Conspiracy Theories, Messianic Populism and Everyday Social Media Use in Contemporary Brazil: a Glocal Semiotic Perspective

Scholars have highlighted the bond between digital populism and conspiracy theories. They have also shown that conspiracy theories from around the globe rely on similar narrative patterns, as well as that being locally adapted. This paper adds to this body of research by exploring the glocal dimensi...

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Main Author: Paolo Demuru
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Globus et Locus 2021-03-01
Series:Glocalism: Journal of Culture, Politics and Innovation
Subjects:
Online Access:https://glocalismjournal.org/conspiracy-theories-messianic-populism-and-everyday-social-media-use-in-contemporary-brazil-a-glocal-semiotic-perspective/
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spelling doaj-16b33395f48f44e0b5fad99a86c28fa92021-03-18T13:01:38ZengGlobus et LocusGlocalism: Journal of Culture, Politics and Innovation2283-79492283-79492021-03-012020310.12893/gjcpi.2020.3.12Conspiracy Theories, Messianic Populism and Everyday Social Media Use in Contemporary Brazil: a Glocal Semiotic Perspective Paolo DemuruScholars have highlighted the bond between digital populism and conspiracy theories. They have also shown that conspiracy theories from around the globe rely on similar narrative patterns, as well as that being locally adapted. This paper adds to this body of research by exploring the glocal dimension of populist conspiracy theories in the contemporary Brazilian political context. Using a semiotic approach to glocalization, I tackle one recurrent motif of global conspiracy theories: the domination of the elites over the people, which contributed to the election of Jair Bolsonaro in 2018, as well as to the rise of his approval rating in 2019 and 2020. I argue that this particular narrative feature has taken on, in Bolsonaro’s case, shapes and tones which are directly related to the local religious semiosphere, especially the Neo-Pentecostal evangelical messianism: indeed, the image of Bolsonaro as a national messiah is characterized by a high rate of mysticism, eschatology and aesthesic load, which are three of the main distinctive traits in Brazilian evangelicalism. Moreover, I discuss the role of everyday social media use in this glocal meaning-making process. I show how on Bolsonarist public WhatsApp groups, everyday banalities, global and local populist, conspiracy and religious narratives were mixed in a way that fostered the image of Bolsonaro as a martyr and a political messiah anointed by the Lord.https://glocalismjournal.org/conspiracy-theories-messianic-populism-and-everyday-social-media-use-in-contemporary-brazil-a-glocal-semiotic-perspective/glocalizationconspiracy theoriesdigital populismmessianismbrazil
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Paolo Demuru
spellingShingle Paolo Demuru
Conspiracy Theories, Messianic Populism and Everyday Social Media Use in Contemporary Brazil: a Glocal Semiotic Perspective
Glocalism: Journal of Culture, Politics and Innovation
glocalization
conspiracy theories
digital populism
messianism
brazil
author_facet Paolo Demuru
author_sort Paolo Demuru
title Conspiracy Theories, Messianic Populism and Everyday Social Media Use in Contemporary Brazil: a Glocal Semiotic Perspective
title_short Conspiracy Theories, Messianic Populism and Everyday Social Media Use in Contemporary Brazil: a Glocal Semiotic Perspective
title_full Conspiracy Theories, Messianic Populism and Everyday Social Media Use in Contemporary Brazil: a Glocal Semiotic Perspective
title_fullStr Conspiracy Theories, Messianic Populism and Everyday Social Media Use in Contemporary Brazil: a Glocal Semiotic Perspective
title_full_unstemmed Conspiracy Theories, Messianic Populism and Everyday Social Media Use in Contemporary Brazil: a Glocal Semiotic Perspective
title_sort conspiracy theories, messianic populism and everyday social media use in contemporary brazil: a glocal semiotic perspective
publisher Globus et Locus
series Glocalism: Journal of Culture, Politics and Innovation
issn 2283-7949
2283-7949
publishDate 2021-03-01
description Scholars have highlighted the bond between digital populism and conspiracy theories. They have also shown that conspiracy theories from around the globe rely on similar narrative patterns, as well as that being locally adapted. This paper adds to this body of research by exploring the glocal dimension of populist conspiracy theories in the contemporary Brazilian political context. Using a semiotic approach to glocalization, I tackle one recurrent motif of global conspiracy theories: the domination of the elites over the people, which contributed to the election of Jair Bolsonaro in 2018, as well as to the rise of his approval rating in 2019 and 2020. I argue that this particular narrative feature has taken on, in Bolsonaro’s case, shapes and tones which are directly related to the local religious semiosphere, especially the Neo-Pentecostal evangelical messianism: indeed, the image of Bolsonaro as a national messiah is characterized by a high rate of mysticism, eschatology and aesthesic load, which are three of the main distinctive traits in Brazilian evangelicalism. Moreover, I discuss the role of everyday social media use in this glocal meaning-making process. I show how on Bolsonarist public WhatsApp groups, everyday banalities, global and local populist, conspiracy and religious narratives were mixed in a way that fostered the image of Bolsonaro as a martyr and a political messiah anointed by the Lord.
topic glocalization
conspiracy theories
digital populism
messianism
brazil
url https://glocalismjournal.org/conspiracy-theories-messianic-populism-and-everyday-social-media-use-in-contemporary-brazil-a-glocal-semiotic-perspective/
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