Book cover | |
| Author | Thom Burnett (introduction) |
|---|---|
| Language | English |
| Subject | Conspiracy theories |
| Genre | Encyclopedia |
| Publisher | Chamberlain Bros. |
Publication date | 2005 |
| Publication place | United States |
| Pages | 320 |
| ISBN | 1-59609-156-8 |
| OCLC | 62162975 |
Conspiracy Encyclopedia: The Encyclopedia of Conspiracy Theories is anon-fictionreference book aboutconspiracy theories, with an introduction by editor Thom Burnett. It was published in 2005 byChamberlain Bros., and in 2006 by Collins & Brown. Contributors to the work include Thom Burnett,Nigel Cawthorne, Richard Emerson,Mick Farren, Alex Games, John Gill, Sandy Gort, Rod Green, Emma Hooley, Esther Selsdon, andKenn Thomas. The encyclopedia discusses 365 conspiracy theories, most of which are political.
The encyclopedia was positively reviewed inThe Guardian, where it was referred to as a "beautifully-produced tome".[1] It received both a positive and a negative review from two different writers inThe Times. In 2008 the encyclopedia was listed as required reading in a course on conspiracy atHarvard University.[2]
Burnett has written other works oninternational politics, includingWho Really Won the Space Race?: Uncovering the Conspiracy That Kept America Second to the Russians (2005),[3] andWho Really Runs the World?: The War between Globalization and Democracy (2007).[4] The nameThom Burnett is apen name for someone who first garnered security experience while a member ofUnited Kingdom Special Forces.[5] After his military service, he became a writer and pursuedpostgraduate education in Britain inconspiracy theories.[5]
Thom Burnett begins the encyclopedia by introducing the reader to the contents and concepts in the work.[6] Burnett notes that theGerman termVerschwörungsmythos means "Conspiracy Myth", and has value as a descriptive label.[7] "Perhaps the conspiracy world is an updated version of ancient myths, where monsters and the gods of Olympus and Valhalla have been replaced by aliens and the Illuminati of Washington and Buckingham Palace," writes Burnett.[7]Three hundred and sixty-five conspiracy theories are discussed in the work, the majority of which are political in nature.[8] It contains many pictures to illustrate the points it makes.[9] Topics discussed include theMoon landing conspiracy theories, theBilderberg Group, theIlluminati, theWarren Commission and theKennedy assassination conspiracy theories, the views ofDavid Icke, andchupacabras.[1][10] The encyclopedia has a section onassassinations, and those discussed include the deaths ofKenneth Bigley in 2004,Danny Casolaro in 1991,John F. Kennedy in 1963, andTutankhamun in 1323 BC.[10][11]
The Bookseller called the book "the first comprehensive encyclopedia of its kind".[12] In a review of the encyclopedia forThe Guardian, Andrew Mueller called it a "beautifully-produced tome" and commented that the work "succeeds, as was probably intentional, in offering some fascinating tours of the byways of history and providing a tantalising alternative universe in which much of what you know may not be what it seems".[1] John Cooper reviewed the encyclopedia forThe Times, and described it as "an entertaining compilation of ideas ranging from who was the 'real William Shakespeare' to the BCCI case and al-Qaeda".[11] Cooper noted, "The most fascinating section relates to 'Assassinations' ... an unusual fairytale book for Christmas."[11] Martin Samuel gave a more critical review of the encyclopedia forThe Times, commenting, "For all the encyclopedia's pretence at sifting the evidence in search of a verdict, if the truth is out there, the authors are damned if they can find it."[10]
Conspiracy Encyclopedia was listed as required reading in a 2008 course on conspiracy atHarvard University.[2] Writing inConspiracy Theories & Secret Societies For Dummies, authors Christopher Hodapp and Alice Von Kannon comment that Burnett asserts "the spirit of our times has had the crap kicked out of it by global domination".[7] The encyclopedia is recommended for further reading by David Southwell and Sean Twist in their bookUnsolved Political Mysteries.[13] Writing forThe Star, James Mitchell observed, "There's a huge amount packed in here, simply presented."[14] Mitchell concluded, "Read the Conspiracy Encyclopedia, and you'll either have your worst fears confirmed that there's a grand, unified conspiracy affecting everything ... or less exciting, that most of the time, vanilla rules: What you see is what you get!"[14]