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Internet meme

An Internet meme, commonly known simply as a meme (/mm/, MEEM), is a cultural item (such as an idea, behaviour, or style) that is spread via the Internet, often through social media platforms. Inspired by the concept of memes proposed by Richard Dawkins in 1972, Internet memes can take various forms, such as images, videos, GIFs, and various other viral sensations. Characteristics of memes include their susceptibility to parody, their use of intertextuality, their propagation in a viral pattern, and their evolution over time.

Mike Godwin coined the term Internet meme in 1993 when he discussed memes as spreading via messageboards, Usenet groups, and email. With the rise of social media platforms such as YouTube, Twitter, Facebook, and Instagram, memes have become more diverse and can spread quickly. More recent genres include "dank" and surrealist memes, as well as short-form videos such as those uploaded on Vine and TikTok.

Memes are considered an important part of Internet culture, and have become a developed research area. They appear in a range of contexts, such as marketing, economics, finance, politics, social movements, religion, and healthcare. Although some argue memes deserve fair use protection, use of media from pre-existing works can sometimes lead to issues with copyright.

Characteristics

Internet memes come from the original concept of memes as an element of culture passed on from person to person. On the Internet, this spread occurs through online mediums such as social media.[1] Though the terms are related, Internet memes differ in that they are often short-lasting fads, while traditional memes have their success determined by longevity. Internet memes are also seen as less conceptually abstract compared to their traditional counterpart.[2] There is no single format that memes must follow, and they can have various purposes. For example, they often serve as simply light entertainment, but can also be powerful tools for self-expression, connection, social influence, and political subversion.[3]

Two central attributes of Internet memes are creative reproduction and intertextuality.[4] The former refers to the tendency of a popular meme to become subject to parody and imitation, which may occur by mimicry or remix. Mimicry refers to the reproduction of a meme in a different setting to the original (e.g., different people imitating the "Charlie Bit My Finger" viral video). Remix uses the original material of the meme but alters it in some way using technology-based manipulation (such as Photoshop).[4]

Intertextuality may be demonstrated through memes that combine different subjects or aspects of culture. For example, a meme may combine United States politician Mitt Romney's assertion of the phrase "binders full of women" from a 2012 US presidential debate with the Korean pop song "Gangnam Style" by overlaying the text "my binders full of women exploded" onto a frame from Psy's music video where paper blows around him. This gives new meaning to the scene from the music video and blends the political and cultural aspects of two different nations.[4]

Memes can involve in-jokes within online communities, which communicate exclusive cultural knowledge unbeknown to general users; through this, a collective group identity can be built.[5] Other memes, in contrast, have broader cultural relevance and can be understood even by those outside the subculture one would associate with the meme.[3]

A study by Michele Knobel and Colin Lankshear explored three characteristics of successful memes identified by Richard Dawkins (fidelity, fecundity, and longevity) with Internet memes. It was found that the fidelity of internet memes was better understood as replicability, as memes, though preserving their essence, are often not transmitted entirely "intact" (due to remixing of some sort). Fecundity was postulated to be determined by three main characteristics: humour (e.g. the comically translated video game line "All your base are belong to us"), intertextuality (e.g. the various pop culture-referencing renditions of the Star Wars Kid viral video), and anomalous juxtaposition (e.g. the Bert is Evil phenomenon). Lastly, a meme's longevity was described as essential for a meme's ongoing transmission and evolution.[6]

Evolution and propagation

 
Internet memes propagate in a similar pattern to infectious disease, as shown by this SIR model. The pattern, as depicted in red, shows an initial spike in popularity followed by a gradual taper to obscurity.

Internet memes may stay the same or evolve over time. They can "mutate" in their meaning but maintain their structure, or vice versa, such mutation occurring by chance or by deliberate means such as parody.[7] A study by Miltner explored the lolcats meme and its evolution over time from an in-joke within computer and gaming communities on 4chan to a source of emotional support and humour for a broader audience. The shift of the meme to mainstream use caused it to become unfashionable among the original creators. Miltner explained "as content passes through various communities, it is interpreted in new ways and takes on new connotations; these are usually specific to the needs and desires of that community, and quite often divorced from the original intent of the creator".[5] Often, the modifications to a meme can turn it into a phenomenon that transgresses social and cultural boundaries.[8]

Memes propagate in a viral pattern, "infecting" individuals in a pattern reminiscent of the SIR model for spread of disease.[9] Once a meme has been propagated to enough people, continued spread is inevitable.[10] A study by Coscia reached a set of conclusions concerning the success of a meme's propagation and its longevity. It found that while Internet memes compete for viewer attention, resulting in shorter lifespan, they can also collaborate with each other to achieve greater survival. Also, paradoxically, a meme that experiences a popularity peak significantly higher than average is not expected to survive unless it is unique, whereas a meme with no such peak continues to be used with other memes and thus has greater survivability.[11] Writing for The Washington Post in 2013, Dominic Basulto asserted that with the growth of the Internet and the exploitation of memes by the marketing and advertising industries, memes have come to lose their initial worth as valuable cultural snippets intended to last for generations, and transmit banal rather than intelligent ideas.[12]

History

Origins and early memes

 
Image macros were a popular meme format in the 2000s, composed of an image overlaid by large text at the top and bottom.

