First Seen
2023-05-10T21:03:36+00:00
gemma3-27b-vision
Okay, let's break down this meme through various critical lenses. ## Visual Description The meme features a cropped detail from Johannes Vermeer's painting "The Astronomer" (1668). It depicts an elderly man, presumably an astronomer, intensely studying a book or chart. The lighting is dramatic, characteristic of Vermeer, creating a strong chiaroscuro effect. The man's face is deeply etched with concentration, almost appearing strained. He wears spectacles and a cap, and his hand is raised as if holding or adjusting the page he's looking at. The overall impression is one of intense focus, scrutiny, and perhaps a slight bewilderment, or effortful reading. The meme text at the top reads "When you see a meme you haven't seen before". The meme is branded with "Classical Art Memes" at the bottom. ## Postmodernism This meme is thoroughly rooted in postmodern sensibilities. It actively *plays* with the idea of authorship, originality, and context. Vermeer's 17th-century painting is removed from its historical milieu and re-appropriated to comment on a 21st-century digital phenomenon—the ceaseless flow of internet memes. The meme hinges on the idea that memes operate as a kind of shared cultural language. To encounter a "new" meme is to be confronted with a new linguistic unit, demanding decoding. The juxtaposition of high art (Vermeer) with low culture (memes) is a hallmark of postmodern irony. It deconstructs hierarchies of taste and demonstrates the fluidity of meaning in a culture saturated with information. The meme isn't about a specific meme, but rather the *experience* of encountering novelty in a world seemingly devoid of it. It is self-referential— a meme *about* memes. ## Foucauldian Genealogical Discourse Analysis From a Foucaultian perspective, the meme can be analyzed as a disruption of the discourse surrounding knowledge and observation. The "astronomer" in the painting historically represents a figure engaged in the pursuit of knowledge, mapping and understanding the universe. However, the meme reframes this 'observation' as the act of observing a meme. The meme highlights a shift in the objects of scrutiny: from the cosmos to the digital landscape. It examines the power dynamics inherent in observation. The astronomer, traditionally a powerful figure, is now humbled by the simple act of processing internet content. The meme operates as a genealogy—tracing the historical shift from celestial observation to digital consumption. The meme also subtly points to the panoptic nature of meme culture. Individuals constantly "observe" and share memes, contributing to a vast, self-regulating network of visual information. The meme becomes part of the broader discourse, a node in the network. ## Critical Theory From a Critical Theory perspective, the meme subtly critiques the state of contemporary culture. The intensity of the astronomer's gaze, now directed at a meme, suggests a sense of desperation or exhaustion. The meme implies that the relentless influx of information—in the form of memes—requires an almost Herculean effort to process. The meme can be read as a commentary on the "culture industry" (Adorno and Horkheimer) and the commodification of attention. Memes, as easily shareable and digestible content, contribute to the fragmentation of experience and the erosion of critical thinking. The astronomer's struggle with a new meme symbolizes the broader struggle to make sense of a hyper-saturated media landscape. Let me know if you'd like me to elaborate on any of these interpretations or explore additional theoretical angles!
tesseract-ocr
When you see a meme that you haven't seen before
llama3.2-vision
This meme is a play on the phrase "I've seen it all before" and features an image of a wise-looking old man with a look of recognition on his face. The text "When you see a meme that you've seen before" is overlaid on the image, implying that the old man is familiar with the meme and is simply nodding in recognition. The meme is a lighthearted way to poke fun at the idea that some memes are so familiar that they feel like old friends.
