top of page
SR_VOL93_No1_Gaslighting_FC.jpg

current issue

The American Dialect Society named “gaslight” as the “most useful” word of 2016, and Merriam-Webster selected it as its Word of the Year for 2022. This Social Research issue takes up gaslighting to interrogate the intersection of mass deception, psychological states, and political behavior.

Proliferating claims about being gaslit indicate that the term has often become unmoored from its initial context—to denote almost any public dissemination of falsehood. Nevertheless, many of the contributions to this issue reveal that the plot of the film Gaslight still offers a powerful key for conceptualizing contemporary modes of public deceit. In implicit and overt ways, the idea of gaslighting connects politics with intersubjective relationships and associates deception with notions of personal injustice and even harm, involving perpetrators and victims. It is a form of abuse that retains much of its gendered characteristics. Moreover, whereas the immense proliferation of relentlessly repeated untruths might not drive individuals insane, it substantiates a perception of deep and lasting confusion and uncertainty about the reality of our public and political life.​​

READ MORE FROM THE EDITOR'S INTRODUCTION >>>

  • Bluesky
  • X
  • Instagram
  • Facebook
  • LinkedIn

Social Research:

An International Quarterly
The New School for Social Research

79 Fifth Avenue, 16th Floor
New York, NY 10003

Tel.: +1 212.229.5776

Email: socres@newschool.edu

SHELLEY STAMP

HOLLYWOOD’S GASLIGHT AND THE GENDERED DYNAMICS OF GASLIGHTING

The 1944 film Gaslight, from which contemporary use of the term “gaslighting” originates, provides key insights into the gendered dynamics of gaslighting. A gothic melodrama set in Victorian London, the film depicts a young bride terrorized by her new husband, increasingly unable to trust her own perception and pushed to the brink of psychosis. Watching the film, viewers experience a perceptual uncertainty similar to that endured by the gaslit heroine. Gaslight shows us how patriarchal norms enable gaslighting and how gaslighting is embedded within a broader culture of gendered violence.

​​​​​

NORA GILBERT

“WHETHER THE WOMEN LIKE IT OR NOT”: READING PROTECTIONIST GENDER POLITICS THROUGH THE LENS OF GASLIGHT NOIR FILM

Because the term “gaslighting” is in the relatively unusual etymological position of deriving from the title of a specific narrative source text (Gaslight), understanding the nuances of that narrative can help us understand the nuances of contemporary political gaslighting. One component of the Trump administration’s gaslighting tactics that has yet to be read through the lens of the Gaslight plot is its manipulative deployment of the language of “protection,” “rescue,” and “care” to infantilize and actively harm its constituents, especially women. In this essay, I compare this deployment to the analogous protectionist gaslighting that takes place not only in Gaslight but also in the powerful, underexplored subgenre of films that arose in Gaslight’s immediate wake: gaslight noir.

PAIGE L. SWEET

POWER IS TWO-FACED: GASLIGHTING IN INTIMATE RELATIONSHIPS

Victims often describe gaslighting as having a “Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde” quality. In this essay, I explore victims’ descriptions of the two-faced nature of gaslighting, showing how they come to feel caught between two irreconcilable realities in gaslighting relationships. They describe gaslighting as creating a fracture between themselves and their broader social environments; they describe feeling that their gaslighter was able to identify something true about them and wrap it up in lies; and they describe their sense of self becoming “lost.” I argue that these findings should push us to think about how broader systems of power and inequality, like intimate experiences of gaslighting, also have a two-faced nature.

AURORA DONZELLI

FROM METAPRAGMATIC GASLIGHTING TO LINGUISTIC STATE OF EXCEPTION: DONALD TRUMP AND THE LANGUAGE REFORM OF THE NEW RIGHT

Since his rise to the political stage in 2015, Donald Trump has emphasized the urgency of a linguistic reform: To “make America great again” it is imperative to abolish periphrastic circumlocutions and embrace a firm stance against the supposed tyranny of political correctness. Yet this call for semantic transparency and performative effectiveness has been paralleled by the frequent deployment of indirectness and sophisticated forms of discursive manipulation, which I call metapragmatic gaslighting. Drawing on a corpus of statements, interventions, and interviews by President Trump, this article examines the basic principles of the language reform of the New Right and describes how metapragmatic gaslighting preludes to establishing a linguistic state of exception. Characterized by the suspension of shared norms for the use and interpretation of utterances, this emerging regime of pragmatic unaccountability materializes an ultrareactionary and hypercapitalist linguistic order.

SANFORD F. SCHRAM

TRUMPISM AS DISCOURSE: GASLIGHTING, CO-OPTING, AND BOOMERANGING

While “Trumpism” usually means the movement Donald Trump has come to lead to great political effect, it also is a term that best describes a metapragmatic discourse Trump and his acolytes have come to use to normalize their extremism. Trumpism as a discourse relies on three primary verbal maneuvers: gaslighting, co-opting, and boomeranging. Gaslighting, the most commonly referred to maneuver, is deflecting criticism by saying that the problem is something other than what the critic alleged. Co-opting is adopting the language of your critics so that you are the one with the just cause and they are the ones deserving of condemnation. Boomeranging is sending criticism directed at you right back at your critics. This article examines, by way of examples, how the effectiveness of gaslighting is enhanced when combined with co-opting and boomeranging to normalize extremism to the point that now it is furthering authoritarian rule under Trump.