The word meme was coined by Richard Dawkins in his 1976 book The Selfish Gene as an attempt to explain how aspects of culture replicate, mutate, and evolve (memetics).[13] Emoticons are among the earliest examples of internet memes, specifically the smiley emoticon ":-)", introduced by Scott Fahlman in 1982.[14] The concept of memes in an online context was formally proposed by Mike Godwin in the June 1993 issue of Wired.[15] In 2013, Dawkins characterized an Internet meme as being a meme deliberately altered by human creativity—distinguished from biological genes and his own pre-Internet concept of a meme, which involved mutation by random change and spreading through accurate replication as in Darwinian selection. Dawkins explained that Internet memes are thus a "hijacking of the original idea", evolving the very concept of a meme in this new direction.[16] Nevertheless, by 2013, Limor Shifman solidified the relationship of memes to internet culture and reworked Dawkins' concept for online contexts.[17] Such an association has been shown to be empirically valuable as internet memes carry an additional property that Dawkins' "memes" do not: internet memes leave a footprint in the media through which they propagate (for example, social networks) that renders them traceable and analyzable.[11]

However, before internet memes were considered truly academic, they were initially a colloquial reference to humorous visual communication online in the mid-late 1990s among internet denizens; examples of these early internet memes include the Dancing Baby and Hampster Dance.[18] Memes of this time were primarily spread via messageboards, Usenet groups, and email, and generally lasted for a longer time than modern memes.[19]

 
A lolcat image macro, a meme style popular in the mid-2000s

As the Internet protocols evolved, so did memes. Lolcats originated from imageboard website 4chan, becoming the prototype of the "image macro" format (an image overlaid by large text).[19] Other early forms of image-based memes included demotivators (parodized motivational posters), photoshopped images, comics (such as rage comics),[20][21] and anime fan art,[22] sometimes made by doujin circles in various countries. After the release of YouTube in 2005, video-based memes such as Rickrolling and viral videos such as "Gangnam Style" and the Harlem shake emerged.[19][23] The appearance of social media websites such as Twitter, Facebook, and Instagram provided additional mediums for the spread of memes,[24] and the creation of meme-generating websites made their production more accessible.[19]

Modern memes

"Dank memes" are a more recent phenomenon, referring to deliberately zany or odd memes with features such as oversaturated colours, compression artifacts, crude humour, and overly loud sounds (termed "ear rape").[25][26] The term "dank", which refers to cold, damp places, has been adapted as a way to describe memes as "new" or "cool".[25][27] The term may also be used to describe memes that have become overused and stale to the point of paradoxically becoming humorous again.[28] The phenomenon of dank memes sprouted a subculture called the "meme market", satirising Wall Street and applying the associated jargon (such as "stocks") to internet memes. Originally started on Reddit as /r/MemeEconomy, users jokingly "buy" or "sell" shares in a meme reflecting opinion on its potential popularity.[29]

 
Example of a "deep-fried" meme, featuring distortion and saturated colours

"Deep-fried" memes refer to those that have been distorted and run through several filters and/or layers of lossy compression.[30][31] An example of these is the "E" meme, a picture of YouTuber Markiplier photoshopped onto Lord Farquaad from the film Shrek, photoshopped into a scene from businessman Mark Zuckerberg's hearing in Congress.[32] Elizabeth Bruenig of the Washington Post described this as a "digital update to the surreal and absurd genres of art and literature that characterized the tumultuous early 20th century".[33]

Many modern memes make use of humorously absurd and even surrealist themes. Examples of the former include "they did surgery on a grape", a video depicting a Da Vinci Surgical System performing test surgery on a grape,[34] and the "moth meme", a close-up picture of a moth with captions humorously conveying the insect's love of lamps.[35] Surreal memes incorporate layers of irony to make them unique and nonsensical, often as a means of escapism from mainstream meme culture.[36]

After the success of the application Vine, a format of memes emerged in the form of short videos and scripted sketches. An example is the "What's Nine Plus Ten" meme, a Vine video depicting a child humorously providing the incorrect answer to a math problem.[37] After the shutdown of Vine in 2017, the de facto replacement became Chinese social network TikTok, which similarly utilises the short video format.[38] The platform has become immensely popular, and is the source of memes such as the "Renegade" dance.[39][40]

By context

Marketing

The practice of using memes to market products or services has been termed "memetic marketing".[41] Internet memes allow brands to circumvent the conception of advertisements as irksome, making them less overt and more tailored to the likes of their target audience. Marketing personnel may choose to utilise an existing meme, or create a new meme from scratch. Fashion house Gucci employed the former strategy, launching a series of Instagram ads that reimagined popular memes featuring its watch collection. The image macro "The Most Interesting Man in the World" is an example of the latter, a meme generated from an advertising campaign for the Dos Equis beer brand.[42] Products may also gain popularity through internet memes without intention by the producer themselves; for instance, the film Snakes on a Plane became a cult classic after creation of the website SnakesOnABlog.com by law student Brian Finkelstein.[43]

