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bibliotecamemetica.com

A collection of memes, curated by CJ Trowbridge.

Category: Food -> This Meme

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First Seen

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

gemma3-27b-vision

Okay, let's break down this meme through the lenses of various theoretical frameworks. **Visual Description** The meme is a four-panel image featuring a progression of barbecue activity. * **Panel 1:** Two raw hamburger patties on a hot grill. Water vapor is visible. There’s a watermark, “prettycooltim”. * **Panel 2:** A man’s face, looking intensely, almost frantically at tongs. He's clearly focused on the grilling process. * **Panel 3:** A large, fully barbecued, glistening brisket on a grill, dripping with barbecue sauce. * **Panel 4:** The same man as in Panel 2, with an even more intensely focused, slightly manic expression, still wielding tongs. The caption “MORE” is overlaid in large, bold letters. The meme's layout establishes a clear cause-and-effect relationship. Weekends are stated as existing, and the response of “dads” is to relentlessly barbecue, escalating from burgers to brisket. It’s comedic because it hyper-emphasizes a cultural stereotype. --- **Foucauldian Genealogical Discourse Analysis** This meme can be analyzed through a Foucauldian lens focusing on *discourse* and the construction of “fatherhood” and “masculinity.” * **Discourse of Fatherhood:** The meme taps into a historically constructed discourse where fathers are frequently associated with providing for the family through grilling/barbecuing. This isn't an inherent trait, but a culturally produced practice that has become intertwined with notions of responsibility and care. The meme *performs* this discourse, exaggerating it to the point of absurdity. * **Power/Knowledge:** Barbecuing, within this discourse, becomes a form of *power*. It’s a way for the father to exert control over the production of food and, symbolically, over the family meal. The “MORE” signals a compulsion, a need to continually perform this role. The repetition embodies a normalization of the ritual. * **Genealogy:** Tracing the genealogy of this practice would reveal how certain historical forces (post-WWII suburbanization, consumerism, marketing of grilling equipment) have contributed to the construction of this masculine role. The meme isn't concerned with the historical roots, it’s presenting a present-day expression of this normalized behavior. --- **Critical Theory** From a critical theory perspective, this meme demonstrates how culture can be used to reinforce social norms and power structures. * **Ideology:** The meme subtly reinforces the *ideology* of the male breadwinner/provider role. While it's presented humorously, it naturalizes the expectation that fathers should be the ones to handle the grilling. * **Commodification:** Barbecuing itself is heavily *commodified*. The equipment (grills, tongs, sauce) are consumer products marketed toward this specific role. The meme implicitly acknowledges this consumerist aspect. * **Reproduction of Norms:** The meme contributes to the *reproduction of social norms* by presenting this behavior as "natural" or "expected". By exaggerating the scenario, it highlights and simultaneously reinforces the stereotype. --- **Marxist Conflict Theory** This meme can be seen through the lens of symbolic labor and the display of resources. * **Symbolic Capital:** The act of grilling, especially the escalation to a large brisket, can be seen as a display of *symbolic capital*. The brisket is not simply food; it represents economic means to purchase and prepare a luxury good. This displays the father's ability to provide beyond basic necessity. * **Labor & Consumption:** The father's frantic grilling can be interpreted as “labor” – albeit performed for enjoyment and domestic purposes. It’s a demonstration of effort, presented as an endless cycle ("MORE"). The consumption of the food signifies the culmination of this labor. * **Class Display:** The brisket (compared to simple burgers) can also signal a certain *class status*. Brisket is more expensive and requires more skill to prepare successfully, subtly signaling wealth or social standing. --- **Postmodernism** This meme embodies postmodern principles of irony, hyperreality, and the breakdown of grand narratives. * **Irony & Pastiche:** The meme relies heavily on *irony*. It acknowledges the stereotype of the grilling dad, but exaggerates it to an absurd degree. This self-awareness is a hallmark of postmodern humor. It’s a playful *pastiche* of a cultural trope. * **Hyperreality:** The frantic grilling and the demand for “MORE” create a *hyperreality*. It’s an exaggerated and distorted version of reality, where the act of grilling has become detached from its original purpose and is now simply a performance. * **Deconstruction:** The meme implicitly *deconstructs* the idealized image of the family barbecue. It reveals the underlying compulsion and perhaps even anxiety behind the performance of this traditional role. --- **Queer Feminist Intersectional Analysis** While less directly applicable, this meme can be analyzed through an intersectional lens by considering what the meme *doesn't* represent. * **Gender Performance & Expectations:** The meme reinforces a *very specific* gender performance associated with fatherhood. It implicitly excludes or marginalizes alternative forms of masculinity or fatherhood that don't involve grilling. * **Division of Labor:** It perpetuates a traditional *division of labor* within the family, with the father taking on the role of grillmaster. This reinforces gendered expectations and potentially limits the participation of other family members. * **Exclusion:** By focusing solely on the "dad," the meme erases the potential contributions of mothers, partners, or other family members. This highlights the need to consider how seemingly harmless memes can contribute to the *exclusion* of marginalized groups. It’s important to remember that these are just *interpretations* and a single meme can be viewed through many different lenses. The richness of the meme lies in its ability to trigger these diverse analyses.

tesseract-ocr

weekends: *exist* dads: : SS = d 5 = = eC 2 s sh a ea 4 oo ee eee ij Bor oie \ ! meee ANS MORE

llama3.2-vision

This meme is a humorous comparison between the expectations of parents and the reality of their children's behavior. The top line reads "weekends: *exist*" implying that the weekend is just a normal, everyday experience, while the bottom line says "dads: *exist*". The meme is accompanied by two images, one showing a normal, mundane scene of a person eating a burger, and the other showing a person covered in BBQ sauce and surrounded by food, with the caption "dads: *exist*" implying that dads are always eating and enjoying food.

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