2013
DOI: 10.1215/01636545-2210473
|View full text |Cite
|
Sign up to set email alerts
|

Occupy Wall Street Meets Occupy Iraq

Abstract: 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's 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… Show more

Help me understand this report

Search citation statements

Order By: Relevance

Paper Sections

Select...
1
1
1

Citation Types

0
3
0

Year Published

2016
2016
2023
2023

Publication Types

Select...
4
2
1
1

Relationship

0
8

Authors

Journals

citations
Cited by 9 publications
(3 citation statements)
references
References 0 publications
0
3
0
Order By: Relevance
“…As the image spread through social media (primarily Twitter) hours after its original publication on a Turkish news site, about 17% of the shared images from the news event appropriated the iconic image in cartoons, memes, and other formats (Vis & Goriunova, 2015). Photojournalistic icons get their multiple lives online when they become Internet memes: images that share common elements of content, form, and stance and use the original image as a template to create new meaning (Hristova, 2013(Hristova, , 2014Milner, 2013;Shifman, 2014aShifman, , 2014b. These images can serve as "memetic photos" (Shifman, 2014b, p. 89), images that invite memetic creativity for a variety of reasons: They may display a visual incongruence that begs for resolution or repetition in other contexts, they may freeze an unfinished action or a tense moment that provokes creative responses, or they may display an absurd situation or a funny facial expression that gets reappropriated in other compositions that already have existing content (Shifman, 2014a(Shifman, , 2014b.…”
Section: The "Speeded-up Icon" and Internet Derivativesmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…As the image spread through social media (primarily Twitter) hours after its original publication on a Turkish news site, about 17% of the shared images from the news event appropriated the iconic image in cartoons, memes, and other formats (Vis & Goriunova, 2015). Photojournalistic icons get their multiple lives online when they become Internet memes: images that share common elements of content, form, and stance and use the original image as a template to create new meaning (Hristova, 2013(Hristova, , 2014Milner, 2013;Shifman, 2014aShifman, , 2014b. These images can serve as "memetic photos" (Shifman, 2014b, p. 89), images that invite memetic creativity for a variety of reasons: They may display a visual incongruence that begs for resolution or repetition in other contexts, they may freeze an unfinished action or a tense moment that provokes creative responses, or they may display an absurd situation or a funny facial expression that gets reappropriated in other compositions that already have existing content (Shifman, 2014a(Shifman, , 2014b.…”
Section: The "Speeded-up Icon" and Internet Derivativesmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…In that case, Internet memes are recognizable because of their shared meaning in a communal setting. Besides, the power of community potentially can be increased along with participation in the process (Hristova 2013). Spitzberg (2014) utilized the spiral of silence effect to illustrate that the cooperative memes assistant minority groups give voice to their memes in the mainstream discourse.…”
Section: Relevant Literature Reviewmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Memes serve as cultural building blocks that bridge between personal and political meanings (Shifman, 2014), between the past and present (Hristova, 2013), and between seriousness and silliness or politics and humor (Mina, 2019;Shifman, 2014;Tay, 2014). Thus, it is no surprise that questions related to worldview, hope, aspirations, and self-awareness hop on the vessel of memes.…”
Section: Sulafa Zidani Massachusetts Institute Of Technologymentioning
confidence: 99%