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What is a meme, technically speaking?

This contribution seeks to demonstrate how studying memes as a collection depends on the website or platform where they are sourced. To do so, we compare how memes, specifically internet memes, are conceived in the well – known meme repository (Know Your Meme) with those from a meme host and generator (Imgur), an imageboard (4chan), a short-form video hosting site (TikTok) as well as a marketing data dashboard (CrowdTangle). Building on insights from software studies and our observational analysis, we demonstrate how each site constructs and arranges meme collections in a distinctive manner, thus affecting the conceptualisation of memes by each of these sites. In all, the piece develops the concept of the meme as a technical collection of content, discussing how each collection’s distinctiveness has implications for meme research.

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Additional Info
Field Value
Accessibility Both
AccessibilityMode OnLine Access
AccessibilityMode Download
Attribution requirements Cite as: Rogers, R. and Giorgi, G. (2023). What is a meme, technically speaking? in Information, Communication & Society,
Availability On-Line
Basic rights Download
CreationDate 2023-02-14 00:00
Creator Rogers, Richard, rogers@uva.nl, orcid.org/0000-0002-9897-6559
External Identifier https://doi.org/10.1080/1369118X.2023.2174790
Field/Scope of use Any use
Group Others
Owner Rogers, Richard, rogers@uva.nl, orcid.org/0000-0002-9897-6559
Sublicense rights No
Territory of use World Wide
Thematic Cluster Visual Analytics [VA]
system:type Method
Management Info
Field Value
Author Bainotti Lucia
Maintainer Bainotti Lucia
Version 1
Last Updated 16 May 2023, 10:01 (CEST)
Created 14 May 2023, 21:35 (CEST)