Sunday, July 21, 2019
Internet Memes and Political Participation
Internet Memes and Political Participation    Internet memes: As a new form of  political participation  1. Introduction   The term ââ¬Å"memeâ⬠ has been emerged in various spheres in a few studies, and it has been discussed with some applied research and cultural research (Hofstadter, 1985; Dawkins, 1976; Blackmore, 1999; Chesterman, 1997). As the basic unit of culture, meme plays an extremely important role in the reproduction of culture. Given this orientation, some researchers started to address and explore the relationship between meme and politics, argue that meme has a positive effect on the development of political. (Shifman, 2013, Milner, 2013). In the 21st century, the rise of digital media has changed the information dissemination ecological, as well as the way of thinking of people. With the advance of social media and digital technology, meme theory also need to adapt the new environment and focus on the present convergence for new field. Accordingly, the new branch of meme study has come out, which is internet meme. In this Internet age, a memes ability to reproduce and spread is grad   ually expanding, thus highlighted increasingly as the dominant force in transmission media, and playing an increasingly important role in the public domain in terms of the news public opinion and political communication. Whatââ¬â¢s more, websites like Know Your Meme, 4chan, Reddit and Tumblr are meme manufactures which have helped people produce thousands of memes. The internet meme has raised the pace of social political awareness and community building in cyberspace.   Shifman (2013) defines that internet meme has three  functions in terms of political participation: as forms of persuasion or  political advocacy, as grassroots action and as modes of expression and public  discussion. This paper builds on existing knowledge in the fields of internet  meme, based on Shifmanââ¬â¢s work and combines with otherââ¬â¢s studies to demonstrate  that internet meme is a new form of political participation. At the same time,  this paper will illustrate it from three aspects: as a persuasion way in  election, as a resistance of people (collection action) and as a public  discourse of political issues.  Body  What is a meme?  The definition of meme  in The Oxford English Dictionary is: an element of culture that may be  considered to be passed on by non-genetic means, especially imitation. The term  ââ¬Å"memeâ⬠ was created by Dawkins in his book ââ¬Å"The selfish Geneâ⬠ in 1976, when he tried  to explain the culture evolution. He defined it as ââ¬Å"small units of culture that  spread from person to person by copying or imitationâ⬠ (Dawkins, 1989). In  addition, he analogized meme with biological gene, considered that meme also  evolved through coping(imitating), variating and selecting, like gene transmits  its genetic information to the next generation. A clear difference between  these two is that genes are the genetic factors of biology, while meme is the  derivative of culture. Besides, gene propagates through heredity, a physical  process to replicate but meme through imitating, which is a mental process. In  his work, he indicated that meme has three characters: 1) Heredity, the process  of memeââ¬â¢s diffusion is heredity. For example, when one religion or belief is  propagating to others, the religion as a meme is acquired by people and copied  to their mind and continuing passed along to believers. 2) Variation, the  contents of meme by imitated are not the same, they could be changed. For  instance, when people telling a story to others they will add or delete some  details, which results in variation. 3) Selection, the ability of diffusion is  varying from different memes, some are easy to spread while some are not, they  are competing when being propagating, which is like the natural selection in  biologic theory (Dawkins, 1989).   Despite some researchers  criticized that Dawkins has limited the culture in the sphere of biologic and  simplified human behavior later, it cannot be ignored that his efforts on the  research of meme, which accentuates the realization of cultural gene. Next,  Douglas Hofstadter put forwarded a new interdisciplinary subject ââ¬Å"Memeticsâ⬠ in  1985. This subject is based on the perspective of Darwinian evolution to study  the content of the mind, aiming to explore the social evolution model of  cultural information transmission (Hofstadter, 1985). Since then, the meme  concept has been discussed and accepted by various of subject: phycology,  physiology, anthropology,à  linguistics and so on. For instance, Daniel  Dennett, an American philosophy who agreed with the concept of meme, and  applied it into his book ââ¬Å"Consciousness Explainedâ⬠ and ââ¬Å"Darwins Dangerous  Ideaâ⬠ to interpret the mechanism of spiritual evolution (Vasiliki, 2014). Furthermore,  Finland linguists and translation theorists Andrew Chesterman, combined meme  with the British philosopher Karl Popperââ¬â¢s idea about the schema of knowledge  evolution, established the translation theory framework of the system by a  descriptive study on the translation standard and strategies (Chesterman, 1997).  