Tuesday, September 24, 2013

Jewish memes as a form of entertainment


One of the earliest forms of entertainment to spread across the internet was humor (Kuipers, 2006). The features of the internet turned the spread of content into a visible process, within it humorous user generated content as a whole, and internet memes in particular (Shifman, 2011). Based on Shifman’s (2011) categories of humor, I can identify the sampled memes as related to two groups – the first, the ‘Incongruent’ group of memes, revels memes that feature “an unexpected cognitive encounter  between two incongruent elements” (Shifman, 2011). For example, The “Hanukkah and Santa” meme, in which Santa Claus mistakenly slides down the chimney of a Jewish family kindling the Hanukkah Menorah. The encounter of the two religious rituals creates a comic effect, but at the same time reinforces the implementation of religious rituals. The Jewish characters in the meme are portrayed as religious – the father is wearing a black suit and a black hat, identified with Haredi Judaism, he has long sidelocks and a beard. The mother and the daughter wear pious cloths: long skirts and long-sleeved shirt; and the young boy wear a kippah. On their table there are dreidels and traditional Hanukkah foods including potato pancakes and jam-filled doughnuts. On the mantel there are candlesticks used for the lighting of Shabbat candles. This meme simultaneously creates a comic message and a religious reinforcement of normative religious rituals.
The second category of memes found in the sample is the “superior” memes, featuring unintentionally funny message. The meme of Adele is one example, when her facial expression coupled with the typo of the “Ad Lo Yada” (Until one no longer knows) creates a new meaning in Hebrew – “Adele no longer knows” referring to one of Purim’s tradition of drinking wine in order to keep with the jovial nature of the Purim feast.
A third type of meme, not included in Shifman’s (2011) categorization was found in my sample. This is a meme that features Disney’s Aladdin character, and can be recognized as ethnic or racist humor. This kind of humor employs race stereotypes, as can be seen in said meme, published during Passover. In this meme, Aladdin eats bread (which is forbidden during Passoverfor European Ashkenazi Jews) and the written text states – “thank god for making me Yemeni in Passover”. This meme can be interpreted as an attitude toward the Ashkenazi perception of the lightly religious demands employed on oriental Jews, among them the Yemeni Jews. This meme’s humor labels the Yemeni Jews (as an indicator of all oriental Jews) as religiously inferior, and the Ashkenazi Jews as more religiously devoted. This kind of religious humor can rhetorically support racist conceptions of ‘truth’ (Weaver, 2011) especially in the ethnically torn Israeli society. In my last blog post I have suggested that function as a tool for reinforcing religious acts and creating clear religious boundaries of the community. The example of the Yemeni meme demonstrates this conclusion but also adds another cultural layer of cultural-ethnic-religious boundaries maintenance.            

Case study question:
Based on Jenkins’s description of convergence culture and participatory culture, Shifman’s representation of the internet as a postmodern field of representation and Amerman’s definition of lived religion as highly individual, self-authorized practice, I would like to focus my case study on the question:

What are the features of the Jewish internet meme, and how do these features represent the postmodern nature of online participation?

Bibliography:
Kuipers, G. (2006). The social construction of digital danger: debating, defusing and inflating the moral dangers of online humor and pornography in the Netherlands and the United States. New Media and Society, 8, (3), 379-400.
Shifman, L. (2011). An Anatomy of a YouTube Meme. New Media and Society, 14, (2), 187-203.
Weaver, S. (2011). Jokes, rhetoric and embodied racism: a rhetorical discourse of racist jokes on the internet. Ethnicities, 11, (4), 413-435.


