User:Miriam/Final presentation: Difference between revisions

From XPUB & Lens-Based wiki
Line 34: Line 34:


[[File:Screenshot 2023-06-17 192746.png|1000x1000px|frameless]]
[[File:Screenshot 2023-06-17 192746.png|1000x1000px|frameless]]
'''''What are their meme strategies?'''''


==<span style="color: black; font-family: monospace; text-shadow: 0 0 1em blue, 0 0 0.2em blue; padding-top: 0.1vw; padding-bottom: 0.1vw; padding-left: 0.1vw; padding-right: 0.2vw;">Grad project</span>==
==<span style="color: black; font-family: monospace; text-shadow: 0 0 1em blue, 0 0 0.2em blue; padding-top: 0.1vw; padding-bottom: 0.1vw; padding-left: 0.1vw; padding-right: 0.2vw;">Grad project</span>==

Revision as of 14:07, 18 June 2023

My thesis

Miri's XPUB2 thesis outline
It all started with memes...

In the beginning, memes amazed me by the way they replicate, go viral, and serve as a way of communicating. I wondered if it might be possible to define a set of rules for memetic success that could be applied to activist strategies; using the power of imitation to reach most publicity. Then, I went down the rabbithole and learnt that the dissemination of memes is already very much a political tool on its own - but mostly used by far-right extremists. My thesis and project got more specific. I asked myself:

What can we learn from the alt-right's meme war and how can we counteract?


Thesis structure:

  • Introduction
  • The definition and concept of memes
  • The Great Meme War of 2016
  • Counteraction strategies - From a leftist, for leftist.

I described the concept of memes and how they can be weaponized in political warfare. Using the example of the Great Meme War of 2016, I analysed how memes and organised fascist activism on internet forums like 4chan led to the rise of the alt-right in the US and how memes influenced the global political landscape and the 2016 US presidential election. I discussed why the alt-right remains one step ahead when it comes to the creation and dissemination of weaponised memes, and dissected their memetic strategies. Then, I tried to illustrate possible counteraction strategies.

Who is the alt-right?

Screenshot 2023-06-18 143514.png

The alt-right is a loose coalition of nationalists, supremacists, monarchists, neo-reactionaries and even self-declared fascists. Most of the alt-right’s adherents are young, white, and male Americans or Western Europeans. They are a relatively new phenomenon although their ideas stay the same as mainstream racism, antisemitism, fascism, and misogyny. They believe that the Western civilization is under attack by multiculturalism and that the leftist “political correctness”, and “social justice” are used to weaken “white identity”. Alt-rightists reject common conservatism (as it’s not radical enough), embrace white ethnonationalism and often adhere to conspiracy theories.

Most alt-right adherents were exposed to the alt-right’s ideologies online, on message boards like 4chan’s and 8chan’s /pol/11, the sub-reddit r/The_Donald12 and platforms like Twitter. The alt-right's activism is characterised by the use of memes and trolling tactics. They plan and discuss specific online strategies and attacks on 4chan, an anonymous imageboard website. From there, they disseminate their propaganda across social media. Their memes are aimed at pushing fascist narratives, spreading disinformation, and provoking the media and the left. In 2016, they heavily supported Trump.

Screenshot 2023-06-17 192746.png

What are their meme strategies?

Grad project

Research

Miri's XPUB2 proposal draft

The original idea of making a guide to memefy your life transformed into the idea of making a guide for leftist meme-making and eventually became how to be a social justice warrior.

I didn't want to publish a set of ultimate rules on how to be activist. Rather, I wanted my publication to be a collection of multiple things: activist strategies, educational material, interviews, memes, trolling experiences, interesting stories, book recommendations,... One big potpourri that serves as a source of inspiration instead of dictates one right way.

Research on Swiss leftist meme makers

Interviews with leftist meme pages:






At that point, I still thought I am working towards a printed publication, a small book. But it didn't seem right to print memes. So I was looking for alternatives...







Is it a book? Is it a map? Is it an Instagram account? Is it a box?

In the meantime, I started experimenting with text-based photos about the topic. There's this memetic trend on Instagram, that activists use this text-based "pastel panel" slide-show aesthetic. Regardless of what the format of the project will be, I wanted to talk in the native language.







