Internet memes as multilayered re-contextualization vehicles in lay-political online discourse

2020 ◽  
Vol 3 (2) ◽  
pp. 283-320
Author(s):  
Monika Kirner-Ludwig

Abstract It is well established that the internet meme has come to represent a highly creative discursive device used to “facilitate the […] communication of one’s own political beliefs, attitudes and orientations” (Ross and Rivers 2017: 1). Although internet memes and political internet memes in particular have been addressed to many communicative situations such as participatory culture (e.g., Jenkins 2006; Shifman 2014; Theocharis 2015), one aspect that has not been paid enough attention to concerns the forms in which users refer to individual political figures and events in political memes. This being said, the present paper focuses on referring strategies (see Kirner-Ludwig and Zimmermann 2015; Kirner-Ludwig 2020) as employed in political internet memes on Reddit, including direct and indirect quotes, citations and allusions. A specific focus is going to be on such political internet memes that employ pop cultural and telecinematic reference points and recontextualize them from their original into new target contexts (see Bublitz 2015; Gruber 2019). As shall be shown, practices such as combining constructed speech elements into recontextualized elements in political internet memes create multiple intertextual references that may enhance visibility, saliency and, thus, the ‘lifetime’ of a political meme.

2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Kunal Srivastava ◽  
Ryan Tabrizi ◽  
Ayaan Rahim ◽  
Lauryn Nakamitsu

<div> <div> <div> <p>Abstract </p> <p>The ceaseless connectivity imposed by the internet has made many vulnerable to offensive comments, be it their physical appearance, political beliefs, or religion. Some define hate speech as any kind of personal attack on one’s identity or beliefs. Of the many sites that grant the ability to spread such offensive speech, Twitter has arguably become the primary medium for individuals and groups to spread these hurtful comments. Such comments typically fail to be detected by Twitter’s anti-hate system and can linger online for hours before finally being taken down. Through sentiment analysis, this algorithm is able to distinguish hate speech effectively through the classification of sentiment. </p> </div> </div> </div>


Author(s):  
Troy J. Strader ◽  
Daniel M. Norris ◽  
Philip A. Houle ◽  
Charles B. Shrader

This chapter examines an entrepreneurial effort to provide products in the Internet security marketplace. The specific focus is on a company named Palisade Systems, which is now faced with questions regarding their future business direction in this field (Mahanti et al., 2004). Current questions include how to take advantage of recent legislation regarding privacy and computer security, and the general increase in awareness of the need for security in the Internet and in related networks. In this chapter we discuss the Internet security marketplace, recent legislation and the creation of new opportunities for marketing Internet security products, and how Palisade’s products may match these opportunities.


2016 ◽  
Vol 41 (3) ◽  
Author(s):  
Monika Taddicken ◽  
Anne Reif

AbstractThis paper argues the relevance of the internet for scientific communication. It is not only an immense source of information, it also empowers laypeople to interact by commenting, rating, and sharing online content. Previous studies have found that users’ contributions to online content affect the reception processes. However, research on who actually uses these participatory possibilities is scarce. This paper characterizes engaged (and non-engaged) online users by analyzing online engagement (using search engines and different participatory forms) with a representative German online survey (


Fractals ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 28 (04) ◽  
pp. 2050088
Author(s):  
R. CARREÑO AGUILERA ◽  
F. AGUILAR ACEVEDO ◽  
M. PATIÑO ORTIZ ◽  
J. PATIÑO ORTIZ

In this work, we present a robotic arm assisted by a visual system to decide whether an object with different colors, parallel flat surfaces and other types of surfaces would be subject to be manipulated without a drop risk. This robotic arm is assisted with sensors such as temperature, humidity, artificial vision, etc. and monitored with a Blockchain Internet of Things (BIoT) expert system assistance, which is shared and accessed by the internet by the users. A prototype for industrial purpose is launched to start providing data for training the expert system, achieving in this way an expert system with machine learning. The variations derived from the identification of the reference points and the characteristics of the robotic arm are a limiting factor of the system, however, it was possible to correctly locate the robotic arm in the workspace to take the object and manipulate it using machine learning based on a BIoT expert system.


2011 ◽  
Vol 28 ◽  
pp. 259-261
Author(s):  
Margarita Silvestra León ◽  
José Miguel Correa ◽  
Jesús María Aramberri ◽  
Estibaliz Jiménez de Aberasturi

2020 ◽  
Vol 39 (2) ◽  
Author(s):  
Henning Melber

In line with the journal's specific focus on current policy issues of local and regional relevance this issue of the Strategic Review for Southern Africa offers you new insights on local, regional and continental matters from a variety of perspectives, with Zimbabwe and South Africa being the most prominent reference points.


First Monday ◽  
2016 ◽  
Author(s):  
Niels van Poecke ◽  
Janna Michael

In this paper we investigate factors underlying the production of independent folk music (indie folk) in the Netherlands. By studying the creation, distribution and reception of indie folk music through in-depth interviewing, we argue that the social production of indie folk music is affected by a shift towards ‘participatory culture’ brought about by the rise of the Internet and Web 2.0. We note how Web 2.0 helps musicians to educate themselves and to develop careers in music. Secondly, from the perspective of both musicians and gatekeepers, participatory culture links their preferences for participatory aesthetics, decreasing boundaries between creators, distributors and users. Within the idiom of folk music, they distinguish themselves from the mainstream, creating more sincere performances. Thirdly, from the perspective of the audience, fans actively contribute by organizing small-scale events, enabling the audience to establish (trans)local scenes, reframing music as a social experience.


2020 ◽  
Vol 25 (2) ◽  
pp. 97-116
Author(s):  
Danuta Smołucha

The Internet is the first medium in which controlling the content has become difficult or even impossible. One of its reasons is the fact that the Internet users – who so far were only passive recipients of media messages – have gained the possibility to create and distribute their own messages. Thus, they have become active participants of the participatory culture, in which it is difficult to distinguish between professional and amateur content. The boundaries between private and public domains have become blurred. The distribution of forces shaping public opinion has changed, because the content comes from large media corporations and nonprofessional creators alike. The Internet message is characterized by instantaneous distribution, the ease of editing and modifying its content, and vagueness of authorship. These features make the Internet particularly susceptible to disinformation purposefully aimed at manipulating its users. The fact that every activity undertaken by the Internet users is recorded and analysed is also conducive to manipulation attempts, as the data obtained this way are used to shape their opinions and influence their decisions. The aim of the article is to undertake a discourse on information and disinformation on the Internet in the context of the development of new digital communication tools. The article provides the examples of information manipulation, which could happen only in such an interactive and multimedia medium as the Internet.


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