Use of memes by brands, while often advantageous, has been subject to criticism for seemingly forced, unoriginal, or unfunny usage of memes, which can negatively impact a brand's image.[44] For example, the fast food company Wendy's began a social media-based approach to marketing that was initially met with success (resulting in an almost 50% profit growth that year), but received criticism after sharing a controversial Pepe meme that was negatively perceived by consumers.[45]

Economics & finance

Meme stocks are a phenomenon where stock values for a company rise significantly in a short period due to a surge in interest online and subsequent buying by investors. Video game retailer GameStop is recognised as the first meme stock.[46] /r/WallStreetBets, a subreddit where participants discuss stock trading, and Robinhood Markets, a financial services company, became notable in 2021 for their involvement in the popularisation of meme stocks.[47][48] "YOLO investors" are a phenomenon that emerged during the COVID-19 pandemic, who are less risk averse in their investments compared to their traditional counterparts.[49]

Additionally, memes have developed an association with cryptocurrency with the development of meme currencies such as Dogecoin, Shiba Inu Coin, and Pepe Coin. Meme cryptocurrencies have suggested comparisons between meme value and monetary markets.[50][51]

Politics

 
Pepe the Frog is a politicized Internet meme that has been used by both the alt-right and Hong Kong protesters.

Internet memes are a medium for fast communication to large online audiences, which has led to their use by those seeking to express a political opinion or actively campaign for (or against) a political entity.[14][52] In some ways, they can be seen as a modern form of the political cartoon, offering a way to democratize political commentary.[53]

Among the earliest political memes were those arising from the viral Dean scream, an excerpt from a speech delivered by Vermont governor Howard Dean.[54] Over time, Internet memes have become an increasingly important element in political campaigns, as online communities contribute to broader discourse through the use of memes.[55] For example, Ted Cruz's 2016 Republican presidential bid was damaged by Internet memes that jokingly speculated he was the Zodiac Killer.[56]

Research has shown the use of memes during elections has a role to play in informing the public on political themes. A study explored this in relation to the 2017 UK general election, and concluded that memes acted as a widely shared conduit for basic political information to audiences who would usually not seek it out.[57] They also found that memes may play some role in increasing voter turnout.[57]

Some political campaigns have begun to explicitly taken advantage of the increasing influence of memes; as part of the 2020 US presidential campaign, Michael Bloomberg sponsored a number of Instagram accounts (with over 60 million followers collectively) to post memes related to the Bloomberg campaign.[58] The campaign was faulted for treating memes as a commodity that can be bought.[59]

Beyond their use in elections, Internet memes can become symbols for various political ideologies. A salient example is Pepe the Frog, which has been used as a symbol for the alt-right political movement, as well as for pro-democracy ideologies in the 2019–2020 Hong Kong protests.[60][61]

Social movements

 
A person performing the Ice Bucket Challenge

Internet memes can be powerful tools in social movements, constructing collective identity and providing platform for discourse.[3][62] During the 2010 It Gets Better Project for LGBTQ+ empowerment, memes were used to uplift LGBTQ+ youth while negotiating the community's collective identity.[63] In 2014, the viral Ice Bucket Challenge raised money and awareness for amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS).[64] Furthermore, internet memes proved an important medium in the discourse surrounding the Occupy Wall Street (OWS) movement.[65]

Religion

Internet memes have also been used in the context of religion.[66] They create a participatory culture that enable individuals to collectively make meaning of religious beliefs, reflecting a form of lived religion.[67] Aguilar et al. of Texas A&M University identified six common genres of religious memes: non-religious image macros with religious themes, image macros featuring religious figures, memes reacting to religion-related news, memes deifying non-religious figures such as celebrities, spoofs of religious images, and video-based memes.[67]

Healthcare

Social media platforms can increase the speed of dissemination of evidence-based health practices.[68] A study by Reynolds and Boyd found the majority of participants (who were healthcare staff) felt that memes could be an appropriate means of improving healthcare worker's knowledge of and compliance with infection prevention practices.[69] Internet memes were also used in Nigeria to raise awareness of the COVID-19 pandemic, with healthcare professionals using the medium to disseminate information on the virus and its vaccine.[70]

Copyright

Since many memes are derived from pre-existing works, it has been contended that memes violate the copyright of the original authors. However, some view memes as falling under the ambit of fair use in the United States.[71][72] This dilemma has caused conflict between meme producers and copyright owners: for example, Getty Images' demand for payment from the blog Get Digital for publishing the "Socially Awkward Penguin" meme without permission.[73]

United States

Under United States copyright law, copyright protection subsists in "original works of authorship fixed in any tangible medium of expression, now known or later developed, from which they can be perceived, reproduced, or otherwise communicated, either directly or with the aid of a machine or device". It is disputed whether the use of memes constitutes copyright infringement.[71]

 
This image macro belongs to the public domain in the United States as the background is taken by the Department of Agriculture.

