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The Forgotten meme. On the example of Life and works of Placyd Jankowski
Author(s) -
Patryk Chłopek
Publication year - 2021
Publication title -
studia slavica
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
eISSN - 2571-0281
pISSN - 1803-5663
DOI - 10.15452/studiaslavica.2021.25.0003
Subject(s) - narrative , popularity , forgetting , sociology , epistemology , memetics , survival of the fittest , aesthetics , literature , philosophy , psychology , social psychology , art , linguistics , evolutionary biology , biology
Placyd Jankowski (known also as John of Dycalp) was a popular writer active in the 1840s, he quickly gained popularity thanks to his humorous lyrics, but before his death in 1872 he was almost forgotten by readers. This raises questions about the rules guiding cultural memory. One of the concepts that could explain the process of cultural heredity is the memetic theory proposed by Richard Dawkins. The scholar assumes the existence of cultural units subject to the process of evolution, which he called memes. Their success and survival depend on the fulfillment of specific characteristics to which the human mind is particularly susceptible, i.e. topicality, originality, narrative, and universality. Using the tools developed by memetics, the article will attempt to describe the reasons for social forgetting on the example of the life and work of Placyd Jankowski.

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