QAnon, Capitalism, and the Crisis of Meaning offers a compelling and theoretically sophisticated analysis of contemporary conspiratorial culture. Conner, Roscigno and Hannah show how QAnon is not a glitch in the system of neoliberal capitalism but its most revealing symptom. QAnon’s appeal, the authors argue, is not hindered by its apparent irrationality but is a result of it: in an era of eroded trust, hollowed institutions and pervasive insecurity, it offers a myth that renders chaos legible and grievance meaningful. This book provides a clear-eyed account of belief and alienation in the age of surveillance capitalism and algorithmic amplification.