Fair use is a defence under U.S. copyright law which protects work made using other copyrighted works.[74] Section 107 of the 1976 Copyright Act outlines four factors for analysis of fair use:

  1. The purpose and character of the use,
  2. The nature of the copyrighted work,
  3. The amount and substantiality of the portion used, and
  4. The effect of the use upon the potential market for or value of the copyrighted work.[71]

The first factor implies the secondary use of a copyrighted work should be "transformative" (that is, giving novel meaning or expression to the original work); many memes fulfil this criteria, placing pieces of media in a new context to serve a different purpose to that of the original author. The second factor favours copied works drawing from factual sources, which may be problematic for memes derived from fictional works (such as films). Many of these memes, however, only use small portions of such works (such as still images), favouring an argument of fair use per the third factor. With regards to the fourth factor, most memes are non-commercial in nature and thus would not have adverse effects on the potential market for the copyright work.[71] Given these factors, and the overall reliance of memes on appropriation of other sources, it has been argued that they deserve protection from copyright infringement suits.[74]

Non-fungible tokens

Some individuals who are subjects of memes (and thus the copyright holders) have made money through sale of non-fungible tokens (NFTs) in auctions.[75] Ben Lashes, a manager of numerous memes, stated their sales as NFTs made over US$2 million and established memes as serious forms of art.[76] One example is the "Disaster Girl", based on a photo of Zoe Roth at age 4 taken in Mebane, North Carolina in January 2005.[76] After this photo became famous and was used hundreds of times without permission, Roth decided to sell the original copy as an NFT for US$539973, with agreement for a further 10 per cent share of any future sales.[77]

See also

References

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Further reading

  • Blackmore, Susan (2000). The Meme Machine. OUP Oxford. ISBN 978-0-19-157461-0.
  • Shifman, Limor (2013). Memes in Digital Culture. MIT Press. ISBN 978-0-262-31770-2.
  • Wiggins, Bradley (September 22, 2014). "How the Russia-Ukraine crisis became a magnet for memes". The Conversation.
  • Wiggins, Bradley E; Bowers, G Bret (December 2015). "Memes as genre: A structurational analysis of the memescape". New Media & Society. 17 (11): 1886–1906. doi:10.1177/1461444814535194. S2CID 30729349.
  • Distin, Kate (2005). The Selfish Meme: A Critical Reassessment. Cambridge University Press. ISBN 978-0-521-60627-1.

