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Today's Paper | May 09, 2024

Published 20 Jan, 2013 10:01pm

Conspiracy theories

IN an early scene of the new drama Utopia on Channel 4, an academic rejects a student’s proposal for a PhD on conspiracy theories: “I mean, conspiracies aren’t very now, are they?” The line is winking inwardly because Utopia is the second conspiracy thriller in a row on this network.

So conspiracies are very now, and about to become even more so with the return of the genre’s dark lord and author of The Da Vinci Code. Dan Brown revealed that his new novel, Inferno, will be published on May 14.

Brown’s protagonist, Robert Langdon, will now follow the trail of Dante’s Inferno into a “harrowing world” filled with secrets and mysteries. Although we aren’t yet allowed to know Brown’s narrative, Dante’s is in the public domain and we may surmise from it that Langdon will face successive challenges representing heaven, hell and purgatory.

Although Brown’s books frequently present religion as an agent of conspiracy, his literary career has benefited from a general Western decline in faith. The human instinct to see a shape to our days, which once drove people to the Bible and Dante’s Inferno, now sends them to The Da Vinci Code and Brown’s Inferno. In frightened, sceptical times, conspiracy theories flourish.

And those who question official histories have recently received vindication. While no truth has ever been proved in the favourite fantasies of conspiracy theorists numerous grave conspiracies have been exposed.

The activities of British TV presenter and paedophile Sir Jimmy Savile benefited from at the very least a conspiracy of silence in the circles in which he moved. At a lesser level of human suffering, it is now established that cabals existed in the banking sector to fix the Libor lending rate.

We also now know that the private lives of the well known and those thrown into the news by tragedy routinely suffered intrusion from a conspiracy of journalists. There was indeed another story behind the official story.

Brown brilliantly anticipated the mindset of the 21st century, in which citizens would come to suspect that every stone had something hidden under it and would be justified in their suspicion by progressive revelations. But Brown’s mistake was to suggest that conspiracies involve medieval sects searching for mystical chalices.

As we have discovered in a series of official reports, these are indeed conspiratorial times, but the collusions and cover-ups take place not among hooded figures in crypts but between police officers and amid bankers, politicians and journalists.

And, indeed, priests. As it happens, the Vatican, a recurrent villain in Brown’s books, was involved in a cover-up. The biggest conspiracies are found not in fiction about the far past, but in the facts of the present. — The Guardian, London

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