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bibliotecamemetica.com

A collection of memes, curated by CJ Trowbridge.

Category: Neo-Dadaism -> This Meme

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First Seen

2023-05-10T21:03:36+00:00

gemma3-27b-vision

Okay, let's break down this image and its accompanying text through various theoretical lenses. It's important to note that the meme is intentionally provocative and layered with potential interpretations. ## Visual Description The image depicts a digitally rendered scene of Pterodactyls (flying reptiles from the Mesozoic Era). Several Pterodactyls are shown in flight against a backdrop of a dry, grassy plain, with hills or low mountains in the distance. The color scheme is dominated by warm tones – browns, golds, and yellowish-greens. The lighting suggests either sunrise or sunset, creating long shadows and highlights on the creatures. The style of rendering has a slightly stylized, almost illustrative quality. ## Foucauldian Genealogical Discourse Analysis This meme operates *precisely* as a discourse, and the text initiates a deliberate disruption of that discourse. The statement "Girls only want one thing..." is a well-worn trope, historically used to essentialize, simplify, and often objectify female desire. This meme doesn’t fill in the missing word, instead playing with the implied conclusion. * **Power/Knowledge:** The original implied statement positions men as knowing what women want, thus establishing a power dynamic. The meme disrupts this by prompting the viewer to fill in the blank. The prompt asks the audience to recall the historical discourse. The "answer" is clearly Pterodactyls, which is absurd, therefore disrupting the implied essentialist statement. * **Genealogy:** The genealogy of this statement traces back to centuries of patriarchal structures where female sexuality has been defined *by* men, often reduced to a single, easily controllable desire. The meme exposes the historical constructedness of that desire. * **Disruption:** The meme intentionally uses a ridiculous conclusion ("Pterodactyls") to demonstrate the absurdity of reducing women to one desire. It deconstructs the power dynamics inherent in the statement. ## Critical Theory This meme can be analyzed through the lens of Critical Theory, specifically concerning the critique of dominant ideologies. * **Ideology:** The original, unsaid sentence ("Girls only want one thing...") functions as a component of a dominant ideology that perpetuates gender stereotypes and objectification. It reduces women to their sexuality and ignores the complexity of their desires. * **Critique of Representation:** The meme subverts this representation by introducing an absurd element. It forces us to confront the ways in which women are often misrepresented or simplified in media and culture. * **Deconstruction:** It deconstructs the assumption that there is a singular “female desire” and reveals the constructedness of such categories. The image of Pterodactyls highlights the incongruity and illogicality of the claim. ## Queer Feminist Intersectional Analysis This meme lends itself to a particularly strong Queer Feminist Intersectional reading. * **Subversion of Heteronormative Desire:** The meme disrupts the idea of women's desire being solely focused on men. The introduction of Pterodactyls is explicitly *non-heteronormative* and thus challenges the assumption that female desire is necessarily oriented towards male gratification. * **Intersectional Critique of Essentialism:** The meme challenges essentialist notions of womanhood and desire. It implicitly recognizes that women are diverse individuals with complex and varied desires, and that reducing them to a single category is harmful. * **Humor as Resistance:** The use of humor is a powerful tool of resistance. By making the ridiculousness of the original statement explicit, the meme can empower women to reject the constraints of patriarchal expectations. **In essence, the meme isn’t *about* Pterodactyls. It's a meta-commentary on the ways in which women are reduced, defined, and misrepresented in culture, and a playful act of resistance against those forces.**

tesseract-ocr

Girls only want one vine and it starts with a P an ends with an S.

llama3.2-vision

The meme is a humorous take on a popular song lyric. The image features a picture of a group of dinosaurs, including a T-Rex, flying over a cliff. The text reads "Girls only want one thing and it starts with a P and ends with an S... and that's a lie, everything I do says P-R-O..."

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