BailynB. (1967). The ideological origins of the American revolution.Cambridge, MA: Belknap.
2.
CampionV. V. (1989). Conspiracies and warnings: Urban legends in our towns. Revue Francaise de Sociologie, 30, 91–105.
3.
Civil Rights Congress. (1951). We charge genocide: The historic petition to the United Nations for relief from a crime of the United States government against the Negro people.New York: Emergency Conference Committee.
4.
CostC. (1991). Vaccines are dangerous: A warning to the Black community.Brooklyn, NY: A&B Books.
5.
DavisD. B. (1969). The slave power conspiracy and the paranoid style.Baton Rouge: Louisiana State University Press.
6.
DeParleJ. (1990, October 29). Talk of government being out to get Blacks falls on more attentive ears. New York Times, p. B-7.
7.
EdelmanM. (1985). The symbolic uses of politics (2nd ed.). Urbana: University of Illinois Press.
8.
Gang Starr. (1992). “Conspiracy.”Daily Operation. Chrysalis Records.
9.
GarfinkelH. (1967). Studies in ethnomethodology.Engelwood Cliffs, NJ: Prentice-Hall.
10.
GaschH.PoulsonD. M.FulliloveR. E.FulliloveM. T. (1991). Shaping AIDS education and prevention programs for African Americans amidst community decline. Journal of Negro Education, 60(1), 85–96.
11.
GeertzC. (1973). The Interpretation of Cultures.New York: Basic Books.
12.
GlockC. Y. (1988). The ways the world works. Sociological Analysis, 49(2), 93–103.
13.
GrohD. (1987). The temptation of conspiracy theory, or: Why do bad things happen to good people? In GraumannC. F.MoscoviciS. (Eds.), Changing conceptions of conspiracy (pp. 1–37). New York: Springer-Verlag.
14.
HofstadterR. (1971). The paranoid style in American politics. In DavisD. B. (Ed.). The fear of conspiracy: Images of un-American subversion from the revolution to the present (pp. 2–8). Ithaca, NY: Cornell University Press.
15.
HomansG. C. (1964). Bringing men back in. American Sociological Review, 29, 809–821.
16.
InglehartR. (1987). Extremist political positions and perceptions of conspiracy: Even paranoids have real enemies. In GraumannC. F.MoscoviciS. (Eds.), Changing conceptions of conspiracy (pp. 231–244). New York: Springer-Verlag.
17.
PinkneyA. (1984). The myth of Black progress.Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press.
18.
SimmelG. (1950). The sociology of Georg Simmel (WolffK. H., Ed.). New York: Free Press.
19.
SingletonJ. (1991). “Boyz N the Hood”. Columbia Pictures.
20.
TreadwellD. (1990, September 17). Blaming a hidden enemy. Los Angeles Times, pp. A-1, A-14.
21.
VanderfortM. L. (1989). Vilification and social movements: A case study of pro-life and pro-choice rhetoric. Quarterly Journal of Speech, 75(2), 166–182.
22.
WarnerL. (1987). What's good about Oklahoma?Free Inquiry in Creative Sociology, 15(2), 221–224.
23.
WulffE. (1987). Paranoic conspiratory delusion. In GraumannC. F.MoscoviciS. (Eds.), Changing conceptions of conspiracy (pp. 171–190). New York: Springer-Verlag.