In 1999, Susan Blackmore (1999) considered meme as an independent replication  factor in her book ââ¬Å"The Meme Machineâ⬠, suggested that whatever the form of  memetic information is, it could be regarded as meme when it can be copied by  imitate.  à  Based on the previous studies, this paper  adopts Shifmanââ¬â¢s (2013) idea and apply it to the analyze. She describes the  meme constituted with two principles: 1) looking at diffused units as  incorporating several memetic dimensions namely, several aspects that people  may imitate; 2) understanding memes not as single entities that propagate well,  but as groups of content units with common characteristics.   2.2 What is an internet meme?  Meme has been widely  accepted and applied to several subjects which has mentioned before, but it  only gets attentions of mass media researchers until 21 centuries (Davison,  2012). According to Shifman (2013), she defines an Internet meme as: 1) a group  of digital items sharing common characteristics of content, form, and/or  stance; 2) that were created with awareness of each other; and 3) were  circulated, imitated, and/or transformed via the Internet by many users. Generally,  in the digital media era, the advancement of Internet and social networks  enable people to acquire more information and accelerate the information  exchange. With the advent of web2.0 and platformlization, meme is actively  involved in the process of information dissemination, in terms of longevity,  fecundity, and copy fidelity have been enhanced through internet, which regard  as the three basic properties that help meme to spread successfully. For  longevity, it is attributed to numerous archives, which can store data  indefinitely not rely on memory. For copy fidelity, it mainly because the  digitization allows lossless information transfer compared to traditional  media. For fecundity, due to the infrastructure, it can achieve the swift  diffusion of any given message to numerous nodes. These facilitates the  creation and exchange of user-generate-consent, which emerges participation  (Shifman, 2013). Apart from this, easier access to the Internet enables people  to receive mounts of information every day, in comparison to the limited  information acquiring approaches in the past. Also, the speed of transmission  is no longer limited by the movement of individuals. Hence, it is necessary to pay  more attention on internet meme, exploring its role on constructing shared values  in contemporary digital cultures.   As Shifman (2013) claimed, the internet  meme has three properties in the web2.0: 1) A gradual propagation from  individuals to society. In other words, memes could shape the mindsets, forms  of behavior, and actions of social groups. People can easier sharing and  communicating in digital era, which facilitates the process of spreading memes  from person to society; 2) Reproduction via copying and imitation. In the  digital world, people can spread content by forwarding, linking, or copying, they  can use some software like Photoshop and application like Snapseed to imitate  and remixing instead of reproducing as well; and 3) Diffusion through  competition and selection. The internet magnifies the competition and selection  of meme. On the one hand, it allows researchers collect data and track the  process of meme evolution. On the other hand, it offers users an opportunity to  understanding and knowing the preference of choice relating to meme diffusion (Davison,  2012).   It is always mentions viral when talks  about internet memes, their differences and similarities are the major parts of  meme research. This paper does not go in further with details about this, but  indicates the mainly difference between viral and internet meme is that viral  is consisted of single units while internet meme is a collection of text.   In order to better analyzing, this paper  focus on the images form of internet memes, takes some images as example to  illustrates the idea. Based on the studies of Knobel, Lankshear (2007) and  Kuipers (2005), internet memes can be divided into two categories: recycled  images and macros images. Recycled images have a template which build by  numerous imitations and stable images which include original  content and are passed along with transformation or not, as presented in Figure  1 and Figure 2. Macros images usually constitute with a single image overlaid  with a white text written in capitals and express the humorous note, as  presented in Figure1.3 and Figure1.4.   Figure.1 and Figure.2    Figure.3 and Figure. 