
In 16th century Europe, a Protestant priest seeks to disrupt the social order by joining a variety of religious revolts and wars happening in Europe. His real name is unknown, but his pseudonyms include Gustav Metzger, Lucas Niemanson, Lienhard Jost, Gerrit Boeckbinder, Lot, Hans GrΓΌeb, Ludwig Schaliedecker,Β TitianΒ and Ismael.Β His adversary is the villain Q, a spy working on behalf of the Catholic Church to maintain the status quo.
Sounds familiar? The battle between establishment and progressive is a pretty standard story throughout history. In this case, itβs also the plot of Q, a 1999 novel,Β conceived by the author asΒ βa handbook of survival skillsβ for people wanting to push against the status quo. Strangely enough, although the book was created by a left-leaning collective in Europe, two decades later, it is being linked to aΒ rightwing US conspiracy theory.
Who are Wu Ming and what do they have to do with QAnon?
The book was written by a now-defunct European artistic collective operating in the 1990s under the name Luther Blissett. Though originally comprising hundreds of members, Luther Blissett is now represented by its heir, an all-male Italian group known as Wu Ming. The book was originally written in Italian.
In Chinese, Wu Ming (ζ ε) means βanonymousβ or, with a different tone (δΊε), βfive people.β It indeed originally comprised five people: Roberto Bui (Wu Ming 1),Β Giovanni Cattabriga (Wu Ming 2),Β Luca Di Meo (Wu Ming 3), Federico Guglielmi (Wu Ming 4), Riccardo Pedrini (Wu Ming 5, who left the group in 2015).
Wu Mingβs ethos is rooted in working class, revolutionary ideology, though it doesnβt identity with a specific party orΒ concrete political project (link in Italian). The collective has published several books, including novels, short stories, essays, many of which translated in various languages. Consistent with the groupβs belief that authorship should be devoid of ego, several books are available for free downloadΒ from their site.
Wu Ming is rather influential in Italyβs leftist cultural scene, and itβs connected with a foundation that involves other collectives working on creative writing projects, historical anti-fascist research, and music. Through these politically tinged projects, they challenge the more mainstream left politics and promote a sense of playful mischievousness. It is the latter that might have prompted the birth of QAnon, as the rightwing result of a leftist prank.
The conspiracy theory behind the conspiracy theory
QAnon, for those who have been able to remain clueless about its existence, is a rightwing conspiracy theory. It centers around a social media user called Q who claims to have secret information about the Trump administration and its would-be saboteurs. The general fuzzy narrative is that Donald Trump fighting a large pedophile ring with representatives in Hollywood and other centers of power.
As Buzzfeed points outΒ in an interview with Wu Ming, the conspiracy theory behind the conspiracy theory is that leftist pranksters inspired by Wu Mingβs novel Q created a fake internet person named βQ.β Under this guise, they share fake news in alt-right forums, getting users worked up over implausible revelations like the claim that Hillary Clinton approved the kidnapping of 3,000 children around the world.
Others are beginning to suspect that QAnon might be a prank targeted at older internet usersβpeople like Roseanne Barr, who is a strong supporter. As Hanna Kozlowska writes, quoting Joseph Uscinski, associate professor of political science at the University of Miami and expert on conspiracy theories:
β[O]lder users [who] can sometimes beΒ intentionally tricked into joining a QAnon group.Β βThese people who havenβt necessarily been raised as digital natives are naively sort of navigating their way through Facebook which is like a giant library with no Dewey Decimal Systemβ


