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The Way We Meme: Toward a Descriptive Typology for Cognitive Sociolinguistic Analysis of Internet Memes
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Author (aut): Johnson, Andrew
Thesis advisor (ths): Allison, Sean
Thesis advisor (ths): Pelkey, Jamin
Degree committee member (dgc): Nicolle, Steve
Degree committee member (dgc): Morrissey, Christopher S
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Degree granting institution (dgg): Trinity Western University. SGS
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Description / Synopsis |
Description / Synopsis
In this thesis, I outline a functional typology for categorizing internet memes using the cognitive linguistic theory of Conceptual Integration (CIT) and related concepts from Construction Grammar and Relevance theory. Although cognitive linguists have analyzed the communicative power of memes, their endeavours have yet to result in a typology that can organize all types of memes for extensible future analysis. Some meme categorization schemes have been proposed, but memes evolve too rapidly for these to be helpful long-term. I argue that CIT provides the necessary tools to construct a robust typology that can support descriptive meme analysis, emphasizing the importance of emergent dynamic meaning creation and phatic socio-pragmatic function to meme communication. I organize memes based on two functional concerns: 1) whether form and function explicitly correspond and 2) whether the meme’s meaning structure applies top-down from conventionalized instructions or bottom-up from a non-conventionalized pattern recognition process. |
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Keywords
memes
CIT
conceptual integration
conceptual blending
cognitive linguistics
multimodality
typology
top-down
bottom-up
anti-correspondent
cognitive sociolinguistics
construction grammar
construction
memetics
relevance theory
CxG
RT
internet communication
internet memes
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82-Extracted Text.txt254.36 KB
twu_932.pdf6.04 MB
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English
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The Way We Meme: Toward a Descriptive Typology for Cognitive Sociolinguistic Analysis of Internet Memes
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application/pdf
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6335865
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