The transformation of iconic images of traumatic historical events into everyday humorous practice illuminates the mechanisms of remembering and forgetting that operate in digital popular culture. The image-icon has the power to evoke history, to function in Walter Benjamin\u27s terms as a monad. This power, however, is fleeting as history is yet again rendered latent and forgotten once it is transformed into a gesture or everyday common sense. In this article, Stefka Hristova offers a comparative analysis of two Internet-driven participatory memes - Pepper Spray Cop and Doing a Lynndie - to illuminate the role digital media plays in the remembering and forgetting of what W. J. T. Mitchell calls the histor[ies] of perception of the No...
This paper examines photoshopping as an important emerging genre of vernacular civic discourse on th...
The article discusses interactions between emotions, memory and user-generated digital content in th...
“Forgetting Fallujah” challenges the institutional memory of Fallujah advanced in “US Marines.” For ...
This study examines how Occupy Wall Street (OWS) protestors' practices and stated understanding of m...
This study examines how Occupy Wall Street (OWS) protestors’ practices and stated understanding of m...
Internet memes are important part of today’s digital culture. Defined by Shifman (2011) as digital c...
This article analyzes the Facebook page Justice for Mike Brownset up during the 2014 Ferguson protes...
A meme, conceived as the cultural equivalent of the biological gene by Richard Dawkins, spread throu...
Internet memes are important part of today’s digital culture. Defined by Shifman (2011) as digital c...
This paper explores the role of visual memes as neutralizers of contested past and present narrative...
This article analyzes the Facebook page Justice for Mike Brownset up during the 2014 Ferguson protes...
Using a photo from 1985 of a woman swinging her handbag at a neo-Nazi inSweden as an entry point, th...
Protest movements have been galvanized recently by social media and are commonly, and somewhat hyper...
The article explores the online memory discourse of the Russian protest movement of 2011-2012 throug...
The article explores the online memory discourse of the Russian protest movement of 2011-2012 throug...
This paper examines photoshopping as an important emerging genre of vernacular civic discourse on th...
The article discusses interactions between emotions, memory and user-generated digital content in th...
“Forgetting Fallujah” challenges the institutional memory of Fallujah advanced in “US Marines.” For ...
This study examines how Occupy Wall Street (OWS) protestors' practices and stated understanding of m...
This study examines how Occupy Wall Street (OWS) protestors’ practices and stated understanding of m...
Internet memes are important part of today’s digital culture. Defined by Shifman (2011) as digital c...
This article analyzes the Facebook page Justice for Mike Brownset up during the 2014 Ferguson protes...
A meme, conceived as the cultural equivalent of the biological gene by Richard Dawkins, spread throu...
Internet memes are important part of today’s digital culture. Defined by Shifman (2011) as digital c...
This paper explores the role of visual memes as neutralizers of contested past and present narrative...
This article analyzes the Facebook page Justice for Mike Brownset up during the 2014 Ferguson protes...
Using a photo from 1985 of a woman swinging her handbag at a neo-Nazi inSweden as an entry point, th...
Protest movements have been galvanized recently by social media and are commonly, and somewhat hyper...
The article explores the online memory discourse of the Russian protest movement of 2011-2012 throug...
The article explores the online memory discourse of the Russian protest movement of 2011-2012 throug...
This paper examines photoshopping as an important emerging genre of vernacular civic discourse on th...
The article discusses interactions between emotions, memory and user-generated digital content in th...
“Forgetting Fallujah” challenges the institutional memory of Fallujah advanced in “US Marines.” For ...