4.5 Article

The (de)-politicization of Internet memes in Chinese national youth propaganda campaign

期刊

出版社

ROUTLEDGE JOURNALS, TAYLOR & FRANCIS LTD
DOI: 10.1080/1369118X.2023.2266005

关键词

Youth study; CCYL; Internet memes; visual communication; political communication

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Using multi-model discourse analysis and following the theoretical framework of Everyday Politics, this study focuses on a random sample of 200 user-generated Internet memes from Chinese national youth propaganda campaign Youth Study, and examines their sharing and dissemination in online public discussions. The findings reveal that young participants have varying degrees of engagement with politics and employ various strategies to construct different roles and scenarios. This analysis contributes to the scholarly literature on youth subcultures, political mobilization, and visual propaganda in post-socialist China.
Visual political communication in the social media sphere is increasingly valuable for its ability to more effectively persuade viewers in this increasingly cluttered media landscape. Using multi-model discourse analysis and following the theoretical framework of Everyday Politics, this study focuses on a random sample (N = 200) of user-generated Internet memes from Chinese national youth propaganda campaign Youth Study. In addition, the author observed the sharing and dissemination of these memes in online public discussions. The findings reveal that young participants maintain a varying distance from politics. They employ strategies such as dark humor, hyperbole, contrast, and appropriation of pop culture to portray two key roles - the charming, brilliant followers and the abandoned, hunted breakers, and to construct four main scenarios-cute threat, humble beg, funny politics, and veiled resistance. This politicized propaganda campaign is being transformed from state aspirations to the creative daily cultural consumption of young netizens. This analysis contributes to the scholarly literature on youth subcultures, political mobilization, and visual propaganda in post-socialist China.

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