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...
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 |
Similar Items
-
Memes, viruses, and violence
by: Joel Finkelstein
Published: (2022-05-01) -
Memes, Violence, and Viruses
by: Joel Finkelstein
Published: (2022-03-01) -
MemeWar’s map editor with terrain evolver integration
by: Ang, Edwin Yew Leng
Published: (2011) -
Meta-memes for combinatorial optimization
by: Song, Liqin
Published: (2012) -
Wann ist ein Meme ein Meme?
by: Oskar Piegsa, et al.
Published: (2018-03-01)