4   2.3 Internet memes as a new form of political participation  In recent years, internet meme has  been constantly evolving into the political participation. This appeared to be  attributed to the digital media. First it offers the opportunities for people  to become the subject of expression, and then reducing the cost of political  participation, especially for the young generation who are less likely to  engaged in political activities (Anduiza, 2012). Second, public and political  events are more likely to be exaggerated than in the past with rapid spread in  the internet. Last, the so-called image politics according to Wilson (2000),  image symbols have more vitality and tension than words. Since the visual  impact has more strong effects on emotion and could save the time for reading  too much words, it is extremely easy to be used to participate in discussing  political issues, especially in sensitive areas. For this reason, the  exaggerated effects and interesting composition of meme makes its transmission  have powerful appeal, which makes the combination of both of them play the role  of two-way gain. Therefore, internet meme has built the bridge between citizens  and political, as a new way to deconstruct by the form of image with humor to  gains serious political, build a unique participate system (Hristova, 2014). This paper  classified this political participation into three sub-items in terms of  facilitates political participation according to Shifmanââ¬â¢s work: 1) As a persuasion  way in election; 2) As a resistance of people (collection action); and 3) As a  public discourse. Following will combining cases to analyze these three  functions (Shifman, 2013).  2.2.1 As a persuasive way in election  Social media allows users to publish  their opinions or ideas so that their friends, family, and strangers can read  these posts and comments back. And it is has been demonstrated that people are  more likely to believe in their friends and family, which makes the online  ideas become more convincible (Shifman, 2013). As a consequence, internet meme  through social media could influence people for their psychological cognition,  behavior patterns and guide their recognition (Tay,  2015). As politics move to the Internet where more and  more voters get their news and information with the trend of digital  technology. The politicians and their companies start to consider taking  advantage of internet meme to create great political profile with their  personalities and campaign slogans. In this way, enabled mobilizing voters  outside of official political discourses. A few studies consider politicians  who appear ââ¬Å"coolâ⬠ in the eyes of ordinary citizens to be rare successes (Tay,  2015)  The 2008 American Presidential election  is known for being the first modern Internet campaign, Shifman (2013) chooses  the ââ¬Å"Obama Girlâ⬠ video as an example of memes as political persuasion, explains  that the video become widely popular due to it just focus on a praise of Obama  not talks about specific political issues. Here, this paper uses The Hope Meme  in 2008 American election as an example to analyze. This meme is the depiction  of Barack Obama by artist Shepard Fairey (Figure 5), it has thousands of  replications and then a vast number of users participated in creating their own  replications (Figure 6 and Figure 7). This meme portrayed Obama as the ideal  candidate and introducing a vision for the country, which triggered peoples  approval (Foster, 2014). Subsequently, Obamaââ¬â¢s supporters enjoying creating new  versions of the Hope Meme itself to show their stance (Seiffert, 2017). With  the propagation of the hope meme, a climbing mount of people acknowledge the  appearance of Obama even they do not participate in, they can see the images in  social media through their friends or families. Moreover, Obamaââ¬â¢s campaign  posted a LOLcat a few days before the 2012 election (Figure 8) to call on  people to vote. This meme combing with the internet culture, the lol culture  and cute cat, make people perceived as Obama is proximity to the ordinary  people. The fact is, Obama is a popular figure referred to in Internet memes,  involved discussions and supportive commentaries (Tay, 2015).  Figure.5 and Figure. 6    Figure.7 and Figure. 8   To give another example is the 2012  American election, between Mitt Romney and Hillary Clinton. On April 4, a meme  containing President Barack Obama and Secretary of State Hillary Clinton posted  on a Tumblr blog. It imagines an exchange between them, and Obama asking  ââ¬Å"whatchu doing?â⬠, she responds, ââ¬Å"Running the worldâ⬠ (Figure 9). In this image,  Obama is lying down while reading, and seems relaxed, Clinton has a solemn  expression, and is busy with work. The post got a lot of attention and received  thousands of notes. Clinton becomes a synonym of respectability, and a  representation of female empowerment. Since then, her supporters involving into  this internet meme and imitate their own picture by change the text or content.  (Figure 10 and Figure 11). The meme became a major part of Hillary Clintons  positive cultural revival as a political figure, which was already seen as  particularly powerful in the 2016 presidential campaign. This has made her a  viable candidate (Tay, 2015).   Figures 9, 10 and 111   These examples have illustrated the use  of internet memes as a persuasion way referred to political participation. As  an active social software, internet memes have a place in the political  expression of new media with the linking, forwarding and imitating, which  increased the exposure of political figures. In the presidential election,  candidates in the media show the image of appearance, and in the narration part  is partly deciding the success or failure of his election (Foster, 2014).  Politics in the media society is becoming more and more a performance, an act  of creating an image.   2.3.2 As a resistance of people (collection action)  Indeed, most of political memes are generally resistant to nature, and as weve seen, resistance itself is a critical mass mobilization. Shifman (2013) defines one function of memes is as grass-roots action with the example Occupy Wall Street online movement. The ââ¬Å"Pepper Spray Copâ⬠ which shows a police officer spraying protesters with pepper spray. The ââ¬Å"We are the 99%â⬠, becomes one of the main visual markers of the on-the-ground Occupy Movement after it spread quickly online. They serve as a call to action for the protest to continue. Shifman indicates that the power of organization is declining, instead being replaced by massive, mobile social networks, which is collective action (Milnerï ¼Å'2013). The background of the developing collective action cannot be separated from the remarkable rise of internet memes. First, the threshold is low and there is no need for technological skill to express and participate. Besides, image meme helps these protests go deepe   r with the visual effects. The most important thing is that internet meme allows the citizens to participate in collective action and at the same time can retain their individuality, since one of the character of meme is alter (Anduiza, 2012).   There are several studies  has worked on the Occupy Wall Street, this paper will apply the collective  action in Facebook between China mainland and Taiwan in 2016 as a case study.  This is the first internet meme and political participation refer to collective  action have been combined in public view in China. In January, Ziyu Zhou, a  member of the south Korean womens group, was accused by the artist An Huang  about Taiwans independence on Weibo, leading to a wave of public opinion  against Ziyu Zhou. As the incident continued to heat up, then Ziyu Zhou issued  a video on Facebook to apologize for the previous uproar. Celebrity Gengxin Lin  forwarded the apology to video, and said apologized too suddenly and  didnt have time to memorize the manuscript, which caused Taiwanese  netizens and Chinese netizens started a debate in Lins Facebook. A few days  after, it is said that 20 million Chinese young people have started a  collective action to Facebook of Taiwanââ¬â¢s three media homepage. Noncitizens  take internet meme as main expression, showed a high degree of organization, to  resist the independence of Taiwan (Tang, 2016).à      As  showed in Figure 12, Figure 13 and Figure 14, these memes are from the China  mainland, people try to use the beautiful scenes from China mainland and some  ironic words to resist the supportive of independence of Taiwan. The contents  of these meme are from traditional Chinese slogans, events with Chinese  characteristics and political propaganda themes. On the one hand, it evokes the  value recognition of people. On the other hand, they combined with familiar  things of public, which will have a greater influence on transmission. The most  important thing is, there are millions of people participate in this action,  and post millions of images on Facebook, the homepage was full of images which  is powerful and spectacular.    Figure.12 ââ¬Å"invite Taiwan people to enjoy the beautiful China mainland scene.â⬠    Figure.13 ââ¬Å"Follow me: Taiwan has been Chinas territory since ancient times. You dont know its okay.    Figure. 14 à  Ã¢â¬Å"Dont talk with a pictureâ⬠   These internet memes  from the mass production by organizing, and hide the emotional expression in  the images, aim to use it to gain the attention occupation and presents  peopleââ¬â¢s political stance of resist. According to sharing and remixing,  transfer it into collective action, reflects the ability to participate in  narrative construction and civic organization. Therefore, memes can be used as  a tool of political participation in terms of turn the public opinion  fragmentation into collective action (Tang, 2016).  