God meme and Humor

Describing the categories of humor is a complicated task. After all, many times we enjoy a joke exactly for its surprising features, which we might find hard to explain. Using the scholarly categories of humor sampled and described by Limor Shifman (2011), this task becomes more achievable.
The Advice God meme act on two levels of humor: the first explicit and the second implicit. On the outset, the main feature of humor is what Shifman defines as Incongruity. The God meme combines "unexpected cognitive encounters" (p. 10) between the upper and lower captions. In other words, the comic derives from reading the "punch line". A good example of that is the following meme, where the first line of text reads: "creates mankind in his image".  The next sentence has an unexpected twist to the first, adding: "Doesn't make people invisible.". Thus, an unexpected cognitive effect is created – we think of mankind as acting in the image of god, trying to be like him, but the meme understand image in a more literal way. Since the monotheistic theological assumption is that god has no image, then humans should have no image as well. In other words, they should be invisible.

Surprisingly, the image of god does not play a significant part in constructing the humor. It is used as a symbol of god, but could have been easily replaced with the word "God" before the text. In the case of scumbag god, the image plays a more significant role, as the intertextuality if the meme world allows for another layer of meaning.
The second, implicit humor indicator is superiority. The superiority is implicit since the image or text usually does not mock people who act strangely. Instead, by criticizing religion or\and god, it can be argued that religious people and belief are being ridiculed.

Case Study Research Question
In the case study assignment, I would like to focus on the evolution process of the "Advice God" meme. What was the process that led to creating this meme? How did it evolved further? How does it use other memes and cultural references?
Since the meme is mostly used as a critical meme against religion, and is widely discussed in Atheists' blogs and forums, a unique perspective emerges. It is not a religious meme – but a meme used against religion and by doing so, defining religion from the outside, the epic perspective. I would focus on how this understanding of religion takes part in the creation and development of this meme.

Wednesday, September 18, 2013

Considering the Use of Humour in Religious Memes

In week five you are being asked to blog about the use of humor in religious Internet memes. This involves paying close attention to the message/s about religion that are communicate in your particular collection of memes, and how humor is used to frame and/or shape these messages.

You should identify what types or genres of humor are employed in your particular collection of internet memes. After reading Limor Shifman’s article” An anatomy of a YouTube meme” consider the categories outlined she outlines on humor in memes (playfulness, incongruity, superiority). Which of these seem to be utilized in your case study? Are there other dominant visual or textual techniques used within these memes? What roles do humor play and how does it frame the way religion is understood or communicated? 

You should also end your blog post by presenting the research question you have chosen for your case study. Please offer some explanation of how this emerged from your online observation and how this will shape your meme analysis

 

Memes & Prosumption: The Buddy Christ



The Buddy Christ meme has maintained an online presence for nearly 10 years.  Hundreds of meme variants have emerged over that time span, and interest in the meme is no longer as intense as it was after its inception.  Recently, it appears to be more common for users to post pictures of a Buddy Christ figurine in personifying situations, such as attending a concert.  Due to the general waning of interest in the Buddy Christ, I may need to consider these images and their accompanying text as part of my case study as well.  Because I am interested in studying how the Buddy Christ meme is used to caricaturize institutionalized Christian practices and beliefs, I will be selecting and examining memes that explicitly refer to and parody liturgical Christian practice (such as the sacrament of communion, an example of which is posted here) or traditional beliefs (e.g., the immoral nature of contraceptive or abortive practices).  To my knowledge, there are no dedicated pages for the Buddy Christ meme on Facebook or other social media sites where individuals might interact in a forum style about the memes.  However, the Buddy Christ meme is often mentioned or tagged on Twitter and Tumblr; therefore, I have been searching these sites for reposts of the meme as well as user commentary regarding religious practice submitted within the past 8-12 months.

For every Buddy Christ meme, the image is the same as that pictured above.  The entire frame of the meme is filled up by the colorful image of Buddy Christ.  In accordance with typical meme style, large white text can be found at the top and bottom of the meme image.  On some microblogging sites, and in particular Twitter, the Buddy Christ meme is posted as an image without white text; in these cases, the user typically adds commentary to match the image that can be found in the tweet attached to the image.  These memes assemble traditional Christian meanings with added sarcastic commentary to generate new messages and meanings about traditional Christian practices and beliefs.  The meme posted above uses the Buddy Christ caricature as well as the phrase “the body of Christ” to denote a message about the sacrament of communion, a traditional Christian practice that involves the eating and drinking of food which symbolizes the body and blood of Jesus of Nazareth.  Then, the image modifies that message with the word “snackrelicious”, a play on the words snack, sacrilege, and delicious.  The total assembly of this image and text connotes the meaning that the creator does not respond to the authority of this sacred practice as seriously as a practitioner of traditional Christian practice would.

