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A collection of memes, curated by CJ Trowbridge.

Category: Queer - Post-Structuralism -> This Meme

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First Seen

2023-05-10T21:03:40+00:00

gemma3-27b-vision

Okay, let's break down this four-panel comic, "Dinos and Comics," applying various theoretical lenses. ## Visual Description The comic features a simple, minimalist aesthetic. The background is a light blue with scattered white dots representing stars. The characters are two cartoon dinosaurs: one is green with a red dorsal stripe, actively speaking in each panel, and the other is a light blue, passively receiving and appearing increasingly distressed. Each panel depicts the dinosaurs facing each other in a field, their forms are simple shapes with minimal detail. The text is cleanly written and positioned alongside the speaking dinosaur. The overall style is whimsical and approachable, which contrasts with the increasingly bleak message conveyed. The format of the comic is a four-panel strip, progressing the dialogue in a sequence. ## Foucauldian Genealogical Discourse Analysis This comic lends itself powerfully to a Foucauldian analysis. The central theme touches on power structures, discourse, and the production of "truth." * **Discourse & Power/Knowledge:** The comic reveals how "awfulness" isn't an inherent quality but *produced* through discourse. The green dinosaur's statements are not objective truths but *statements* that construct a narrative. The idea that people *are* awful is a circulated discourse. * **Genealogy of Awfulness:** The dinosaur highlights a shift from an essentialist view of "people being awful" to the realization that awfulness isn't inherent to people, but *created by* the world *they build*. This implies that the "awfulness" is not a natural state, but a product of historical and social forces. The statement "but people built the world" suggests that the problem isn't people, it's the structures they've erected. * **Power/Knowledge and Normalization:** The blue dinosaur's increasing distress can be seen as a visual representation of the internalization of these discourses. It begins as a simple acknowledgment of awfulness, progresses to the idea of being impacted by it, then to the final revelation that the source of the awfulness is the very people who built the world. The passive dinosaur’s facial expressions and position demonstrate a slow acceptance of the discourse. * **Subjectivity and Power:** The comic demonstrates how discourse constructs subjects. The blue dinosaur is a subject shaped by a dominant discourse of awfulness, before realizing it’s circular. The comic questions what it means to be “awful” and how that category is applied. ## Critical Theory The comic speaks to core tenets of Critical Theory, particularly its focus on uncovering hidden power dynamics and challenging assumptions. * **Ideology Critique:** The comic functions as an ideology critique. Initially, the green dinosaur presents a seemingly common-sense assertion (“people are awful”). The comic then deconstructs this assertion, revealing it as a simplification that obscures the root causes of suffering. It challenges the naturalization of awfulness. * **Social Construction of Reality:** The comic emphasizes that what we perceive as "reality" is not objective but *socially constructed*. The world is not inherently awful; it *becomes* awful through the actions and structures created by people. * **Alienation:** The comic subtly hints at alienation, a central theme in critical theory. The separation between people and the world they create is highlighted in the revelation that “people built the world”. It suggests a sense of disengagement and a loss of control over the systems that govern our lives. * **Emancipatory Potential:** While bleak, the comic also holds a potential for emancipation. By exposing the cyclical nature of awfulness, it implicitly calls for a re-evaluation of the structures we create and a commitment to building a better world. ## Marxist Conflict Theory While not explicitly Marxist, the comic can be interpreted through a lens of conflict and power imbalances. * **Class/Power Structures:** While dinosaurs aren’t representative of a specific class structure, the building of the world can be seen as a metaphor for the construction of societal structures that create inequality. The “awfulness” of the world could be attributed to the exploitative and oppressive systems that benefit some at the expense of others. * **False Consciousness:** The initial statement (“people are awful”) could be seen as an example of false consciousness – a belief that obscures the true sources of oppression. It diverts attention from the systemic problems that contribute to awfulness. * **Alienation from Labor:** The idea of “people building the world” can be connected to the Marxist concept of alienation from labor. People create the world through their work, but they often have little control over the products of their labor, and that product is then presented as awful. ## Postmodernism Elements of Postmodernism are present in the comic's deconstruction of grand narratives and its emphasis on subjectivity. * **Deconstruction:** The comic functions as a micro-deconstruction. It takes a seemingly simple statement (“people are awful”) and dismantles it, revealing its underlying assumptions and contradictions. * **Rejection of Essentialism:** The comic rejects the idea of inherent “awfulness”. It suggests that awfulness is not a fixed quality but a product of social forces and historical context. * **Subjectivity and Perspective:** The blue dinosaur's experience highlights the subjectivity of perception. Awfulness is not an objective reality but is felt and experienced differently by individuals. * **Meta-Commentary:** The simplicity of the comic format and the directness of the dialogue can be seen as a meta-commentary on the nature of communication and the limitations of language. **Note:** It's important to remember that these theoretical lenses are tools for interpretation, and other readings are possible. The strength of this comic lies in its ability to provoke thought and encourage critical reflection on the nature of power, responsibility, and the world we create.

tesseract-ocr

no the world is awful, it just rubs off on people people are awful Ke yh 2" dinos ecomics oh yeah, the people ho did that are but people i built the ane world ic

llama3.2-vision

This meme is a simple, four-panel comic featuring two dinosaurs. In the first panel, the first dinosaur says "people are awful" to the second dinosaur, which responds with "no, the world is awful, people are just doing the best they can with the hand they've been given". The second dinosaur then says "but people built the world we live in, so maybe we should try to be better" and the first dinosaur responds with "yeah, but that's just it's been done, so what are you going to do, hoist the colours and run the flag up the pole to show the world that you are on the side of the angels?"

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