First Seen
2023-05-10T21:03:35+00:00
gemma3-27b-vision
Here's an analysis of the image and text, broken down into the requested theoretical frameworks. I'll indicate where a particular framework *doesn't* apply strongly, rather than forcing a fit. ## Visual Description The image is a screenshot of a social media post, likely from X/Twitter. It features an avatar of a menacing, digitally-rendered clown (similar to Pennywise from *It*). A red, fist-shaped emoji is also present. The background is black. The composition centers the image on the avatar and the text. The username “@comrade_gritty” is visible, adding a layer of characterization. The hashtag #GeneralStrike2020 is included, suggesting a specific political moment associated with the post. The overall aesthetic is intentionally unsettling and attention-grabbing. --- ## Foucauldian Genealogical Discourse Analysis This post is fertile ground for a Foucauldian analysis. The central claim – that humans are born with innate communism, later “indoctrinated” into capitalism – directly confronts dominant power/knowledge systems. Foucault would argue that 'truth' isn’t inherent but *produced* through discourse. Here, the author is actively challenging the discourse of capitalism as natural or inevitable. The framing of "indoctrination" is key. It suggests a *power relation* at work, where certain ideas (capitalist values) are *imposed* rather than freely chosen. The author isn’t claiming an objective “truth” about human nature, but rather exposing how the “truth” of capitalism is *constructed* through institutions (schools, media, family) and normalized through repeated practice. The “test” proposed (asking a 7-year-old about basic needs) is an attempt to *disrupt* established discourse and reveal the inherent rationality of communist principles *prior* to capitalist conditioning. It tries to bypass the layers of justification and rationalization that uphold the capitalist system. The final statement ("Theory later just helps us unlearn the bullshit") highlights the genealogical aspect – a tracing of how these power/knowledge relations have evolved and solidified over time, and how theory can serve as a tool for *deconstructing* them. --- ## Critical Theory This post fits strongly within the broader context of Critical Theory, particularly the Frankfurt School's focus on ideology critique. The post directly challenges the ideology of capitalism by asserting that it is *imposed*, not natural or desirable. The framing of capitalism as something we are “indoctrinated” into echoes critical theorists’ arguments about the "culture industry" and how mass media and social institutions serve to reproduce capitalist relations of domination. The author suggests a pre-existing, innate moral compass (a kind of proto-communist empathy) which is suppressed by capitalist ideology. The simple questions about basic needs are a rhetorical tactic used to expose the inherent contradictions of capitalism – the fact that it produces both wealth *and* poverty, and that the latter is not simply a matter of individual failings, but a structural feature of the system. The rejection of "bullshit" is a rejection of the rationalizations and justifications that prop up the status quo. --- ## Marxist Conflict Theory This post is explicitly rooted in Marxist thought. The core argument centers on the inherent conflict between different classes and ideologies. The author frames communism not as a utopian ideal, but as a natural state disrupted by the forces of capitalism. This implies a historical trajectory of class struggle, where capitalism *suppresses* the innate communist tendencies of humanity. The questions about housing, food, and medicine directly highlight the material conditions of class struggle. These are basic needs denied to many under capitalism, creating a situation of inherent conflict between the ruling class (who benefit from the system) and the working class (who suffer from its inequalities). The post’s call to "unlearn the bullshit" is a call to develop *class consciousness* – an understanding of one’s own position within the class structure and the inherent contradictions of capitalism. --- ## Postmodernism While the post *resonates* with some postmodern themes, it doesn’t fully *embrace* them. The author is making a strong claim about a pre-existing "natural" state (innate communism), which runs counter to the postmodern emphasis on the deconstruction of all foundational truths. However, the *rhetorical strategy* of challenging established narratives and exposing the constructed nature of “truth” aligns with postmodern concerns. The rejection of "bullshit" as a form of ideological obfuscation also echoes postmodern critiques of grand narratives and metanarratives. Ultimately, the post leans more toward a materialist critique of power structures than a radical questioning of the very possibility of knowledge. It is more concerned with *revealing* a hidden truth than *deconstructing* the concept of truth itself. --- ## Queer Feminist Intersectional Analysis This framework is the *least* directly applicable, but some connections can be made. The questions about basic needs (housing, food, medicine) directly address issues of *material inequality* that disproportionately affect marginalized groups, including those based on gender, sexuality, race, and class. The critique of capitalism as a system of domination resonates with feminist and queer critiques of patriarchal and heteronormative power structures. The author implies that capitalism is not simply an economic system, but a system of *total domination* that suppresses our innate empathy and solidarity. However, the post lacks explicit attention to the *intersectional* nature of oppression – the ways in which different forms of domination intersect and reinforce each other. It doesn't explicitly address how capitalism interacts with other forms of inequality based on gender, sexuality, race, or ability. In conclusion, this post is primarily rooted in Marxist and Critical Theory, with elements of Foucauldian discourse analysis. It uses a provocative rhetorical strategy to challenge dominant ideologies and call for a fundamental restructuring of society. While connections can be made to postmodernism and queer feminist intersectional analysis, these frameworks are less central to its core argument.
tesseract-ocr
a) Gritty strikes #GeneralStrike2020 gg © @comrade_gritty Nobody learns communism from a book. We're born communist and then get indoctrinated into capitalism. Don't believe me? Go ask a 7 year old if we should give homeless people houses, hungry people food, and sick people medicine. Theory later just helps us unlearn the bullshit.
llama3.2-vision
The meme is a humorous and satirical take on the concept of communism and the idea of teaching children about it. The text reads: "Nobody learns communism from a book. We're born communists and then get indoctrinated into capitalism. Don't believe me? Go ask a 7 year old if we should give homeless people houses, hungry people food, and sick people medicine. That's communism. The rest is capitalism."