The image of Buddy Christ is an intentional mockery of the crucifixes and icons of Jesus of Nazareth that adorn many traditional Christian churches.  While the hair, beard, and robe of the Buddy Christ image match typical depictions of Jesus, the large grin, winking eye, and thumbs up symbol visually denote a departure in meaning from more common portrayals of Jesus.  Furthermore, the text that the Buddy Christ meme is derived from is widely known to be a sarcastic commentary on organized religion; because users of the Buddy Christ meme are often fans of the movie Dogma, they typically intend to use the meme in order to express an alignment of their perspective on religion with that of the film from which the meme emerged.

The Buddy Christ image is derived from fan culture surrounding the movie Dogma.  Thus, it could be said that the creation and posting of Buddy Christ images are an active reshaping of this fan mythology to satisfy religious fantasies.  In other words, users of the meme may fantasize about shaming religious institutions or even subverting their authority altogether; the creation of the Buddy Christ meme is an expression of that fantasy.  Also, the meme uses humor to reject the traditional expert paradigm that is so pervasive throughout mainstream Christian culture regarding Christian institutions.  The Buddy Christ meme provides producers with an opportunity to respond to traditional Christian practice and authority in a format that is less threatening for both the meme producer and Christian organizations.



Memes and Prosumption: Religion and the 2012 Presidential Election

The notion of a “meme” is derived from the word, “enthymeme,” a type of Aristotelian argument that leaves out one of more of the premises, or comes to an incomplete conclusion. As such, in a meme, one or more parts of the argument are suppressed, requiring that the reader infer the completed argument for him or herself. In 2012, memes became a huge part of internet discourse regarding the election, especially after the presidential debates when Romney’s “binders full of women” gaffe went viral. Given the interesting role of religion in the 2012 presidential election (Romney was the first serious Mormon candidate and Obama was the first Democrat to engage the subject of religion since Jimmy Carter), attending to memes that feature both the candidate and the subject of religion can help us to better understand the unique context of the 2012 election. This, by extension, can also help us to see how members of the public responded the way that each candidate invoked his religious perspective.

To that end, the memes I have chosen to study concern the intersection of politics, religion, and identity during the 2012 presidential election. In particular, I looked at memes that were posted between June and December 2012 that featured one or more of the major presidential candidates (Barack Obama and Mitt Romney). The memes varied in theme, but those featuring Obama seem to stem from two major categories: Obama as Jesus and Obama as Muslim. The memes featuring Obama as Jesus tended to be critical, positing that either Obama’s fans or Obama himself viewed Obama as Jesus. The memes featuring Obama as Muslim are also critical, assuming that the reader will “fill in” the idea that a Muslim president is inherently a bad idea.
 The memes featuring Romney also fell into one of two categories: Romney’s Mormon belief as illogical, or Romney’s Mormonism in conflict with his (alleged) classist/racist/sexist beliefs. For the purposes of this discussion, I will provide an example and analysis of one meme from each candidate. The memes that characterized Romney as illogical based on his Mormon beliefs tended to poke fun at specific aspects of the Mormon religion, such as sacred undergarments, Joseph Smith’s golden plates, and the more extraterrestrial aspects of Mormonism.

In the first meme, Obama is pictured as Jesus of Nazareth. The image into which Obama’s face has been photoshopped is strongly reminiscent of “Ecce homo,” a famous Spanish fresco painted by Elias Garcia Martinez. Underneath the image, the phrase “Obama the messiah?” is posited as a problematic statement or question. The smaller text underneath says, “He’s more like Moses! Wandering around aimlessly, blaming everything on the Bush.”


