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bibliotecamemetica.com

A collection of memes, curated by CJ Trowbridge.

Category: Anti-Billionaire -> This Meme

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First Seen

2023-06-30T03:22:26+00:00

gemma3-27b-vision

Okay, let's break down this meme through several theoretical lenses. **Visual Description** The meme features a screenshot from the animated TV show *Family Guy*. Lois Griffin is sitting in what appears to be a domestic interior. To her left is a gigantic pill bottle labeled "More submarine memes." The text “Me” is superimposed onto her, indicating her relationship to the contents of the bottle. The lighting is standard for the show – bright and cartoonish. The overall aesthetic is colorful and somewhat cluttered. --- **Foucauldian Genealogical Discourse Analysis** This meme can be seen through a Foucauldian lens as illustrating a *discourse* around online culture and compulsive consumption. The "pill bottle" representing "More submarine memes" signifies a normalization of meme addiction. * **Power/Knowledge:** The meme suggests that the desire for memes (specifically about submarines) has become a pervasive force, almost a necessary component of modern life. This can be interpreted as a form of power—the power of online culture to dictate attention and shape desires. Knowledge is constructed *through* this meme—it signals a shared understanding that such craving is typical and possibly even desirable. * **Genealogy:** The history of internet culture and meme consumption can be traced. We've moved from simple image macros to complex, layered memes, then to specialized subcultures like the submarine meme one, and now to an admission of compulsion— a genealogy of increasing desire. * **Discipline & Subjectivation:** The meme subtly disciplines viewers by framing meme consumption as a norm. The viewer recognizes the self-deprecating humor because they understand the impulse. The subject ("Me") is *constructed* through participation in this meme culture. The meme doesn't necessarily *force* this desire but enables it. --- **Critical Theory** From a Critical Theory perspective (drawing from the Frankfurt School), this meme can be read as a commentary on the **culture industry** and its role in shaping and controlling consciousness. * **Commodification of Desire:** The meme suggests that even seemingly innocuous things like submarine memes can become objects of compulsive desire, fueled by the endless loop of online content. This desire is *manufactured* – not organic. The "pill bottle" represents the constant feeding of this manufactured need. * **Distraction & False Consciousness:** The focus on niche internet humor (submarine memes) can be seen as a distraction from more pressing societal issues. This meme could exemplify how the culture industry keeps individuals preoccupied with superficial content. The "Me" figure is passively consuming rather than critically engaging with the world. * **Repression & Sublimation:** While a playful meme, it could also represent a form of repression. Perhaps the craving for memes is a sublimated expression of underlying anxieties or frustrations. --- **Postmodernism** This meme is thoroughly postmodern in its self-referentiality, irony, and rejection of grand narratives. * **Hyperreality & Simulation:** The meme isn't about *actual* submarines; it’s about the *idea* of submarine memes, a hyperreal simulation detached from any genuine connection to the subject matter. The bottle implies a limitless supply of this simulated reality. * **Pastiche & Irony:** The use of a Family Guy screenshot is itself a form of pastiche, drawing on pre-existing cultural material. The self-deprecating "Me" is ironic; it acknowledges the absurdity of craving specific internet content. * **Fragmentation & Loss of Meaning:** The meme's specificity ("submarine memes") exemplifies the fragmentation of contemporary culture. Meaning is not inherent in the object but is created through niche online communities. --- **Queer Feminist Intersectional Analysis** (Less directly applicable, but possible) While less central, a queer feminist lens could consider the meme's participation in online culture and the potential for both inclusion and exclusion. * **Online Communities & Identity:** Subcultures like the one surrounding submarine memes can provide spaces for individuals to explore and express their identities, potentially creating communities around shared interests. * **Digital Divide & Access:** Access to internet and participation in these communities is not universal, potentially reinforcing existing inequalities. * **Commodification of Identity:** The meme's reliance on a niche interest could be seen as a form of commodification of identity, turning personal interests into fodder for online consumption. (Though this is a weak connection). --- **Marxist Conflict Theory** (weak application) It's hard to apply this directly, but we could view the meme as representing the commodification of leisure time and the manipulation of needs under capitalism. The meme implicitly acknowledges a "need" (or at least a strong desire) for entertainment. The “pill bottle” represents the unending availability of commodities (memes) designed to keep consumers engaged and spending time/attention. This distracts from recognizing, let alone addressing, potential alienation or exploitation. However, it is a stretched application. Let me know if you'd like me to elaborate on any of these theoretical interpretations!

tesseract-ocr

HT . More = submarine Ve.) memes Po)

llama3.2-vision

This meme is a play on the "more pills" meme, where a character from a TV show or movie is sitting in a doctor's office, looking at a prescription bottle with a label that says "more pills". In this version, the character is looking at a prescription bottle with a label that says "more submarine memes", implying that the person is seeking a prescription for more memes about submarines. The image is humorous because it pokes fun at the idea that someone could be seeking a prescription for something as mundane as memes.

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