External links

  •   Media related to Internet memes at Wikimedia Commons

internet, meme, commonly, known, simply, meme, meem, cultural, item, such, idea, behaviour, style, that, spread, internet, often, through, social, media, platforms, inspired, concept, memes, proposed, richard, dawkins, 1972, take, various, forms, such, images,. An Internet meme commonly known simply as a meme m iː m MEEM is a cultural item such as an idea behaviour or style that is spread via the Internet often through social media platforms Inspired by the concept of memes proposed by Richard Dawkins in 1972 Internet memes can take various forms such as images videos GIFs and various other viral sensations Characteristics of memes include their susceptibility to parody their use of intertextuality their propagation in a viral pattern and their evolution over time Mike Godwin coined the term Internet meme in 1993 when he discussed memes as spreading via messageboards Usenet groups and email With the rise of social media platforms such as YouTube Twitter Facebook and Instagram memes have become more diverse and can spread quickly More recent genres include dank and surrealist memes as well as short form videos such as those uploaded on Vine and TikTok Memes are considered an important part of Internet culture and have become a developed research area They appear in a range of contexts such as marketing economics finance politics social movements religion and healthcare Although some argue memes deserve fair use protection use of media from pre existing works can sometimes lead to issues with copyright Contents 1 Characteristics 2 Evolution and propagation 3 History 3 1 Origins and early memes 3 2 Modern memes 4 By context 4 1 Marketing 4 2 Economics amp finance 4 3 Politics 4 4 Social movements 4 5 Religion 4 6 Healthcare 5 Copyright 5 1 United States 5 1 1 Non fungible tokens 6 See also 7 References 8 Further reading 9 External linksCharacteristicsInternet memes come from the original concept of memes as an element of culture passed on from person to person On the Internet this spread occurs through online mediums such as social media 1 Though the terms are related Internet memes differ in that they are often short lasting fads while traditional memes have their success determined by longevity Internet memes are also seen as less conceptually abstract compared to their traditional counterpart 2 There is no single format that memes must follow and they can have various purposes For example they often serve as simply light entertainment but can also be powerful tools for self expression connection social influence and political subversion 3 Two central attributes of Internet memes are creative reproduction and intertextuality 4 The former refers to the tendency of a popular meme to become subject to parody and imitation which may occur by mimicry or remix Mimicry refers to the reproduction of a meme in a different setting to the original e g different people imitating the Charlie Bit My Finger viral video Remix uses the original material of the meme but alters it in some way using technology based manipulation such as Photoshop 4 Intertextuality may be demonstrated through memes that combine different subjects or aspects of culture For example a meme may combine United States politician Mitt Romney s assertion of the phrase binders full of women from a 2012 US presidential debate with the Korean pop song Gangnam Style by overlaying the text my binders full of women exploded onto a frame from Psy s music video where paper blows around him This gives new meaning to the scene from the music video and blends the political and cultural aspects of two different nations 4 Memes can involve in jokes within online communities which communicate exclusive cultural knowledge unbeknown to general users through this a collective group identity can be built 5 Other memes in contrast have broader cultural relevance and can be understood even by those outside the subculture one would associate with the meme 3 A study by Michele Knobel and Colin Lankshear explored three characteristics of successful memes identified by Richard Dawkins fidelity fecundity and longevity with Internet memes It was found that the fidelity of internet memes was better understood as replicability as memes though preserving their essence are often not transmitted entirely intact due to remixing of some sort Fecundity was postulated to be determined by three main characteristics humour e g the comically translated video game line All your base are belong to us intertextuality e g the various pop culture referencing renditions of the Star Wars Kid viral video and anomalous juxtaposition e g the Bert is Evil phenomenon Lastly a meme s longevity was described as essential for a meme s ongoing transmission and evolution 6 Evolution and propagation nbsp Internet memes propagate in a similar pattern to infectious disease as shown by this SIR model The pattern as depicted in red shows an initial spike in popularity followed by a gradual taper to obscurity Internet memes may stay the same or evolve over time They can mutate in their meaning but maintain their structure or vice versa such mutation occurring by chance or by deliberate means such as parody 7 A study by Miltner explored the lolcats meme and its evolution over time from an in joke within computer and gaming communities on 4chan to a source of emotional support and humour for a broader audience The shift of the meme to mainstream use caused it to become unfashionable among the original creators Miltner explained as content passes through various communities it is interpreted in new ways and takes on new connotations these are usually specific to the needs and desires of that community and quite often divorced from the original intent of the creator 5 Often the modifications to a meme can turn it into a phenomenon that transgresses social and cultural boundaries 8 Memes propagate in a viral pattern infecting individuals in a pattern reminiscent of the SIR model for spread of disease 9 Once a meme has been propagated to enough people continued spread is inevitable 10 A study by Coscia reached a set of conclusions concerning the success of a meme s propagation and its longevity It found that while Internet memes compete for viewer attention resulting in shorter lifespan they can also collaborate with each other to achieve greater survival Also paradoxically a meme that experiences a popularity peak significantly higher than average is not expected to survive unless it is unique whereas a meme with no such peak continues to be used with other memes and thus has greater survivability 11 Writing for The Washington Post in 2013 Dominic Basulto asserted that with the growth of the Internet and the exploitation of memes by the marketing and advertising industries memes have come to lose their initial worth as