2.3.3 As a public discourse of political issues  Social media is considered to be more  effective in terms of information diffusion comparison to traditional media, it  expands the source of information and knowledge for people. People not only are  the receiver of the political information in network environment, they also are  a political message of reproducing and disseminator, which means everyone is  likely to be the news publishers, and likely to be receiving information. The advantages of digital media including openness,  virtualization, interactivity and timeliness build a great environment for the  public discourse, and helping people freely communicate and express their  opinions. Therefore, net citizens are keen on discuss politic issues through  digital media. The richness, floating and uncertainty of meme allow everyone  revolve around the image to construct the legal qualification and compete for  their statements, thus it is easy to be used to participate in discuss sensitive  political issues (Hristova, 2014). They are now been a part of our internet culture,  participating in a larger media and material ecosystem that helps shape the  political identity and political union. Meme could be a catalyst for political  discussion (Shifman, 2013). Compared to the past  people have to talk or write articles to show their political stance while now  they just can use an image. Like the Pepe the Frog, it becomes a Nazi Trump  supporter and Alt-Right symbol (Figure 15). It attracts not only peopleââ¬â¢s  attention, but also political discussions by its powerful visual impact. Some  notable examples are: The 2015 General election of United Kingdom, the image of  eating of candidate Miliband, which is different from his appearance on  newspapers, evokes a vast number of imitation of people with parody and  ridicule (Figure 16). After that, many politicians actively to follow the  trend, post out their own eating images to get attention and discussion. This  meme is similar to the Sihao Bai in 2014, the mayor of New York city. He used a  knife and fork in an undisciplined manner in an image (Figure 17), which made people  questioned his ability to govern because he has a more powerful appearance in  newspaper than this image. Back to the Occupy Wall Street case, the We  are the 99% meme. It is widely popular in Facebook and has numerous  replicators. At first, most of them are from the 99% people to support with  fixed images, annotation or remix (Figure 18). Gradually, the 1% people  participate in and post their own images with the text ââ¬Å"tax meâ⬠ or ââ¬Å"redistributeâ⬠  (Figure 19). At the same time, they got mounted of comments along with (Milner,  2013). This meme engages in multiple discussions and arguments on Facebook.  Figure 15  Figure 16  Figure 17  Figure 18  Figure 19  With the propagation  characteristics of memes, public discourse is totally different than the past.  The increasing of complex hotspot issues duration, degree of attention and  transformation mechanism, a serial of crisis involved in, the more complex  issues appear at the same time including and the increase of average time of  the single issue are catalyzing the public discourse with political issues in  digital era. In another way, internet memes as a  political catharsis, it represents a strong demand of citizens for political  participation. Significantly, when people engaged in this discussion rather  than sharing or forwarding, it has more powerful since it empowers citizens to  share their opinions of political stances (Shifman, 2013).  3. Conclusion  In the era of media, the process of  political participation can be well deserved to internet meme, which from the  bottom to top, allows people to have the chance to get involved in political  activities. The three basic characters of meme including heredity, variation  and selection have been enhanced in digital media, and that is the major reason  why the internet meme could leave a great influence on political participation.  From one hand, internet meme as the persuasion way mainly reflected on the  political elections, help politicians to build positive image thus get voterââ¬â¢s  approval. From another hand, it allows ordinary people to resist through mastery  of dominance on the spread of images, not only can modify the content of the  meme, also can undertake production and innovation. Besides, it offers a new  way for net citizens to seek affirmation and self-expression in political communities.  The future study of internet meme could focus on the effects, like how to measure the effects of internet memes on elections or collective action. As a new way to participate in politics, internet meme has its own advantages and it is deserved to study in the future.  References  Anduiza, E., Jensen, M.J. and Jorba L., eds. (2012). Digital Media and Political Engagement Worldwide: A Comparative Study. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.  Blackmore, S. (1999).The Meme Machine, New York: Oxford  University Press Inc.  Chesterman, A. (1997).à  Memes of translation. 1st  ed. Amsterdam: J. Benjamins.  Davison, P. (2012).à  The Language of Internet Memes.  Dawkins, R. 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