 

 

JASON HANNAN

REACTIONARY SPEECH: THE ART OF POLITICAL GASLIGHTING

This article proposes that we think of reactionary rhetoric as the art of political gaslighting. Revisiting the thought of eighteenth-century Anglo-Irish statesman, philosopher, and political theorist Edmund Burke, the article extrapolates a conception of conservatism as inherently oriented toward a rhetoric of denialism, demonization, and victimhood. I argue that reactionary rhetoric bears a striking similarity to what trauma psychologists call DARVO: deny, attack, and reverse victim and offender. I close with a discussion of right-wing political activist Charlie Kirk’s remarks on race as a case study in political gaslighting.

DAVID GILLBORN

RACIAL GASLIGHTING

This article examines racial gaslighting, whereby racially minoritized people are told that their experiences of White racism are really patterns born of their own making or, at the very least, a combination of factors that are beyond the control of White powerholders. Several examples are discussed, including the deployment of a falsified image of Martin Luther King Jr., the perversion of civil rights language to equate White success with merit, and the use of statistical techniques to erase evidence of racist inequity. A common factor in each example is the significance of the racist status quo, which amplifies, legitimizes, and benefits from the gaslighting.

G. ALEX SINHA

JUDICIAL GASLIGHTING

Judges sometimes deceive the public as to how they will rule—or how they have ruled—in important cases. To be confirmed to our highest courts, they often hide or downplay their moral and political commitments, despite being nominated specifically for those commitments. To justify their rulings, they couch their reasoning in antiseptic legal terms, even when we have excellent cause to see such reasoning as pretextual. This essay argues that such forms of judicial deceit are disturbingly common, deeply harmful, and appropriately understood as a form of gaslighting.

KRISTEN R. GHODSEE

LIES, DAMN LIES, AND TRANSITION: THE GASLIGHTING OF EASTERN EUROPE

In the 1990s, some 400 million people across Eastern Europe lived through an economic collapse deeper than the Great Depression. Yet, while families lost jobs, pensions, and even years of life expectancy, Western institutions and commentators insisted things were “getting better.” This article calls that denial what it was: collective gaslighting. By massaging statistics, celebrating televisions and cars, and blaming cultural “deficiencies,” experts erased the trauma of entire societies. Revisiting the transition through the eyes of those who endured it reveals not a triumphant march to democracy but a politics of memory and denial whose consequences still shape Western society today.

MARC TUTERS

CONSPIRACIZATION: CRITIQUE, GASLIGHTING, AND THE INFRASTRUCTURES OF SUSPICION

Gaslighting and conspiracization mark two convergent crises of interpretation in the digital age. Gaslighting manipulates perception by denying intent; conspiracization overreads intent, recoding critique’s idioms as proof of hidden design. The problem is not confined to misinformation but emerges instead where the forms and tones of critique themselves become objects of suspicion. Examining catchphrases like historian Yuval Noah Harari’s “hackable animals” and the World Economic Forum’s “Great Reset,” this article shows how speculative foresight discourse is reframed online as elite confession. Empirical analysis of Amazon’s “also bought” metadata networks reveals how conspiracy bestsellers cluster with critical texts, generating ambient legitimacy within digital infrastructures. Conspiracization thus emerges as critique’s mimetic double: borrowing its style while stripping its reflexivity. The task is to recalibrate suspicion—distinguishing between practices that illuminate complexity and those that collapse it into plot.

previous issue

Edited by Oz Frankel

Articles by

W. Caleb McDaniel

Manisha Sinha

Ricardo Vega León

Vincent Lloyd

Gillian Harkins

Leigh Goodmark

Sophie Lewis

Anna Terwiel

Joshua Dubler and Kristin Doughty

Satoria Ray and Bettina L. Love

Carol Rovane

Youngjae Lee

next issue

Edited by Oz Frankel

Articles by

Daniel Anderson and Matthew Duncan

Charles Bazerman

John Cayley

Jeff Dolven

Matthew Kirschenbaum

Otto Kruse

Nancy K. Miller

Tahneer Oksman

Regina Rini

MOST CITED
ARTICLES

 Chantal Mouffe, “Deliberative Democracy or Agonistic Pluralism?” (Fall 1999)

 Jerome Bruner, “Life as Narrative(Spring 1987)

 Peter Miller, “Governing by Numbers: Why Calculative Practices Matter” (Summer 2001)

 Richard S. Lazarus, “Hope: An Emotion and a Vital Coping Resource against Despair” (Summer 1999)

 Emanuel A. Schegloff, “Body Torque”  (Fall 1998)

popular THIS
MONTH

Michael Walzer, “The Triumph of Just War Theory (and the Dangers of Success)” (Winter 2002, reprinted Spring 2024)

Sophie Lewis, “Destroy the Family to Realize Its Promise: Abolition as Care Communization” (Winter 2025)

 Fabio Parasecoli, Food, Identity, and Cultural Reproduction in Immigrant Communities” (Summer 2014)

• Jan-Werner Müller, What, If Anything, Do Populism and Conspiracy Theories Have to Do with Each Other?” (Fall 2022)

• Aleida Assmann, “Transformations Between History and Memory” (Spring 2008)

recent issues

news

SOCIAL RESEARCH
BACK ISSUES SALE

Back issues of the journal are available for purchase in special bundles.

 

Discover new authors and shop the multi-issue packages now.

THREE / FOUR ISSUES FOR $30

FIVE / SIX ISSUES FOR $50

bottom of page