The (un)Funny side of Memes : reproduction of symbolic violence against women through Memes

This study seeks to understand the portrayal of women and racial minorities in memes and uncover if such portrayals reproduces symbolic violence against women. By using content analysis to analyze 248 memes and Stuart Hall encoding/decoding model to code 22 comments, the findings revealed sexism and...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Ang, James
Other Authors: Paul Kohl
Format: Final Year Project (FYP)
Language:English
Published: 2016
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10356/66147
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author Ang, James
author2 Paul Kohl
author_facet Paul Kohl
Ang, James
author_sort Ang, James
collection NTU
description This study seeks to understand the portrayal of women and racial minorities in memes and uncover if such portrayals reproduces symbolic violence against women. By using content analysis to analyze 248 memes and Stuart Hall encoding/decoding model to code 22 comments, the findings revealed sexism and misogyny to be rampant against women in memes, while racism is largely contested. The contrast between the treatments of both groups emphasized the lack of resistance towards the negative and positive representation of women. Symbolic violence is thus enacted through such weak resistance to such representations and the users’ imposition of their definition of negative and positive women in memes.
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spelling ntu-10356/661472019-12-10T14:12:40Z The (un)Funny side of Memes : reproduction of symbolic violence against women through Memes Ang, James Paul Kohl School of Humanities and Social Sciences Patrick Williams DRNTU::Social sciences::Sociology This study seeks to understand the portrayal of women and racial minorities in memes and uncover if such portrayals reproduces symbolic violence against women. By using content analysis to analyze 248 memes and Stuart Hall encoding/decoding model to code 22 comments, the findings revealed sexism and misogyny to be rampant against women in memes, while racism is largely contested. The contrast between the treatments of both groups emphasized the lack of resistance towards the negative and positive representation of women. Symbolic violence is thus enacted through such weak resistance to such representations and the users’ imposition of their definition of negative and positive women in memes. Bachelor of Arts 2016-03-13T09:08:20Z 2016-03-13T09:08:20Z 2016 Final Year Project (FYP) http://hdl.handle.net/10356/66147 en Nanyang Technological University 39 p. application/pdf
spellingShingle DRNTU::Social sciences::Sociology
Ang, James
The (un)Funny side of Memes : reproduction of symbolic violence against women through Memes
title The (un)Funny side of Memes : reproduction of symbolic violence against women through Memes
title_full The (un)Funny side of Memes : reproduction of symbolic violence against women through Memes
title_fullStr The (un)Funny side of Memes : reproduction of symbolic violence against women through Memes
title_full_unstemmed The (un)Funny side of Memes : reproduction of symbolic violence against women through Memes
title_short The (un)Funny side of Memes : reproduction of symbolic violence against women through Memes
title_sort un funny side of memes reproduction of symbolic violence against women through memes
topic DRNTU::Social sciences::Sociology
url http://hdl.handle.net/10356/66147
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