RT Article T1 Asymmetric conflation: QAnon and the political cooptation of religion JF Politics and religion VO 17 IS 1 SP 58 OP 80 A1 Foertsch, Steven A1 Chakraborty, Rudra A1 Joosse, Paul LA English PB Cambridge Univ. Press YR 2024 UL https://ixtheo.de/Record/1884474179 AB QAnon is beginning to gain attention in scholarly circles, but these sources often disagree about how to categorize the movement. This amounts to the meta-dispute between those who view QAnon primarily as a religious "cult," and those who grant it greater credibility as a political populist movement. Using quantitative and qualitative methods we test the proposition that QAnon could be a mix of both. Results from both analyses suggest that QAnon is best understood primarily as a political populist movement, but one that utilizes religious rhetoric. The findings thus highlight the asymmetric nature of the conflation of religion and politics in the contemporary American civil sphere. K1 QAnon K1 asymmetric conflation K1 Cult K1 Populism K1 Religion DO 10.1017/S1755048323000275