The comparison between Obama and Jesus is not unique, as several Christian media outlets accused Obama of having a “messiah complex” during the election cycle. John Stewart of the “Daily Show” even addressed the issue, albeit from a humorous, sarcastic perspective. The fact that the creator of the meme chose “Homo ecce” may be even more telling, as the original fresco was restored unsuccessfully, resulting in a marred image. From this perspective, it is possible to view the meme creator’s view of the Obama/Messiah concept as essentially flawed, incapable of being compared to the original. In addition, the comparison of Obama to Moses invokes the Biblical account of the Israelites wandering in the desert for forty years. In this case, though, the American people are thought to be aimlessly wandering under Obama’s leadership. Finally, the meme states that Obama is “blaming everything on the Bush,” clearly referencing George W. Bush. This statement is interesting, because for the reader to accept this statement as critical of Obama requires that the reader be uncritical of Bush (or to at least deny Bush’s culpability in the economic collapse). In summary, then, the pairing of Obama’s face in a messianic image is meant to be ironic, as the central message of the meme is that Obama is decidedly un-messianic. Further, the meme posits Obama as the source of the nation’s ills at the time (the meme was posted in June 2012) and pokes fun at those who would look at Obama as a source of hope.

The next meme features Mitt Romney as he appeared in his official gubernatorial photo for Massachusetts. Superimposed over the top of the picture is the question, “People evolved from apes?” followed by, “Don’t be stupid. Everyone knows we come from spirit orbs created by God who lives on the planet Kolub.” This meme is interesting for a number of reasons, but primarily for its irony. 


First, as governor of Massachusetts, Romney is perceived to have some level of credibility, established in part through using his official gubernatorial photo. However, the meme creator attempts to debunk Romney’s credibility by pointing out inconsistencies between the Mormon faith and the popularly accepted theory of evolution. However, in attempting to do so, the author of the meme essentializes and misrepresents aspects of the Mormon faith that make the meme as a piece of criticism less credible. For example, “the planet Kolub” referenced in the meme is not said by Mormons to be the residence of God, but the star closest to God and is spelled “Kolob” (lds.org, 2012). While these may not seem like very significant errors, the lack of knowledge regarding the Mormon religion that is conveyed significantly decreases the impact of the meme (at least to those who have a moderate level of religious literacy). In effect, then, while the Romney meme attempts to make Romney seem less credible or logical because of his faith, further investigation reveals that the more telling lack of knowledge is that of the meme’s creator.

While each of these memes could be seen as problematic for one reason or another, what is more interesting about the memes is what they reveal about Jenkins’ notion of participatory culture. According to Jenkins in Convergence Culture, participatory culture occurs in part when people become information hunters and gatherers, collecting information for the purpose of creating new and multiple texts. As Jenkins states, “Each of us constructs our own personal mythology from bits and fragments of information extracted from the media flow and transformed into resources through which we make sense of our everyday lives” (Jenkins, 2006, pp. 3-4). These memes can thus be seen as the “bits and fragments” Jenkins mentions that have been cobbled together in order to reinforce the ideology of the meme’s creator. This unique process of production creates “prosumers,” individuals who are both consumers and producers of the digital media they collaboratively create (Jenkins, 2006). This collaborative, multimedia process uniquely shapes religious internet memes in the case of presidential elections precisely because bits of information from different media—speeches, images, religious doctrine, etc—can be combined in unique ways to create new texts that challenge or reinforce our existing beliefs. What we must be careful of, as explained in the analysis of these memes, is the tendency to be reductionist about a religious perspective in our attempts to construct public criticism.

References

Jenkins, H. (2006). Convergence culture: Where old and new media collide. New York, NY: New York University Press.

Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints. (2012, February 21). Kolob. Retrieved from http://www.lds.org/scriptures/gs/kolob?lang=eng