With those poppy colors and the catchy text, I decided that this aesthetic only works digitally. I didn't want to deal with the politics of other platforms, so I knew that if I want to have an independant platform, I need to make it myself. That's when I decided that the format will be a website. howtobeasocialjusticewarrior.com was born!

Websitenote.jpg

I started making more of these text-based slide-shows, memes, and the website. I used very mainstream softwares and tools as this made the most sense for a project on memes.







Outcome

https://project.xpub.nl/howtobeasocialjusticewarrior/

https://howtobeasocialjusticewarrior.com/

Welcomepage.png Gallery.png Sjwdefinition.png Memecompubody.png

If the far-right is able to mobilise people to be politically active in real life, to attend white supremacist rallies or to storm the capitol by means of memes, what could the left learn from the far-right’s cyber tactics? And how can anti-fascists counteract? 
That memes are not only silly images but can have a political effect has long been understood by the far-right. When it comes to the creation and dissemination of weaponised memes, they are unquestionably ahead of the left-wing. Backed up by a powerful network and well-coordinated organisational structures, fascist trolls have not only managed to infiltrate political neutral spaces, but also the ones of the left. When white supremacists are manipulating elections by means of memes, sockpuppet trolls are paid to spread disinformation online, and right-wing troll armies successfully conquer online territories, the battle against fascism extends beyonds the streets.
"How to be a social justice warrior" is an online platform that dives into the digital propaganda strategies employed by the far-right, and explores possible counter-action strategies. It's a website packed with printable guides, memes, gifs and educational material, ranging from tips for leftist meme-making, to information about trolling strategies, up to instructions on how to install an Instagram report bot. Pick whatever suits your activism best.
This publication is an attempt to equip you with tools to identify, address and combat cybertoxicity and fascism, in the digital realm as well as in the analogue world. If you decide to use any of the activist strategies presented, I suggest to ask yourself what exactly you want to reach with your actions, and to set your moral compass. Not all strategies may be without risk, nor can they guarantee success. The fight against fascism depends on broader societal efforts and requires stamina and collective action. Use this publication as a source of inspiration for your activism and as a resource to support your journey.
Content Warning: This publication includes racist, sexist, antisemitic, and other discriminatory content.

Grad show and further plans

  • Screen installation
  • Continue website like a blog! There's so much to talk about!
  • Start making videos?
  • Stickers
  • Printable sticker sheets
  • Milieudefensie

Stickerssheet.jpg

Individual contributions to the Special Issues

SI16

My role

  • Worked with my subgroup on the code for the language filter of "...and I wish that your question has been answered."
  • Creating altered versions of our origin text
  • Printing and binding of the "...and I wish that your question has been answered." zines
  • Organisation and set up of the launch with the launch event team
  • Proof-reading publication texts

Subgroup project

...and I wish that your question has been answered. https://hub.xpub.nl/soupboat/si16/projects/and-i-wish-that-your-question-has-been-answered/

Our tool is a filter to process and alter texts. By targeting specific words and replacing them, either for another word, for specific characters or for blank spaces, the reader or user of the tool can change the text in many ways. The tool includes three functions The function “respell” receives as input a text (string type) and substitute all the occurrences of a target word with a replacement chosen by the user. The function “stitch” is very similar to the previous one but replaces all the occurrences of a target word with a single character (it can also be a blank space) that is repeated as many times as the length of the target. The third function “reveal” also works very similar but deletes all input text except the target word(s) and replaces the deleted text with blank spaces.

SI17

My role

  • Taking care of the SI17 finances
  • Creating a card game as well as a collection of life hacks for the loot box content
  • Creating the loot box reveal audio track: File:Loot Box Reveal (online-audio-converter.com).mp3
  • Making a game music playlist for the launch
  • Organisation and set up of the launch
  • Creation of Fage Not Pound timezone with Kim, Emma, Chae: Fage Not Pound

Final project

This box found your for a reason: https://issue.xpub.nl/17/index.html

SI18

My role

Final project

Development of reading/writing practice across the 2 years

Development of prototyping practice across the 2 years

1st year

2nd year

Other projects