Bryan Giemza is Professor of Humanities and Literature in the Texas Tech Honors College and a 2025 US Fulbright Scholar. As a public scholar and author grounded in law and literature, he directs engaged scholarship initiatives and leads international resilience-focused collaborations at Texas Tech University. His work explores misinformation, democracy, and cultural change in the US and beyond.

Request Academic Copy
Please copy the ISBN for submitting review copy form
Description
Introduction: Epistemic Disorder and Democratic Vulnerability Robert Moses Peaslee et al., "We felt like we were doing noble work": Local Information Flows in the Texas South Plains During the COVID-19 Pandemic Bryan A. Giemza, Made in Texas, Sometimes with Imported Ingredients: Pink Slime Journalism Arrives in Lubbock Erik P. Bucy, Misinformation and Vaccination Hesitancy Surrounding the COVID-19 Pandemic: A Perfect Storm of Distortion and Doubt Katharine Hayhoe and Bryan Giemza, Headwinds: A Conversation about Climate Communication and Disinformation Kenton T. Wilkinson and Lucinda Holt, Juntos estamos saludables: Addressing COVID-19 Mis/Disinformation Among Hispanics/Latinos on the South Plains of Texas Lyombe Eko, Seeing Double: Two American Journalists, Linguistic Affinity, and Russian Disinformation in the 2014 and 2022 Invasions of Ukraine Ori Swed, Digital Manipulation: Unmasking Russian Trolls' Role in Fueling Texas Secession Fever during the 2016 US Presidential Campaign Brie D. Sherwin, Anatomy of a Conspiracy Theory: Law, Politics, and Science Denialism in the Era of COVID-19