valuable cultural snippets intended to last for generations and transmit banal rather than intelligent ideas 12 HistoryOrigins and early memes nbsp Image macros were a popular meme format in the 2000s composed of an image overlaid by large text at the top and bottom The word meme was coined by Richard Dawkins in his 1976 book The Selfish Gene as an attempt to explain how aspects of culture replicate mutate and evolve memetics 13 Emoticons are among the earliest examples of internet memes specifically the smiley emoticon introduced by Scott Fahlman in 1982 14 The concept of memes in an online context was formally proposed by Mike Godwin in the June 1993 issue of Wired 15 In 2013 Dawkins characterized an Internet meme as being a meme deliberately altered by human creativity distinguished from biological genes and his own pre Internet concept of a meme which involved mutation by random change and spreading through accurate replication as in Darwinian selection Dawkins explained that Internet memes are thus a hijacking of the original idea evolving the very concept of a meme in this new direction 16 Nevertheless by 2013 Limor Shifman solidified the relationship of memes to internet culture and reworked Dawkins concept for online contexts 17 Such an association has been shown to be empirically valuable as internet memes carry an additional property that Dawkins memes do not internet memes leave a footprint in the media through which they propagate for example social networks that renders them traceable and analyzable 11 However before internet memes were considered truly academic they were initially a colloquial reference to humorous visual communication online in the mid late 1990s among internet denizens examples of these early internet memes include the Dancing Baby and Hampster Dance 18 Memes of this time were primarily spread via messageboards Usenet groups and email and generally lasted for a longer time than modern memes 19 nbsp A lolcat image macro a meme style popular in the mid 2000sAs the Internet protocols evolved so did memes Lolcats originated from imageboard website 4chan becoming the prototype of the image macro format an image overlaid by large text 19 Other early forms of image based memes included demotivators parodized motivational posters photoshopped images comics such as rage comics 20 21 and anime fan art 22 sometimes made by doujin circles in various countries After the release of YouTube in 2005 video based memes such as Rickrolling and viral videos such as Gangnam Style and the Harlem shake emerged 19 23 The appearance of social media websites such as Twitter Facebook and Instagram provided additional mediums for the spread of memes 24 and the creation of meme generating websites made their production more accessible 19 Modern memes Dank memes are a more recent phenomenon referring to deliberately zany or odd memes with features such as oversaturated colours compression artifacts crude humour and overly loud sounds termed ear rape 25 26 The term dank which refers to cold damp places has been adapted as a way to describe memes as new or cool 25 27 The term may also be used to describe memes that have become overused and stale to the point of paradoxically becoming humorous again 28 The phenomenon of dank memes sprouted a subculture called the meme market satirising Wall Street and applying the associated jargon such as stocks to internet memes Originally started on Reddit as r MemeEconomy users jokingly buy or sell shares in a meme reflecting opinion on its potential popularity 29 nbsp Example of a deep fried meme featuring distortion and saturated colours Deep fried memes refer to those that have been distorted and run through several filters and or layers of lossy compression 30 31 An example of these is the E meme a picture of YouTuber Markiplier photoshopped onto Lord Farquaad from the film Shrek photoshopped into a scene from businessman Mark Zuckerberg s hearing in Congress 32 Elizabeth Bruenig of the Washington Post described this as a digital update to the surreal and absurd genres of art and literature that characterized the tumultuous early 20th century 33 Many modern memes make use of humorously absurd and even surrealist themes Examples of the former include they did surgery on a grape a video depicting a Da Vinci Surgical System performing test surgery on a grape 34 and the moth meme a close up picture of a moth with captions humorously conveying the insect s love of lamps 35 Surreal memes incorporate layers of irony to make them unique and nonsensical often as a means of escapism from mainstream meme culture 36 After the success of the application Vine a format of memes emerged in the form of short videos and scripted sketches An example is the What s Nine Plus Ten meme a Vine video depicting a child humorously providing the incorrect answer to a math problem 37 After the shutdown of Vine in 2017 the de facto replacement became Chinese social network TikTok which similarly utilises the short video format 38 The platform has become immensely popular and is the source of memes such as the Renegade dance 39 40 By contextMarketing The practice of using memes to market products or services has been termed memetic marketing 41 Internet memes allow brands to circumvent the conception of advertisements as irksome making them less overt and more tailored to the likes of their target audience Marketing personnel may choose to utilise an existing meme or create a new meme from scratch Fashion house Gucci employed the former strategy launching a series of Instagram ads that reimagined popular memes featuring its watch collection The image macro The Most Interesting Man in the World is an example of the latter a meme generated from an advertising campaign for the Dos Equis beer brand 42 Products may also gain popularity through internet memes without intention by the producer themselves for instance the film Snakes on a Plane became a cult classic after creation of the website SnakesOnABlog com by law student Brian Finkelstein 43 Use of memes by brands while often advantageous has been subject to criticism for seemingly forced unoriginal or unfunny usage of memes which can negatively impact a brand s image 44 For example the fast food company Wendy s began a social media based approach to marketing that was initially met with success resulting in an almost 50 profit growth that year but received criticism after sharing a controversial Pepe meme that was negatively perceived by consumers 45 Economics amp finance Further information Meme stocks Meme stocks are a phenomenon where stock values for a company rise significantly in a short period due to a surge in interest online and subsequent buying by investors Video game retailer GameStop is recognised as the first meme stock 46 r WallStreetBets a subreddit where participants discuss stock trading and Robinhood Markets