Definitions by Abzugal
Mobology
The study of online mob culture using Kremlinological methods—inferring the organization, tactics, and hidden leadership of digital lynch mobs from public posts, timing patterns, and coordination signals. Mobologists analyze how a pile‑on starts (a single call‑out post, often by a high‑status account), how it escalates (through retweet chains, screenshots, and shared hashtags), and how it dissipates (once the target is banned or the mob loses interest). They study the role of anonymous tip lines, secret Discord servers, and cross‑platform coordination. Like Sovietologists tracking the flow of power through the Politburo, mobologists track the flow of outrage through influencer networks, revealing that online mobs are often not spontaneous but semi‑organized.
Cancelology
The study of cancel culture using Kremlinological methods—analyzing call‑outs, deplatforming, public apologies, and career resurrections to map the hidden norms, factions, and power centers of online accountability communities. Cancelologists track who initiates a cancellation, whose silence protects the accused, who is permanently exiled and who is quietly reinstated, and how the target’s identity influences the outcome. Like Sovietologists studying purges, cancelologists understand that cancellations are not random but follow predictable patterns: they serve to reinforce in‑group boundaries, eliminate rivals, and signal loyalty. Cancelology reveals that the same social dynamics that operated in Stalinist Moscow now operate on Twitter.
Example: "Cancelology research showed that apologies containing specific keywords (‘listening,’ ‘growing,’ ‘harm’) were far more likely to be accepted—revealing a hidden ritual script that, once performed, could restore a canceled figure to grace."
Cancelology by Abzugal April 2, 2026
Justiciology
The study of justice and law using Kremlinological methods—focusing not on formal legal doctrine but on who receives justice, who is denied it, and how justice is performed as a ritual of power. Justiciologists analyze court rulings, pardon lists, settlement patterns, and the language of judicial opinions to infer the hidden ideologies and power alignments that determine outcomes. Like Sovietologists reading the show trials for clues about factional struggles, justiciologists read high‑profile cases for evidence of which groups are favored and which are scapegoated. The field reveals that justice is often a performance, and that true justiciology studies the gap between the performance and the reality.
Example: "Using justiciology, he showed that insider trading cases were almost never brought against major campaign donors—not because they didn’t trade, but because justice was selectively performed on small‑time offenders to create the appearance of enforcement."
Justiciology by Abzugal April 2, 2026
Legalology
The study of legal systems and laws using Kremlinological methods—inferring actual legal practice from indirect signals rather than relying on written codes or official statements. Legalologists examine who is prosecuted and who is protected, which laws are enforced and which are ignored, how judicial vacancies are filled, and where legal reasoning suddenly shifts. Like Sovietologists knowing that the real constitution was the one enforced by the party, legalologists understand that the law on the books is often a facade; the real law is revealed by patterns of enforcement, selective prosecution, and the informal privileges of the powerful. The field exposes legal hypocrisy and the gap between rhetoric and reality.
Example: "Legalology research showed that a ‘neutral’ anti‑protest law was applied almost exclusively to minority communities—the law was the same, but its real function was revealed by arrest statistics."
Legalology by Abzugal April 2, 2026
Realitology
The study of reality itself using the Kremlinological method—treating “reality” not as a given but as a contested construct produced by institutions, media, and power. Realitologists analyze what is presented as “common sense,” what is labeled “conspiracy theory,” and what is simply ignored, inferring the hidden mechanisms that define the real for a society. Like Sovietologists parsing Pravda for clues about crop failures, realitologists parse official statements, scientific consensus documents, and social media trend lines to map how reality is manufactured and challenged. The field is crucial for understanding propaganda, disinformation, and the breakdown of shared reality in polarized societies.
Example: "Her realitology research traced how a false rumor about election fraud became ‘real’ for millions—not through evidence, but through repetition by trusted influencers and the strategic absence of correction."
Realitology by Abzugal April 2, 2026
Reactionology
The study of social reactions—especially outrage, praise, silence, and pile‑ons—using Kremlinological inference. Reactionologists analyze response patterns, timing, coordination, and the strategic use of hashtags or silence to deduce the hidden dynamics of online mobs, PR campaigns, and political spin. Just as Sovietologists watched who sat next to whom at the May Day parade, reactionologists watch who replies, who retweets, who “likes” and then un‑likes, and who conspicuously says nothing. The field reveals that reactions are not spontaneous but often orchestrated, and that the absence of reaction can be as telling as an explosion of anger. Reactionology is essential for understanding cancel culture, astroturfing, and the emotional economy of platforms.
Example: "Using reactionology, he identified a coordinated outrage campaign by mapping identical comments posted from accounts created on the same day—digital uniforms in a manufactured mob."
Reactionology by Abzugal April 2, 2026
Rememberology
The study of collective memory and remembering using the methods of Sovietology—analyzing what is commemorated, what is forgotten, what is distorted, and who controls the archives. Rememberologists examine monuments, textbooks, social media anniversaries, and memorial practices to map the hidden politics of memory: which events are elevated into national myth, which are erased, and how remembering serves present power. Like Kremlinologists decoding a purged photograph, rememberologists read silences and repetitions to understand how communities construct a usable past. The field is essential for understanding post‑conflict societies, platform content moderation (what posts are “remembered” algorithmically), and the weaponization of memory in online shaming.
Example: "Her rememberology research tracked how a violent police crackdown was systematically scrubbed from local news archives while memorial posts on Instagram were algorithmically demoted—a digital damnatio memoriae."
Rememberology by Abzugal April 2, 2026