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Full text release has been delayed at the author's request until May 03, 2025
ETD Abstract Container
Abstract Header
"Through a Glass, Darkly": Assessing the Influence of Digital Conspiracism on American Catholicism
Author Info
Sanfilippo, Dominic Raymond
ORCID® Identifier
http://orcid.org/0009-0008-4137-6916
Permalink:
http://rave.ohiolink.edu/etdc/view?acc_num=dayton1714651584296873
Abstract Details
Year and Degree
2024, Master of Arts (M.A.), University of Dayton, Theological Studies.
Abstract
This thesis examines the influence of conspiratorial content present throughout American Catholic digital spaces. Drawing on several contemporary definitions of contemporary conspiracism, the thesis first identifies rhetorical hallmarks of digital conspiracism in places like social media feeds and blogs, including accusatory claims about power; binary framings; and aesthetic invocations of violence and eschatological judgment. Based on these definitional grounds, the thesis conjectures a disproportionate amount of existent conspiratorial rhetoric in primarily English-speaking Catholic digital spaces compared to estimates of total participants within #CatholicTwitter and adjacent digital spaces. The first chapter affirms the many benefits media and connective technologies bestow on contemporary societies. It largely agrees with works like Katherine G. Schmidt's Virtual Communion which highlight how concepts like mediation and virtuality—both key to internet functionality—lie at the heart of Catholic theological understandings of reality. Given those two points and the initial conjecture, the thesis asks the following question: if digital interactions are real (albeit nuanced) parts of human life, what should scholarly observers and institutional leaders alike make of the conspiratorial fragments floating between cyber and "real-life" conversations? Utilizing an interdisciplinary methodological approach drawing on Catholic intellectual history, recent social science research, and theological reflection, the rest of the project tries to answer that question. In answering it, the project warns institutional American Catholicism might yet fail a twenty-first century "stress test" alongside other contemporary institutions. The second chapter examines historical conditions in the twentieth and twenty-first centuries during which emergent media technologies helped polarize ideas and detach individuals from their immediate communities. It also contrasts institutional Catholicism's measured approach to digital mediation with rapid consumptive patterns by individual users of all backgrounds and identities, including American Catholics. In its third chapter, the thesis connects consumptive participation on X (or Twitter) to contemporary research about four phenomena related to modern conspiracism's rise: pernicious polarization; widespread addictive patterns within social media use; the dissemination of misinformation and disinformation across networks; and militant rhetoric online. In its epilogue, the thesis closes by calling for collaborative qualitative and quantitative research to test the initial conjecture about heightened conspiratorial Catholic content online. In doing so, it argues Catholic and non-Catholic researchers would more accurately be able to explore the diverse qualities and origins of observed conspiratorial rhetoric within Catholic digital streams; trace such conspiratorial content's varied dissemination motives (or lack thereof); and assess how unique rhetorical "pressure points" affect American Catholics and their communities in specific ways. The epilogue also points to contemporary scholars within and outside the Catholic intellectual tradition working on diverse themes such as reconciliation; digital literacy; Eucharistic theology; and conflict de-escalation whose expertise areas are crucial referents at this moment in time. By actualizing their work through pedagogy, community programming, and dialogue efforts, Catholic and civil society leaders might both combat the deleterious effects of contemporary conspiracism and bolster American (and American Catholic) institutional health in a turbulent, fractured age.
Committee
William V. Trollinger (Advisor)
Nicholas Rademacher (Committee Member)
Vincent J. Miller (Committee Member)
Pages
140 p.
Subject Headings
Religion
;
Theology
Keywords
"conspiracism
;
American Catholicism
;
digital
;
glass
;
darkly
;
Twitter
;
polarization"
Recommended Citations
Refworks
EndNote
RIS
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Citations
Sanfilippo, D. R. (2024).
"Through a Glass, Darkly": Assessing the Influence of Digital Conspiracism on American Catholicism
[Master's thesis, University of Dayton]. OhioLINK Electronic Theses and Dissertations Center. http://rave.ohiolink.edu/etdc/view?acc_num=dayton1714651584296873
APA Style (7th edition)
Sanfilippo, Dominic.
"Through a Glass, Darkly": Assessing the Influence of Digital Conspiracism on American Catholicism .
2024. University of Dayton, Master's thesis.
OhioLINK Electronic Theses and Dissertations Center
, http://rave.ohiolink.edu/etdc/view?acc_num=dayton1714651584296873.
MLA Style (8th edition)
Sanfilippo, Dominic. ""Through a Glass, Darkly": Assessing the Influence of Digital Conspiracism on American Catholicism ." Master's thesis, University of Dayton, 2024. http://rave.ohiolink.edu/etdc/view?acc_num=dayton1714651584296873
Chicago Manual of Style (17th edition)
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Document number:
dayton1714651584296873
Copyright Info
© 2024, all rights reserved.
This open access ETD is published by University of Dayton and OhioLINK.