a financial services company became notable in 2021 for their involvement in the popularisation of meme stocks 47 48 YOLO investors are a phenomenon that emerged during the COVID 19 pandemic who are less risk averse in their investments compared to their traditional counterparts 49 Additionally memes have developed an association with cryptocurrency with the development of meme currencies such as Dogecoin Shiba Inu Coin and Pepe Coin Meme cryptocurrencies have suggested comparisons between meme value and monetary markets 50 51 Politics nbsp Pepe the Frog is a politicized Internet meme that has been used by both the alt right and Hong Kong protesters Internet memes are a medium for fast communication to large online audiences which has led to their use by those seeking to express a political opinion or actively campaign for or against a political entity 14 52 In some ways they can be seen as a modern form of the political cartoon offering a way to democratize political commentary 53 Among the earliest political memes were those arising from the viral Dean scream an excerpt from a speech delivered by Vermont governor Howard Dean 54 Over time Internet memes have become an increasingly important element in political campaigns as online communities contribute to broader discourse through the use of memes 55 For example Ted Cruz s 2016 Republican presidential bid was damaged by Internet memes that jokingly speculated he was the Zodiac Killer 56 Research has shown the use of memes during elections has a role to play in informing the public on political themes A study explored this in relation to the 2017 UK general election and concluded that memes acted as a widely shared conduit for basic political information to audiences who would usually not seek it out 57 They also found that memes may play some role in increasing voter turnout 57 Some political campaigns have begun to explicitly taken advantage of the increasing influence of memes as part of the 2020 US presidential campaign Michael Bloomberg sponsored a number of Instagram accounts with over 60 million followers collectively to post memes related to the Bloomberg campaign 58 The campaign was faulted for treating memes as a commodity that can be bought 59 Beyond their use in elections Internet memes can become symbols for various political ideologies A salient example is Pepe the Frog which has been used as a symbol for the alt right political movement as well as for pro democracy ideologies in the 2019 2020 Hong Kong protests 60 61 Social movements nbsp A person performing the Ice Bucket ChallengeInternet memes can be powerful tools in social movements constructing collective identity and providing platform for discourse 3 62 During the 2010 It Gets Better Project for LGBTQ empowerment memes were used to uplift LGBTQ youth while negotiating the community s collective identity 63 In 2014 the viral Ice Bucket Challenge raised money and awareness for amyotrophic lateral sclerosis ALS 64 Furthermore internet memes proved an important medium in the discourse surrounding the Occupy Wall Street OWS movement 65 Religion Internet memes have also been used in the context of religion 66 They create a participatory culture that enable individuals to collectively make meaning of religious beliefs reflecting a form of lived religion 67 Aguilar et al of Texas A amp M University identified six common genres of religious memes non religious image macros with religious themes image macros featuring religious figures memes reacting to religion related news memes deifying non religious figures such as celebrities spoofs of religious images and video based memes 67 Healthcare Social media platforms can increase the speed of dissemination of evidence based health practices 68 A study by Reynolds and Boyd found the majority of participants who were healthcare staff felt that memes could be an appropriate means of improving healthcare worker s knowledge of and compliance with infection prevention practices 69 Internet memes were also used in Nigeria to raise awareness of the COVID 19 pandemic with healthcare professionals using the medium to disseminate information on the virus and its vaccine 70 CopyrightSince many memes are derived from pre existing works it has been contended that memes violate the copyright of the original authors However some view memes as falling under the ambit of fair use in the United States 71 72 This dilemma has caused conflict between meme producers and copyright owners for example Getty Images demand for payment from the blog Get Digital for publishing the Socially Awkward Penguin meme without permission 73 United StatesUnder United States copyright law copyright protection subsists in original works of authorship fixed in any tangible medium of expression now known or later developed from which they can be perceived reproduced or otherwise communicated either directly or with the aid of a machine or device It is disputed whether the use of memes constitutes copyright infringement 71 nbsp This image macro belongs to the public domain in the United States as the background is taken by the Department of Agriculture Fair use is a defence under U S copyright law which protects work made using other copyrighted works 74 Section 107 of the 1976 Copyright Act outlines four factors for analysis of fair use The purpose and character of the use The nature of the copyrighted work The amount and substantiality of the portion used and The effect of the use upon the potential market for or value of the copyrighted work 71 The first factor implies the secondary use of a copyrighted work should be transformative that is giving novel meaning or expression to the original work many memes fulfil this criteria placing pieces of media in a new context to serve a different purpose to that of the original author The second factor favours copied works drawing from factual sources which may be problematic for memes derived from fictional works such as films Many of these memes however only use small portions of such works such as still images favouring an argument of fair use per the third factor With regards to the fourth factor most memes are non commercial in nature and thus would not have adverse effects on the potential market for the copyright work 71 Given these factors and the overall reliance of memes on appropriation of other sources it has been argued that they deserve protection from copyright infringement suits 74 Non fungible tokens Some individuals who are subjects of memes and thus the copyright holders have made money through sale of non fungible tokens NFTs in auctions 75 Ben Lashes a manager of numerous memes stated their sales as NFTs made over US 2 million and established memes as serious forms of art 76 One example is the Disaster Girl based on a photo of Zoe Roth at age 4 taken in Mebane North Carolina in January 2005 76 After this