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bibliotecamemetica.com

A collection of memes, curated by CJ Trowbridge.

Category: Star Trek - Queer -> This Meme

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First Seen

2023-05-10T21:03:41+00:00

gemma3-27b-vision

Okay, let's break down this meme, applying the requested theoretical frameworks where relevant. It's a particularly provocative image that lends itself to a surprising amount of analysis. ## Visual Description The image is a screenshot of an online article with a sensationalist headline. The headline reads “NASA warns alien life may not be fuckable.” The article is dated March 10, 2021, and is written by Alex Brault. Beneath the headline is a dramatic, close-up photograph of a man. He appears visibly distressed, with furrowed brows, wide eyes, and a downturned mouth. The lighting is stark, emphasizing his expression. He's partially obscured by what appears to be a metallic structure, possibly a spaceship door or console, creating a sense of confinement or disillusionment. The overall aesthetic is designed to be shocking and humorous, though arguably in a somewhat uncomfortable way. The photograph’s dramatic use of shadow and emotional portrayal are used to amplify the shock value of the sensational headline. ## Foucauldian Genealogical Discourse Analysis This meme offers a ripe opportunity for Foucauldian analysis. At its core, it's about *discourse* - how knowledge and power are intertwined. * **Power/Knowledge:** The headline is framed as a "warning" *from* NASA, a powerful institution representing scientific authority. The language of warning suggests potential dangers, but the danger being highlighted isn't physical harm, but *sexual incompatibility*. This is a fascinating shift. It positions sexuality as a central (and somewhat absurd) component of potential alien encounters. NASA's authority is being *used* to address and normalize a very base instinct. * **Genealogy:** Tracing the "genealogy" of this meme’s power/knowledge relationship, we can see that it leverages long-standing cultural assumptions about sex and reproduction. The inherent human drive to procreate and the associated anxieties (can we? will they be fertile? will it *work*?) are amplified by the unknown of extraterrestrial life. It builds on decades of sci-fi tropes where alien encounters *always* include potential (often fraught) interspecies breeding. * **Disciplinary Power:** The meme, in a perverse way, reinforces norms around heterosexuality and reproductive desire. Even the framing of alien life is filtered through the lens of human sexual desire. It posits that "fuckability" is a key metric for judging the worth or value of another life form. This isn’t about aliens, but about the structuring of our own desires and anxieties. ## Critical Theory Applying Critical Theory, we can see the meme as a commentary on the ways dominant ideologies are embedded in even seemingly objective fields like science. * **Ideology Critique:** The meme reveals how deeply ingrained *sexuality* is within our worldview. It reveals the implicit assumption that sex/reproduction is a primary concern, even when encountering entirely *alien* life. It questions the universality of the drive to reproduce and the assumptions about how reproduction would work with alien life. The very question suggests an anthropocentric perspective. * **Commodification & Objectification:** The focus on "fuckability" reduces alien life to a sexual object. It aligns with broader patterns of objectification, framing alien life as existing for the gratification of human desire. * **Culture Industry:** The meme itself is a product of the "culture industry" – the mass production of cultural artifacts. It relies on shock value and sensationalism to capture attention, reinforcing the demand for increasingly extreme content. The "NASA warns..." headline isn’t a serious scientific statement, but a click-bait tactic that reinforces market-driven media. ## Queer Feminist Intersectional Analysis This meme offers significant opportunities for intersectional critique. * **Heteronormativity & the Phallus:** The framing centers male sexual desire. "Fuckability" is implicitly focused on male penetration. The meme perpetuates the idea that sexual access is a measure of power and control, reinforcing a phallocentric worldview. * **Reproductive Anxiety & Gendered Control:** The emphasis on reproduction ties into long-standing anxieties about fertility and the control of reproduction, particularly within patriarchal societies. The assumption that alien life *should* be compatible with human reproduction reinforces the idea that women's bodies exist for the purpose of procreation. * **Intersectional Vulnerability:** Alien life, in this meme, is cast as a vulnerable object, subject to the gaze and desire of humanity. This vulnerability aligns with broader patterns of exploitation and domination experienced by marginalized groups. The meme highlights how power imbalances shape our perceptions of "otherness." In essence, this meme is far more complex than a simple joke. It unveils a web of assumptions about power, desire, and control. It functions as a provocative thought experiment, pushing us to examine the underlying ideologies that shape our understanding of not only alien life but ourselves.

tesseract-ocr

NASA warns alien life may not be fuckable

llama3.2-vision

The meme is an image of a screenshot from the TV show "Stargate SG-1" where the character Daniel Jackson says "In case of an emergency, in case of an emergency, in case of an emergency, in case of an emergency..." and then suddenly stops and says "In case of an emergency, in case of an emergency, in case of an emergency, in case of an emergency... IN CASE OF AN EMERGENCY, SAY 'IN CASE OF AN EMERGENCY, SAY...'". The image is captioned "Nasa warns alien life may not be friendly".

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