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bibliotecamemetica.com

A collection of memes, curated by CJ Trowbridge.

Category: Anti-Incel -> This Meme

296839790_118236827622960_5445174876564337659_n.jpg

First Seen

2023-05-10T21:03:34+00:00

gemma3-27b-vision

Okay, here's an analysis of the image, broken down by the requested theoretical frameworks where applicable. I'll indicate if a framework isn't a good fit for the image. **Visual Description** The image is a diptych (two panels combined). * **Top Panel:** A man (presumably Jordan Peterson, given context) is seated in a dark, formal setting. He is well-dressed in a suit and tie. The lighting is dramatic, with strong shadows emphasizing his face and a sense of authority/confrontation. The background is blurred, suggesting an interior space, possibly a study. Text overlay reads: "up yours woke moralists we'll see who cancels who." * **Bottom Panel:** A younger man (presumably his son, Julian Peterson) is shown in a lower-angle shot, appearing somber and perhaps defeated. He’s in a room with muted greens and beige, and the lighting is cooler. The text reads: "you made those words up." The contrast between the two panels is significant. The top panel is assertive and declarative; the bottom is reflective and accusatory. **Foucauldian Genealogical Discourse Analysis** This image *strongly* lends itself to Foucault’s work. * **Discourse & Power:** The exchange exemplifies a power struggle *through* discourse. The father uses language ("woke moralists," "canceling") which are key terms in contemporary cultural and political debates – debates *about* power, legitimacy, and morality. His statement is a declaration of his own position within this discourse. * **Genealogy of "Cancel Culture":** The father’s use of "cancel culture" isn't about a neutral observation. Instead, it represents a specific *genealogy* of that term. It’s being deployed to frame a perceived attack on his authority, framing critiques of his views as a form of unjust persecution. His use of "woke moralists" establishes an 'other' against which he defines his own position. * **Son’s Challenge:** The son's response, "you made those words up," is crucial. It's not merely a statement of fact (whether true or not) but a challenge to the *very foundations* of the father’s discourse. He is claiming the father is constructing a narrative, fabricating terms, and potentially manipulating language to suit his own purposes. The son is attempting to deconstruct the father’s power by exposing what he sees as its constructed nature. * **Power/Knowledge:** The father's assertion is an attempt to establish *power/knowledge* – to position himself as an authority who defines the terms of the debate. The son's claim directly challenges that authority, suggesting the father's "knowledge" is based on fabricated or manipulative language. **Critical Theory** * **Ideology & Hegemony:** The father's use of language ("woke moralists", "canceling") can be interpreted through the lens of ideology. These terms often serve as shorthand for specific ideological positions, enabling him to demonize those who disagree with him. He's attempting to establish a dominant narrative that reinforces his worldview. * **Domination & Resistance:** The son’s response represents a form of *resistance* against the father’s ideological domination. He’s refusing to accept the terms of the debate, challenging the father's framing of the situation, and refusing to participate in the narrative. * **Critique of Power Structures:** The exchange points to broader power dynamics—specifically, the power of language to shape perceptions and control narratives. **Marxist Conflict Theory** This is a somewhat less direct fit, but can be interpreted: * **Class & Cultural Capital:** The father’s position (as an intellectual, public figure) represents a certain form of cultural capital. His attempt to define the terms of the debate is a way of maintaining his status and control. * **Contradiction & Struggle:** The exchange represents a contradiction—between the father's attempt to assert his authority and the son's attempt to challenge it. This is a form of struggle—not necessarily economic, but a struggle over meaning and power. **Postmodernism** * **Deconstruction of Meaning:** The son’s statement "you made those words up" embodies a central tenet of postmodernism—the rejection of fixed meanings. The son implies language is fluid, constructed, and ultimately unstable. The father’s attempts to establish fixed definitions (“woke moralists”) are undermined. * **Meta-Narratives:** The father’s use of charged language hints at the reliance on grand narratives (e.g., the idea of a moral decline, the threat of "cancel culture") which postmodernists critique. * **Simulation and Hyperreality:** The image suggests a hyperreal environment where representation and reality become blurred. The language used (“woke moralists,” “canceling”) are often stylized and symbolic, divorced from concrete reality. **Queer Feminist Intersectional Analysis** This framework doesn't seem directly applicable in the way the others are, but a stretch could be made: * **Power dynamics:** The power dynamic between the father and son might be read as analogous to broader power dynamics where dominant patriarchal figures attempt to control narratives and silence dissent. * **Silencing/Disavowal:** Depending on the context, the father's language could be interpreted as a way of dismissing or invalidating the experiences and perspectives of marginalized groups. The son's response could be seen as a form of resistance to this silencing. *However, this is a weak fit, and applying this framework would require significantly more contextual information. In summary, the image is particularly rich for Foucauldian analysis and offers strong points for interpretation within Critical Theory and Postmodernism. It's a visually compelling representation of power dynamics, ideological struggle, and the constructed nature of language.

tesseract-ocr

: up yours woke moralists we'll see who cancels who 7 | | CLM | you made those words up

llama3.2-vision

This meme is a humorous response to a situation where someone is being "canceled" or ostracized for their views or actions. The image shows a screenshot of a character from the TV show "The Office" (Sylvester from The Office) saying "I'm not going to be the one to be a ‘c’ word” and then a character from the TV show "The Boys" saying "you made those words up." The text is being used to mock a person who is getting “c” words, or being censored, and the character from The Boys is saying the person made up the words that were being used to get censored.

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