photo became famous and was used hundreds of times without permission Roth decided to sell the original copy as an NFT for US 539973 with agreement for a further 10 per cent share of any future sales 77 See also nbsp Internet portalList of Internet phenomena Remix cultureReferences Benveniste Alexis January 26 2022 The Meaning and History of Memes The New York Times Archived from the original on January 28 2023 Retrieved January 28 2023 Shifman Limor April 2013 Memes in a Digital World Reconciling with a Conceptual Troublemaker Journal of Computer 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Retrieved June 16 2015 a b Kulkarni Anushka June 3 2017 Internet Meme and Political Discourse A Study on the Impact of Internet Meme as a Tool in Communicating Political Satire PDF Journal of Content Community amp Communication Amity School of Communication 6 13 SSRN 3501366 Godwin Mike October 1 1994 Meme Counter meme Wired Retrieved January 31 2023 Solon Olivia June 20 2013 Richard Dawkins on The Internet s hijacking of the word meme Wired UK Archived from the original on July 9 2013 Shifman Limor April 2013 Memes in a Digital World Reconciling with a Conceptual Troublemaker Journal of Computer Mediated Communication 18 3 367 doi 10 1111 jcc4 12013 Keep Lennlee October 8 2020 From Kilroy to Pepe A Brief History of Memes Public Broadcasting Service Archived from the original on March 6 2023 Retrieved January 31 2023 a b c d Watercutter Angela Grey Ellisby Emma April 1 2018 The WIRED Guide to Memes Wired Archived from the original on February 1 2019 Retrieved November 30 2018 Boutin 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1177 1461444818804143 S2CID 67774146 Stuart Tessa February 26 2016 Is Ted Cruz the Zodiac Killer Maybe Say Florida Voters Rolling Stone Retrieved July 22 2020 a b McLoughlin Liam Southern Rosalynd February 2021 By any memes necessary Small political acts incidental exposure and memes during the 2017 UK general election The British Journal of Politics and International Relations 23 1 78 79 doi 10 1177 1369148120930594 S2CID 225602095 Lorenz Taylor February 13 2020 Michael Bloomberg s Campaign Suddenly Drops Memes Everywhere The New York Times Archived from the original on February 13 2020 Retrieved July 30 2020 Tiffany Kaitlyn February 28 2020 You Can t Buy Memes The Atlantic Archived from the original on November 14 2021 Retrieved July 30 2020 Placido Dani Di May 9 2017 How Pepe The Frog Became A Symbol Of Hatred Forbes Archived from the original on February 8 2023 Retrieved February 8 2023 Victor Daniel August 19 2019 Hong Kong Protesters Love Pepe the Frog No They re Not Alt Right The New York Times Archived from the original on August 19 2019 Retrieved February 8 2023 Harbo Tenna Foustad December 2022 Internet memes as knowledge practice in social movements Rethinking Economics delegitimization of economists Discourse Context amp Media 50 8 doi 10 1016 j dcm 2022 100650 S2CID 252906293 Gal Noam Shifman Limor Kampf Zohar September 2016 It Gets Better Internet memes and the construction of collective identity New Media amp Society 18 8 1698 doi 10 1177 1461444814568784 S2CID 206728484 Sample Ian Woolf Nicky July 27 2016 How the ice bucket challenge led to an ALS research breakthrough The Guardian Archived from the original on November 8 2017 Retrieved February 11 2023 Milner Ryan M October 2013 Pop polyvocality internet memes public participation and the occupy wall street movement International Journal of Communication 7 2357 Gale A352494259 Haden Church Scott Feller Gavin January 2 2020 Synecdoche Aesthetics and the Sublime Online Or What s a Religious Internet Meme Journal of Media and Religion 19 1 12 doi 10 1080 15348423 2020 1728188 S2CID 213540194 a b Aguilar Gabrielle K Campbell Heidi A Stanley Mariah Taylor Ellen October 3 2017 Communicating mixed messages about religion through internet memes Information Communication amp Society 20 10 1502 1509 doi 10 1080 1369118X 2016 1229004 S2CID 151721706 Cawcutt Kelly A Marcelin Jasmine R Silver Julie K August 27 2019 Using social media to disseminate research in infection prevention hospital epidemiology and antimicrobial stewardship Infection Control amp Hospital Epidemiology 40 11 969 971 doi 10 1017 ice 2019 231 PMID 31452490 S2CID 201757947 Archived from the original on February 12 2023 Retrieved February 12 2023 Reynolds Staci Boyd Shelby July 2021 Healthcare worker s perspectives on use of memes as an implementation strategy in infection prevention An exploratory descriptive analysis American Journal of Infection Control 49 7 969 971 doi 10 1016 j ajic 2020 11 019 PMID 33249101 S2CID 227234896 Msughter Aondover Eric Iman Maryam Lawal March 15 2020 Internet Meme as a Campaign Tool to the Fight against Covid 19 in Nigeria PDF Global Journal of Human Social Science 20 A6 27 a b c d Scialabba Elena E A Copy of a Copy of a Copy Internet Mimesis and the Copyrightability of Memes Duke Law amp Technology Review 18 1 340 341 344 346 Archived from the original on February 13 2023 Retrieved February 13 2023 Schwartz Benjamin D August 5 2022 Who Owns Memes The National Law Review Retrieved August 20 2023 Iyer Aishwaria S Mehrotra Raghav February 26 2017 A critical analysis of memes and fair use Rostrum s Law Review 4 1 2 3 a b Mielczarek Natalia Hopkins W Wat March 2021 Copyright Transformativeness and Protection for Internet Memes Journalism amp Mass Communication Quarterly 98 1 53 55 doi 10 1177 1077699020950492 S2CID 225023573 Pritchard Will April 16 2021 They were ancient internet memes Now NFTs are making them rich Wired UK Archived from the original on November 14 2021 Retrieved May 4 2021 a b Fazio Marie April 29 2021 The World Knows Her as Disaster Girl She Just Made 500 000 Off the Meme The New York Times Archived from the original on April 29 2021 Retrieved April 30 2021 Howard Jacqueline April 30 2021 Disaster girl now aged 21 sells original meme photo as an NFT for an eye watering 650 000 ABC News Archived from the original on February 14 2023 Retrieved February 14 2023 Further readingBlackmore Susan 2000 The Meme Machine OUP Oxford ISBN 978 0 19 157461 0 Shifman Limor 2013 Memes in Digital Culture MIT Press ISBN 978 0 262 31770 2 Wiggins Bradley September 22 2014 How the Russia Ukraine crisis became a magnet for memes The Conversation Wiggins Bradley E Bowers G Bret December 2015 Memes as genre A structurational analysis of the memescape New Media amp Society 17 11 1886 1906 doi 10 1177 1461444814535194 S2CID 30729349 Distin Kate 2005 The Selfish Meme A Critical Reassessment Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0 521 60627 1 External links nbsp Media related to Internet memes at Wikimedia Commons Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Internet meme amp oldid 1180275172, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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