In FYP We Trust: The Divine Force of Algorithmic Conspirituality

Authors

  • Kelley Cotter Pennsylvania State University
  • Julia R. DeCook Loyola University Chicago
  • Shaheen Kanthawala University of Alabama
  • Kali Foyle University of Texas at Austin

Keywords:

algorithms, conspirituality, algorithmic conspirituality, big data, platforms, TikTok

Abstract

In this article, we introduce the concept of algorithmic conspirituality to capture occasions when people find personal, often revelatory connections to content algorithmically recommended to them on social media and explain these connections as a kind of algorithmically mediated cosmic intervention. The phenomenon emerges from three particular developments: an epistemological shift that has positioned algorithms as important tools for self-knowledge; the sublime quality that algorithms have acquired, which primes users to imagine them as providential; and the rise of conspirituality (a portmanteau of conspiracy and spirituality). In conceptualizing algorithmic conspirituality, we particularly focus on TikTok, where the platform’s For You Page algorithm shapes users’ experience to an even greater degree than other platforms. We illustrate the concept through three example TikTok videos and conclude with a discussion and recommendations on future research agendas using algorithmic conspirituality.

Author Biographies

Kelley Cotter, Pennsylvania State University

Assistant Professor in the College of Information Sciences and Technology

Julia R. DeCook, Loyola University Chicago

 School of Communication, Assistant Professor. 

Shaheen Kanthawala, University of Alabama

 Assistant Professor, Department of Communication & Information Sciences 

Kali Foyle, University of Texas at Austin

Undergraduate student

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Published

2022-05-26

Issue

Section

Articles