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A gathering with fire : Exploring the audience reception of internet memes about Belfast riots

Lundqvist, Martin LU (2023) In Media, Culture and Society
Abstract
This study sheds light upon how memes about rioting in present-day Belfast are read by their audiences. As such, it answers to a distinct research gap in the meme studies literature, which has mostly shied away from in-depth engagements with audiences, favouring instead the intertwined concepts ‘imagined audience’ and the ideological ‘directionality’ of memes. Drawing on semi-structured interviews with 19 respondents in Belfast, I develop four themes on how they read memes about political violence. The findings indicate that the concept ‘imagined audience’ is reductive at best, which was evident in this study as interviewees did not blindly follow the ideological ‘directionality’ when reading a meme. Moving beyond this reductive view... (More)
This study sheds light upon how memes about rioting in present-day Belfast are read by their audiences. As such, it answers to a distinct research gap in the meme studies literature, which has mostly shied away from in-depth engagements with audiences, favouring instead the intertwined concepts ‘imagined audience’ and the ideological ‘directionality’ of memes. Drawing on semi-structured interviews with 19 respondents in Belfast, I develop four themes on how they read memes about political violence. The findings indicate that the concept ‘imagined audience’ is reductive at best, which was evident in this study as interviewees did not blindly follow the ideological ‘directionality’ when reading a meme. Moving beyond this reductive view allowed me to unpack how meme audiences place value in the pop-cultural form of the meme; their take on its ‘imagined author’; how they perceived the meme as a site for identity work, and their emotional engagements with memes. (Less)
Please use this url to cite or link to this publication:
author
organization
publishing date
type
Contribution to journal
publication status
epub
subject
keywords
audiences, Belfast, memes, meme audiences, Northern Ireland, political violence, riots
in
Media, Culture and Society
pages
19 pages
publisher
SAGE Publications
external identifiers
  • scopus:85180239227
ISSN
1460-3675
DOI
10.1177/01634437231219154
language
English
LU publication?
yes
id
dfbd0618-08ea-487d-b07f-ce2b252b9eef
date added to LUP
2023-12-20 13:37:15
date last changed
2024-01-10 10:57:59
@article{dfbd0618-08ea-487d-b07f-ce2b252b9eef,
  abstract     = {{This study sheds light upon how memes about rioting in present-day Belfast are read by their audiences. As such, it answers to a distinct research gap in the meme studies literature, which has mostly shied away from in-depth engagements with audiences, favouring instead the intertwined concepts ‘imagined audience’ and the ideological ‘directionality’ of memes. Drawing on semi-structured interviews with 19 respondents in Belfast, I develop four themes on how they read memes about political violence. The findings indicate that the concept ‘imagined audience’ is reductive at best, which was evident in this study as interviewees did not blindly follow the ideological ‘directionality’ when reading a meme. Moving beyond this reductive view allowed me to unpack how meme audiences place value in the pop-cultural form of the meme; their take on its ‘imagined author’; how they perceived the meme as a site for identity work, and their emotional engagements with memes.}},
  author       = {{Lundqvist, Martin}},
  issn         = {{1460-3675}},
  keywords     = {{audiences; Belfast; memes; meme audiences; Northern Ireland; political violence; riots}},
  language     = {{eng}},
  month        = {{12}},
  publisher    = {{SAGE Publications}},
  series       = {{Media, Culture and Society}},
  title        = {{A gathering with fire : Exploring the audience reception of internet memes about Belfast riots}},
  url          = {{http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/01634437231219154}},
  doi          = {{10.1177/01634437231219154}},
  year         = {{2023}},
}