a neon cyberpunk cat, generated by cj with stable diffusion

bibliotecamemetica.com

A collection of memes, curated by CJ Trowbridge.

Category: Coronavirus -> This Meme

89009756_1149181645413264_4096511086478491648_o.jpg

First Seen

2023-05-10T21:03:35+00:00

gemma3-27b-vision

Okay, let's break down this meme through a few theoretical lenses. It's a rather complex little image, surprisingly ripe for analysis. ## Visual Description The meme features a two-panel image of Steve Harvey, a comedian and television host, taken from a segment on his show *Family Feud*. In the first panel, Harvey is caught mid-laugh, mouth wide open in an exaggerated expression of amusement. The second panel shows him quickly covering his mouth with his hand, his expression shifting to something resembling panic or discomfort. The top text reads, "When you're laughing at Corona Virus Memes and then you cough." The bottom of the image includes the social media handle "@NotOkMemes". The contrast between the initial, unrestrained laughter and the sudden, self-conscious covering of the mouth creates the humorous effect, implying a moment of realization and potential social anxiety. ## Foucauldian Genealogical Discourse Analysis This meme is deeply connected to the power dynamics surrounding illness and discourse. Foucault’s concept of *biopower* is crucial here. During the height of the COVID-19 pandemic, the cough itself became a *signifier* of potential danger, a site of surveillance and control. The meme plays on this. * **Discipline & Surveillance:** The cough, even if innocuous, suddenly places the “laugher” under a perceived self-imposed (and societal) surveillance. The act of covering the mouth is a *disciplinary* act - a self-regulation in response to the fear of being *othered* as a potential carrier of the virus. * **Genealogy of the Cough:** Foucault would ask how the meaning of the cough *changed* over time. Before the pandemic, a cough was often simply a symptom of a cold. Now, within the pandemic discourse, it became a marker of a potentially deadly illness. The meme is, ironically, playing with the genealogy of that meaning shift. * **Power/Knowledge:** The meme demonstrates how knowledge surrounding the virus (its transmission, dangers) is intimately linked to power. The *knowledge* of the virus’s potential harm *powers* the self-surveillance enacted by covering the mouth. The meme is a darkly humorous acknowledgement of that internalized power dynamic. ## Critical Theory From a Critical Theory perspective (drawing on the Frankfurt School, particularly Adorno and Horkheimer), the meme can be read as a symptom of the “culture industry” and its ability to commodify even tragedy. * **Commodification of Anxiety:** The meme *uses* the collective anxiety surrounding the pandemic for comedic effect. It *sells* that anxiety as entertainment. * **The Illusion of Freedom:** The act of laughing at memes *appears* to be a form of rebellion or coping. But the meme highlights how quickly that “freedom” is curtailed by the internalised fear of appearing ill and the potential social consequences. The brief laughter is immediately *subsumed* by anxiety and self-regulation. * **Reification:** The meme reifies (turns into a thing) the abstract fear of contagion. It presents it as a readily consumable bit of humour, obscuring the very real suffering and danger of the pandemic. ## Postmodernism From a Postmodern lens, the meme's humor relies on the collapse of grand narratives and the embrace of fragmentation and irony. * **Irony and Simulacra:** The humor comes from the ironic juxtaposition of enjoying memes about a deadly virus and the immediate physical reaction (coughing) that reminds the viewer of the very thing they are laughing at. This is a kind of simulation – the memes are not the virus, but they are a representation, and the cough bursts the bubble of representation. * **Deconstruction of Meaning:** The meme mocks the seriousness with which the pandemic was (and continues to be) treated. It suggests that meaning itself is fluid and context-dependent. Laughter and fear can coexist. * **Playfulness and Parody:** It parodies the entire situation – the morbid fascination with tragedy, the proliferation of pandemic memes, and the anxieties surrounding illness. **Important Note:** This analysis is complex and open to interpretation. The power of memes lies in their ambiguity and ability to resonate on multiple levels. These are just potential readings based on the theoretical frameworks outlined above.

tesseract-ocr

When you're laughing at Corona Virus Memes and then you cough +8 > a 4 oe many B

llama3.2-vision

This meme is a humorous image of Steve Harvey from the TV game show "Family Feud" with a shocked expression. The text above the image reads "When you're laughing at COVID-19 memes and then you cough." The meme is poking fun at the irony of laughing at coronavirus-related jokes and then suddenly coughing, which is a common symptom of the virus.

Back to Coronavirus