
The Quiet Damage
The riveting story of QAnons devastating impact on the American family, grappling with the seductive allure of disinformation, the trauma it causes, and how we might set ourselves free.
The QAnon conspiracy theorieswhich posit that a nefarious cabal of elites is secretly ruling our society, poisoning our bodies, and harming our childrenhave come to represent the peculiar mania driven by social media disinformation campaigns and its dire consequences on our politics. But whats often overlooked is the raw destructive power these theories have on the American family. In an age in which partisanship has created deep divides within the homebetween parents and children, brothers and sisters, husbands and wivesthe extreme belief structure of QAnon widens those divides into seemingly insurmountable chasms, leaving people lost, confused, and broken. With studies showing that nearly 19% of Americans believe in QAnon-related theories, the true toll of QAnon on our mental and social health is as vast as it is urgent to confront.
In The Quiet Damage, celebrated reporter Jesselyn Cook unfolds the heartbreaking story of five representative American families to show how QAnon shattered bonds once believed unbreakable. In these stories, of families comprising young couples and old, rural white parents and urban Black siblings, Cook paints a portrait of American suffering, of the vulnerabilities that have left people susceptible to outrageous theories promising order and control in a world where both are increasingly in short supply. Charting the arc of each believers path from their first intersection with QAnon to the depths of their cultish conviction in the theorys promise, toin some fortunate casestheir rejection of conspiracy thinking and the mending of broken bonds, Cook offers a fascinating look into the psychology of how and why ordinary people come to believe the unbelievable. Her reporting lays bare how we have been taken hostage by grifters who profit from a network built on false hopeand how we might eventually release our loved ones, and ourselves, from their grasp.
At once a riveting account of the American family in crisis and a sociological exploration of the hidden costs of our global crisis of disinformation, The Quiet Damage is profound, brilliantly researched and beautifully written.
The QAnon conspiracy theorieswhich posit that a nefarious cabal of elites is secretly ruling our society, poisoning our bodies, and harming our childrenhave come to represent the peculiar mania driven by social media disinformation campaigns and its dire consequences on our politics. But whats often overlooked is the raw destructive power these theories have on the American family. In an age in which partisanship has created deep divides within the homebetween parents and children, brothers and sisters, husbands and wivesthe extreme belief structure of QAnon widens those divides into seemingly insurmountable chasms, leaving people lost, confused, and broken. With studies showing that nearly 19% of Americans believe in QAnon-related theories, the true toll of QAnon on our mental and social health is as vast as it is urgent to confront.
In The Quiet Damage, celebrated reporter Jesselyn Cook unfolds the heartbreaking story of five representative American families to show how QAnon shattered bonds once believed unbreakable. In these stories, of families comprising young couples and old, rural white parents and urban Black siblings, Cook paints a portrait of American suffering, of the vulnerabilities that have left people susceptible to outrageous theories promising order and control in a world where both are increasingly in short supply. Charting the arc of each believers path from their first intersection with QAnon to the depths of their cultish conviction in the theorys promise, toin some fortunate casestheir rejection of conspiracy thinking and the mending of broken bonds, Cook offers a fascinating look into the psychology of how and why ordinary people come to believe the unbelievable. Her reporting lays bare how we have been taken hostage by grifters who profit from a network built on false hopeand how we might eventually release our loved ones, and ourselves, from their grasp.
At once a riveting account of the American family in crisis and a sociological exploration of the hidden costs of our global crisis of disinformation, The Quiet Damage is profound, brilliantly researched and beautifully written.
Auteur | | Jesselyn Cook |
Taal | | Engels |
Type | | Hardcover |
Categorie | | Mens & Maatschappij |