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“There are no girls on the Internet”: Gender performances in Advice Animal memes
Author(s) -
Siân Brooke
Publication year - 2019
Publication title -
first monday
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.533
H-Index - 70
eISSN - 1396-0466
pISSN - 1396-0458
DOI - 10.5210/fm.v24i10.9593
Subject(s) - advice (programming) , space (punctuation) , power (physics) , representation (politics) , the internet , identity (music) , sociology , character (mathematics) , gender studies , media studies , world wide web , political science , computer science , politics , aesthetics , art , physics , programming language , law , mathematics , quantum mechanics , operating system , geometry
Online anonymous forums are valued as spaces of open participation which facilitate multiple expressions of identity. In this paper I unmask how memes perpetuate existing gender power structures in spaces where users are only known by pseudonyms. The site of study is the r/AdviceAnimals forum of Reddit, in which a popular genre of memes known as Advice Animals are shared by users. Using a cross-section of Advice Animal memes submitted to this forum, the study examines the uneven distribution of power in representations of gender and feminists. I find that while women are highly sexualised, obsessive, and clingy, male characters are a default central character, used to express non-specific ideals of behaviour . As feminists, men are portrayed as legitimate, whilst women-feminists are epitomised as hypocritical, demanding, “Nazis”. The main contribution of the article is highlighting the gendered nature of memes, and call attention to the unequal representation in pseudonymous space.

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