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bibliotecamemetica.com

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 meme/tweet using the frameworks you've requested. It's a surprisingly rich little piece for the amount of text it contains. **Visual Description** The image is a screenshot of a Twitter/X post. It features a circular profile image of a person in what appears to be a vibrant outdoor setting (possibly a park or botanical garden). The person is wearing a light-colored dress or outfit and appears to be in motion, giving a dynamic impression. The text overlay is a white rectangle with black text. Above the text is a handle of "@Lenniesaurus" with a sparkling emoji design. The profile picture and emojis give the meme a slightly playful, ironic feel. --- **Foucauldian Genealogical Discourse Analysis** This tweet is *highly* relevant to a Foucauldian analysis, particularly around the discourse of beauty and femininity. * **Power/Knowledge:** The statement challenges the power dynamic inherent in the unsolicited opinions on women's appearance. It's not simply a matter of "preference" but an assertion of control over the female body and expression. The person issuing the statement is positioning themselves as having the right to comment on, and evaluate, a woman's 'natural' state. * **Discipline & Surveillance:** The comment "stop telling women" implies that this is a *common* practice – a disciplinary norm. Men are enacting a kind of surveillance, attempting to police women's choices about makeup. The meme flips this by suggesting a darker, almost monstrous subtext to seemingly innocent beautification. It disrupts the expected logic of male gaze. * **Genealogy:** Tracing the historical roots of the expectation of "natural" beauty is crucial. This meme hints at the historical construction of ideals of femininity (often tied to purity, fragility, and a rejection of artifice). The meme throws this ideal into stark contrast with a sinister purpose, revealing the inherent absurdity of expecting women to cater to male preferences. * **Discursive Shift:** The extreme (sirens luring sailors) functions as a disruption of the discourse. It's a hyperbolic, deliberately unsettling image that forces the viewer to reconsider the underlying assumptions behind the "no makeup" comment. --- **Critical Theory** The meme strongly resonates with concepts of alienation and the social construction of reality found in Critical Theory. * **False Consciousness:** The meme implies a disconnect between what appears to be a harmless or even flattering comment ("you look better without makeup") and the underlying patriarchal power structures that enforce these expectations. The commenter believes they are simply stating a preference, but the meme suggests they are participating in a system that objectifies and controls women. * **Objectification:** The text frames the woman's appearance as being *for* someone else (the sailors) rather than for herself. This is a key element of objectification – reducing a person to their appearance and defining their worth based on how others perceive them. * **The Social Construction of Gender:** The meme challenges the notion of a "natural" female appearance. Makeup isn't about appealing to an individual man, but a deliberate choice (with sinister implications) that upends expectations. * **Critique of Dominant Ideology:** It's a pointed critique of the assumption that women should be pleasing to the male gaze. The over-the-top imagery exposes the ridiculousness and potential harm of this expectation. --- **Marxist Conflict Theory** While not immediately obvious, Marxist interpretations can be applied to analyze the underlying power dynamics. * **Power Imbalance:** The meme highlights an asymmetry of power between men and women. Men feel entitled to comment on women's bodies and dictate what is considered beautiful. * **Commodity Fetishism (Extended):** We can extend the concept of commodity fetishism. The woman’s body/appearance is treated as a commodity – an object to be assessed, judged, and controlled. The "no makeup" comment positions her as a 'product' to be appreciated in its 'natural' state. * **Alienation:** The woman is alienated from her own agency. The statement suggests she is acting solely to attract others rather than for her own self-expression. --- **Postmodernism** Several postmodern themes are present. * **Deconstruction of Meaning:** The meme brilliantly deconstructs the seemingly harmless comment. It takes a benign statement and reveals the underlying power structures and expectations that give it meaning. * **Hyperreality & Simulation:** The "sirens luring sailors" element is a clear example of a simulation, or a hyperreal image that replaces reality. It is intentionally shocking and exaggerated, challenging our perception of what is "real" and what is constructed. * **Irony & Parody:** The meme is deeply ironic. It uses humor and exaggeration to expose the absurdity of certain social norms. --- **Queer Feminist Intersectional Analysis** This is a particularly rich area of analysis. * **Patriarchy & Gender Performativity:** The meme highlights how gender is performed. The woman is not simply ‘being’ beautiful, but *doing* beauty—a deliberate act with specific consequences. The sirens imagery adds a layer of monstrous feminine power. * **Challenging Heteronormativity:** While the specific example is focused on male attraction, the core message—women are not performing beauty for men—resonates with queer feminist ideas about breaking free from heteronormative expectations. * **Intersectionality:** The meme can be extended to acknowledge how this power dynamic intersects with other forms of oppression. Women of color, disabled women, and other marginalized groups face additional scrutiny and control over their bodies and appearance. * **Reclaiming the Monstrous Feminine:** The association with sirens—traditionally portrayed as dangerous and alluring—can be seen as a reclamation of the “monstrous feminine,” embracing female power and agency even when it is perceived as threatening. In conclusion, this seemingly simple meme is a remarkably dense text that offers fertile ground for analysis through multiple critical lenses. It highlights the power dynamics inherent in everyday interactions and challenges us to question the assumptions that underlie our perceptions of gender, beauty, and agency.

tesseract-ocr

rt) eesti acai 2 oe @Lenniesaurus Stop telling women you find them more attractive without makeup. | can assure you she's not doing all that for you, Chad. She's doing it to attract sailors so she can lure them to their watery graves.

llama3.2-vision

This meme is a screenshot of a Twitter post. The post reads: "Stop telling women you find them attractive without makeup. I can tell when you're doing it to get in their pants. It's creepy and it's not sexy." The text is written in a straightforward and slightly sarcastic tone, with a hint of annoyance.

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