
New Books in Critical Theory Elizabeth Anne Davis, "The Time of the Cannibals: On Conspiracy Theory and Context" (Fordham UP, 2024)
7 snips
Nov 25, 2025 In this engaging discussion, Elizabeth Anne Davis, a Princeton anthropology professor and author of The Time of the Cannibals, explores the complex web of conspiracy theories surrounding the 2009 grave theft of Cyprus's former president, Tassos Papadopoulos. She examines how public speculation reveals deeper political and historical tensions, linking local narratives to broader imperial histories. Davis critiques existing scholarly approaches, proposing 'conspiracy attunement' to better understand the discourse. Expect provocative insights on the politics of the dead body and future projects on body doubles and burial practices.
AI Snips
Chapters
Books
Transcript
Episode notes
Conspiracy Theory Is Not One Thing
- Conspiracy theory is not a stable analytic object that sustains easy comparative claims.
- Elizabeth Ann Davis argues it recurs across times and places and resists singular theorization.
First Encounters With Local Conspiracy Talk
- Davis first encountered Anglo-American conspiracy claims about Cyprus as an American researcher.
- Locals joked about being 'conspiracy theorists,' which sparked her interest in meta-discourse.
Don't Use Nation-States As Default Context
- When writing a case study on conspiracy, avoid defaulting to nation-state boundaries as context.
- Davis advises setting context through discursive and phenomenological relations, not just geopolitical frames.

