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Carole McGranahan's Research on Trump and Twitter in A&S Magazine

Trump supporters climbing the capital building in DC

Carole McGranahan's research on Trump and Twitter featured in Colorado Arts and Sciences Magazine.

Carole McGranahan, professor of cultural anthropology at the 精品SM在线影片, may not be a soothsayer, but just months into Donald J. Trump鈥檚 presidential term, she warned that his rhetoric, amplified by the social media platform Twitter, might result in not just division, but outright violence.

Trump鈥檚 well-documented penchant for lying, she argued, was creating 鈥渁ffiliative truths,鈥 alternate realities around which people were building communities.

鈥淭he sociality of lies brings people together, but in so doing, distances others,鈥 she wrote in 鈥,鈥 published in the May 2017 issue of American Ethnologist. 鈥淎f铿乴iative truths need not always be violent. But when they mark others as fearsome, af铿乴iation to groups can bring violence. Is this the future of Trump鈥檚 America? Will such lie-fueled violence become normalized?鈥

Fast forward to the burgeoning days of 2021. For more than two months, Trump has refused to acknowledge that he lost the Nov. 3 presidential election to Democrat Joe Biden and, he has continually stirred up supporters with claims鈥攎ostly on Twitter鈥攖hat the election was 鈥渟tolen.鈥 His attorneys have filed more than 60 lawsuits protesting various aspects of the election; all but one conceding a minor point were summarily dismissed.听

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