It is hard today to go on the internet without coming across a meme in some form, and anyone who is savvy with current internet cultures knows that one meme reigns supreme: Pepe the frog. Pepe is a cartoon frog created in 2005 as a character on the cartoon Boy's Club. The cartoon depicts the typical life of a twenty some year old american. The cartoon was relatively small and Pepe did not have any kind of great claim to fame. He spread relatively slowly throughout social media, but by 2015 Pepe was the most common meme on almost all platforms. Obviously Pepe is popular, but why does he have such a broad appeal?
It is hard to say why Pepe has become so popular, but I would argue that it is due to his incredibly emotional depiction and easily emphasized features. Pepe comes in many iterations but his most common form is sad Pepe. This instance of Pepe features the frog looking down with a mix between sadness and emotion in his eyes. This complex level of emotion is shown through the details put in the eyes. The eyes are looking down and slightly furrowed, but they also seem distant and are made so to look reflective like dears are building in them. This meme is typically paired with a caption depicting a sad event, or more specifically a disheartening realization of the future. This is a key part of the life of an early twenty year old, it is the beginning of true adulthood and independence.
I think it is also important that Pepe is a frog. Although he possesses a fairly humanoid form Pepe is still a completely different creature. This makes him seem a little more distant. This creates a tone of a sort of self depriving humor. It highlights both the way that there are many things that can make you upset when you are young but also how in hindsight they are greatly insignificant.
Like any part of the internet Pepe has been appropriated for many less than savory causes. He has been used by alt-right antisemitic groups to promote Neo-Nazism, racism, and white supremacy. This is a wholly unjust and quite frankly irrelevant use of the image and is not true to its original intent.
Sunday, December 18, 2016
Sunday, December 11, 2016
Wander Above The Sea Of Fog (Tow #12)
The Wanderer Above The Sea Of Fog is one of the most iconic romantic paintings of all time, and is rightfully so. It was painted in 1818 by artist Caspar David Friedrich and depicts a man standing high on a cliff looking down over a land shrouded in fog.
Caspar David Friedrich was one of the more well known painters of his era and is considered the most important German artist of his time. Most of his pieces were landscapes and were allegorical in nature. His work went on to be some of the most important pieces in all of German history and to influence the surreal and expressionist movements greatly.
The images central figure is a man staring over a precipice. He is notably higher than everything else in the image, even the cliffs in the background. The image itself is very typical of the time period and the romantic movement. It shows a subject in nature and focuses on the power and beauty of nature, it is also a very emotionally evocative piece, adding further to its romantic undertones is the fact that the man is alone. The romantic movement was strongly centralized around introspective solitude and emotional reflection, which is shown in the mans staring into the fog and presumably pondering.
Two crucial symbols within the text are the authors intentional positioning of the man facing away, and the intense fog enveloping the surroundings. The man's distal orientation is used very powerfully to highlight the emotion of the piece. This is because it is impossible to tell what the man is feeling because we can see his face. It also in some ways makes the man easier to affiliate with because he could have the same face as one of us. The next device is the fog. The fog is interesting because everything about the man seems to suggest a ruler looking down over his nation, but there is nothing to be seen, just a vast empty landscape of fog.
Sunday, December 4, 2016
Tow #11 (The American Crisis)
When we think of the american revolution we tend to focus on the roles of the founding fathers. People among the ranks of George Washington, Benjamin Franklin, and Thomas Jefferson. However, when we consider the ideals behind the american revolution one man stands at the base of nearly all of them. Thomas Paine is an author whose works were incredibly moving and influential, helping to structure the beliefs of the american revolution. Pains most notable work is the pamphlet Common Sense, meant to display the tyranny of Britain. His next work, the american crisis, was meant to inspire Americans to fight against Britain in the revolutionary war. It was so effective, in fact, that George Washington read it to the all of the troops in valley forge.
The essay is meant as a call to action so as to inspire american soldiers to fight against Britain. It lays out and juxtaposes two different men the summer soldier, and the true patriot. In the introduction Paine says " These are the times that try men's souls: The summer soldier and the sunshine patriot will, in this crisis, shrink from the service of their country" by characterizing the summer soldier Paine creates a rather unfavorable archetype. He shows a soldier who literally and figuratively fights in the summer. The summer soldier is the soldier who literally fights in the summer but retreats home to comfort in the winter. This symbol is further extended at a deeper level. The summer could be referring to any time where fighting seems favorable, where sun and good fortune shine down on you, but as soon as darkness or threats loom, the sunshine patriot flees. Paine continues his argument in this first paragraph with an argument that seems both logical and emotional. It was a call to the american sense of divinity. He makes a clear logical relationship Tyranny is like hell and there for not easily conquered, but it is known that the harder a conflict the better the triumph. This call to action is deeply moving in that it not only lays out a logical reason to fight but also compels one to revolt against the actions of Britain depicted as nearly satanic.
The essay is meant as a call to action so as to inspire american soldiers to fight against Britain. It lays out and juxtaposes two different men the summer soldier, and the true patriot. In the introduction Paine says " These are the times that try men's souls: The summer soldier and the sunshine patriot will, in this crisis, shrink from the service of their country" by characterizing the summer soldier Paine creates a rather unfavorable archetype. He shows a soldier who literally and figuratively fights in the summer. The summer soldier is the soldier who literally fights in the summer but retreats home to comfort in the winter. This symbol is further extended at a deeper level. The summer could be referring to any time where fighting seems favorable, where sun and good fortune shine down on you, but as soon as darkness or threats loom, the sunshine patriot flees. Paine continues his argument in this first paragraph with an argument that seems both logical and emotional. It was a call to the american sense of divinity. He makes a clear logical relationship Tyranny is like hell and there for not easily conquered, but it is known that the harder a conflict the better the triumph. This call to action is deeply moving in that it not only lays out a logical reason to fight but also compels one to revolt against the actions of Britain depicted as nearly satanic.
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