a neon cyberpunk cat, generated by cj with stable diffusion

bibliotecamemetica.com

A collection of memes, curated by CJ Trowbridge.

Category: OC -> This Meme

janeway subversion.fw.png

First Seen

2023-05-10T21:03:38+00:00

gemma3-27b-vision

Okay, let's break down the image and its accompanying text through the lenses requested. It's a quirky, layered meme that lends itself to multiple levels of analysis. I'll address the sections that *apply* given the content. **Visual Description** The image is a close-up portrait of Kate Mulgrew as Captain Kathryn Janeway from *Star Trek: Voyager*. She's wearing her Starfleet uniform (a red jumpsuit with a combadge). Her expression is subtly ambiguous—slightly amused, slightly knowing. The lighting is a bit dark and moody. The text superimposed on the image is a direct quote: "On top of everything, I got a letter." Beneath, there is additional text: "Janeway as John. Post-feminist acts of identity subversion. (despite the mulgrew shitshow vs ryan)." The color scheme is dominated by red and dark shades. **Postmodernism** This meme is strongly rooted in Postmodern thought. Here’s how: * **Simulacra & Simulation:** The core of the meme relies on the disruption of expectation. Janeway *is* Janeway. But the meme insists she's "Janeway as John." This is a deliberate creation of a signifier (“John”) that has no grounding in reality, a simulation of identity. It's not about Janeway literally being named John; it's about the *idea* of her being John, playing with the meaning of identity. * **Deconstruction:** The meme deconstructs traditional notions of gender and authority. Captain Janeway, a powerful female leader in a traditionally male-dominated space, is re-imagined under a male identifier ("John"). This disruption challenges the assumed link between gender and role. It suggests that the role, the *position* of Captain, is not inherently tied to femininity. * **Intertextuality:** The meme relies on the viewer's understanding of *Star Trek*, Janeway’s character, and the inherent meaning of the name "John" (often associated with traditional masculinity). It's a layering of references. The viewer *needs* to understand those references to “get” the joke. **Queer Feminist Intersectional Analysis** This is where the meme's subversion becomes particularly compelling: * **Gender Performance and Subversion:** Judith Butler’s concepts of gender performance are central here. The meme is not saying Janeway *is* a man, but it’s staging a thought experiment that disrupts the assumed naturalness of gender presentation. It’s a demonstration that identity can be fluid, constructed, and potentially rewritten. By using the name "John," it suggests that Janeway could embody traditionally masculine traits without ceasing to be Janeway. * **Intersectionality:** This is where the "mulgrew shitshow vs ryan" part comes in. Kate Mulgrew replaced Genevieve Bujold as Captain Janeway. The choice of Mulgrew over Bujold was partially due to the studio’s belief that Mulgrew better fit the traditional, heroic image they had for the character. The text recognizes the conflict between Mulgrew’s interpretation and the potentially more nuanced performance Bujold might have given. This highlights how factors like actor selection, studio expectations, and audience perception intersect to shape character representation and gender roles. * **Queering Authority:** Janeway's role as Captain is, in itself, a disruption of patriarchal norms. The meme pushes this further, potentially suggesting that authority isn’t inherently gendered. It asks, "What if a powerful woman *identified* as a man? Would that change our perception of her leadership?" **Critical Theory** The meme is a commentary on how language and power operate. It demonstrates how a simple change in labeling ("Janeway as John") can disrupt established meanings and challenge the dominant narrative. The text’s recognition of the behind-the-scenes conflict (“mulgrew shitshow vs ryan”) further exposes the constructed nature of character and narrative. The text is a meta-commentary on how the character’s representation was itself shaped by power dynamics within the production. Let me know if you'd like me to elaborate on any of these points, or if you’d like me to explore other theoretical frameworks!

tesseract-ocr

“On top of everything, | got a dear John Letter.” Janeway as John. Post-feminist acts of identity subversion. (despite the mulgrew shitshow vs ryan)

llama3.2-vision

This meme is a screenshot from the TV show Star Trek: The Next Generation, featuring a character saying "In my experience, Captain, war is best described as a messy, bloody, and very expensive form of communication." The text overlaid on the image reads: "When you realize the captain of the Enterprise is actually a 90s feminist."

Back to OC