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A collection of memes, curated by CJ Trowbridge.

Category: Anti-Oligarch -> This Meme

363813775_10162945000209409_4361791569754903810_n.jpg

First Seen

2023-08-03T04:17:41+00:00

gemma3-27b-vision

Okay, here's an analysis of the cartoon, broken down into sections as requested. I'll only include sections where the cartoon lends itself to that particular theoretical lens. ## Visual Description The cartoon depicts a therapy session. A patient, visibly distressed with messy hair and slumped posture, is speaking to a therapist. The therapist is seated behind a cluttered desk, with a small Twitter bird statue on it, suggesting a technological or social media focus. The patient is explaining his feelings of emptiness and needing approval. The therapist, rather than offering a traditional psychological approach, is showing the patient Elon Musk’s Twitter feed on a laptop. Specifically, Musk is posting a somewhat silly, intentionally childish meme about a technical issue with Twitter, coupled with bacon emojis. The patient's distress is evident, highlighted by sweat and a pained expression. The artist’s signature, "bogs wallop" is in the bottom right corner. The color palette is mostly muted, adding to the overall somber and slightly cynical tone. ## Foucauldian Genealogical Discourse Analysis This cartoon provides a rich site for a Foucauldian analysis. * **Power/Knowledge:** The therapist isn’t offering “healing” in the traditional sense. Instead, he’s presenting *another* instance of someone seeking approval online, specifically Elon Musk. This positions the therapist not as a neutral healer, but as a participant in the very discourses he’s ostensibly addressing. The therapist's approach implies that observing Musk’s behavior constitutes understanding and treating the patient's condition. This subtly shifts the power dynamic - the therapist wields the "knowledge" of this observed pattern as a means of "treatment". * **Discourse & Normalization:** The cartoon suggests that the relentless pursuit of online validation, even to the point of absurdity (Musk posting a cartoon meme), is becoming *normalized*. The therapist, by showing this as "treatment," inadvertently reinforces the idea that this behavior is common, expected, and perhaps even the standard. This feeds into a discourse where self-worth is increasingly tied to digital performance. * **Genealogy of the Self:** We could trace a genealogy of the modern self, from traditional notions of identity rooted in community and labor, to a contemporary self constructed through online personas and “likes.” The cartoon critiques the trajectory where validation is externalized and quantified. The patient’s distress isn’t simply a personal issue, but a symptom of broader cultural shifts. * **Panopticism (loosely):** While not a direct application, there's a subtle echo of the panoptic principle. The patient, like the online user, is constantly performing for an unseen audience (potential "likes," views, etc.). This performance, and the desire for external validation, shapes their behavior. ## Critical Theory This cartoon is squarely within the realm of critique, particularly related to the Frankfurt School's concerns with culture industry and mass media. * **Commodification of the Self:** The cartoon highlights how the self has become commodified in the age of social media. The patient’s need for approval, and Musk’s desperate attempts to entertain his audience, both demonstrate a reduction of the individual to a performance, a product designed to garner attention and validation. * **False Consciousness:** The therapist’s ‘treatment’ is deeply ironic and highlights a form of false consciousness. He’s presenting a symptom of the problem (Musk’s behavior) *as* the solution, rather than challenging the underlying systems that produce this need for validation. This prevents any real self-reflection or transformative change. * **Mass Culture & Regression:** Musk’s juvenile meme and the therapist's use of it as therapy suggest a regression to childish forms of communication and validation. This aligns with Adorno and Horkheimer's critique of mass culture, which argued that it promotes standardized and simplistic forms of entertainment, stifling critical thought. * **Alienation:** The patient’s distress points to a sense of alienation – a disconnection from genuine selfhood and meaningful connection. The search for external validation through social media only exacerbates this alienation, as it replaces authentic relationships with superficial interactions. ## Postmodernism The cartoon embraces several elements associated with postmodern thought: * **Irony & Parody:** The therapist’s “treatment” is deeply ironic. It’s a parody of traditional therapy, suggesting that there’s no deeper meaning or solution, only the endless circulation of images and performances. * **Simulacra & Simulation:** Musk’s online persona, and the entire spectacle of his Twitter feed, can be seen as a simulacrum – a copy without an original. It’s a performance of personality, divorced from any underlying authenticity. The cartoon suggests that we are increasingly living in a world of simulations, where appearances matter more than reality. * **Deconstruction of Authority:** The cartoon challenges the authority of the therapist and the institution of therapy itself. The therapist's absurd "treatment" undermines the expectation of expert knowledge and effective intervention. * **Fragmentation of Identity:** The pursuit of online validation leads to a fragmented identity, where the self is constantly being reconstructed based on external feedback. The cartoon is a potent and cynical commentary on the anxieties of the digital age. It uses irony and satire to expose the absurdity of seeking validation in a world increasingly dominated by performance and superficiality.

tesseract-ocr

Doctor, | feel the constant need for Treatment js simple. Check out approval, for everyone to love me,to par Mast g4Y we ul twitter. find me funny, | feel unfulfilled and is Posts are absolute dogshit: ‘ Just the most outdated empty. | dont know what to do. untusny teas imaginal and tae bar >) Ye D QAN —4)))} | AY fb == ‘<x - a) \ ees N= a= y oo : Atter seeing how much he's debasing himself for approval from the biggest But doctor... losers online, your problems wont Seem So bad. AWS 5, a aw Pmt a AG @ sort co hereto d J a 2 Pe eas = oF as Paci Woe cd ~T @ Le eee nen XZ ; ] ) — bogswallop

llama3.2-vision

This meme is a four-panel comic that satirizes the relationship between a doctor and his patient. The patient is unhappy with the doctor's response to his complaints, so he decides to seek online validation by sharing his feelings on Twitter. The doctor's response is a humorous commentary on the patient's online behavior, suggesting that he is seeking approval from the internet rather than the doctor.

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