senseless killing of a black man in Minneapolis, the time scale in which large-scale action occurs speeds up and become affect-driven time, not a time in which collective deliberation is really possible. This means that informational, and therefore “disinformational,” bursts into that monochord become all the more powerful.
Categories
- Academe (108)
- Anthropocene (75)
- Blog stuff (52)
- Cinema (88)
- Climate change (75)
- Cultural politics (45)
- Eco-culture (174)
- Eco-theory (55)
- Manifestos & auguries (42)
- Media ecology (121)
- Music & soundscape (39)
- Philosophy (261)
- Politics (167)
- Process-relational thought (101)
- Science & society (37)
- Spirit matter (129)
- Uncategorized (57)
- Visual culture (88)
Translate
Archives
Subscribe to Blog via Email
Subscribe2
Top Posts & Pages
Popular resources
Lyme disease & beyond: a bibliographic resourceHumming the New Earth (on the "global Hum")
33⅓ Environmental Studies greats (or, a canon revisited) (2015)
Books of the decade in ecocultural theory, 2020
Books of the decade in ecocultural theory, 2010
Between Continental and environmental philosophy (2009)
Books & articles
Selected interviews, talks, music
Apocalyptic Anxieties, SFU, 2023
SFU Global Humanities interview
KCSB Selectric Davyland interview
The Zone is Us (Vermont Humanities, 2022)
What’s on my Bandcamp music page
Soundcloud playlist (music sampler)
Krista Tippett On Being (Speaking of Faith) interview
Associated sites
Immanence on Facebook
- This weblog is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-No Derivative Works 3.0 United States license.