“Don’t panic people! Trump will tweet the virus away”: Memes Contesting and Confirming Populist Political Leaders during the COVID-19 Crisis

Publikation: Bidrag til bog/antologi/rapportBidrag til bog/antologiFormidling

Standard

“Don’t panic people! Trump will tweet the virus away” : Memes Contesting and Confirming Populist Political Leaders during the COVID-19 Crisis. / Kristensen, Nete Nørgaard; Mortensen, Mette.

The Playful Politics of Memes. red. / Mette Mortensen; Christina Neumayer. Routledge, 2023.

Publikation: Bidrag til bog/antologi/rapportBidrag til bog/antologiFormidling

Harvard

Kristensen, NN & Mortensen, M 2023, “Don’t panic people! Trump will tweet the virus away”: Memes Contesting and Confirming Populist Political Leaders during the COVID-19 Crisis. i M Mortensen & C Neumayer (red), The Playful Politics of Memes. Routledge.

APA

Kristensen, N. N., & Mortensen, M. (2023). “Don’t panic people! Trump will tweet the virus away”: Memes Contesting and Confirming Populist Political Leaders during the COVID-19 Crisis. I M. Mortensen, & C. Neumayer (red.), The Playful Politics of Memes Routledge.

Vancouver

Kristensen NN, Mortensen M. “Don’t panic people! Trump will tweet the virus away”: Memes Contesting and Confirming Populist Political Leaders during the COVID-19 Crisis. I Mortensen M, Neumayer C, red., The Playful Politics of Memes. Routledge. 2023

Author

Kristensen, Nete Nørgaard ; Mortensen, Mette. / “Don’t panic people! Trump will tweet the virus away” : Memes Contesting and Confirming Populist Political Leaders during the COVID-19 Crisis. The Playful Politics of Memes. red. / Mette Mortensen ; Christina Neumayer. Routledge, 2023.

Bibtex

@inbook{65a9cfd4cadc4da284d3e244e04807c5,
title = "“Don{\textquoteright}t panic people! Trump will tweet the virus away”: Memes Contesting and Confirming Populist Political Leaders during the COVID-19 Crisis",
abstract = "When the COVID-19 pandemic triggered a global health crisis in early 2020, memes of populist political leaders were disseminated in abundance on social media. At first sight, these political memes satirized and exposed the hazardous actions, appearances and communicative strategies of the populist leaders in this unforeseen situation that not only unsettled existing power balances, but also standard modes of professional and personal conduct. Based on a thematic analysis of memes of British Prime Minister Boris Johnson and US President Donald Trump during the COVID-19 crisis, this paper finds, however, that the political memes{\textquoteright} critical and affirmative power conflated. This challenged their potential as counter-narratives to the actions and communication of these populist leaders. We argue that this can be explained by an overlap in the communicative form of populism and memes: Political memes are a social media genre that uses incongruent humor to expose the contradictions, conflicts and hypocrisy of populist politicians. Similarly, populist politicians communicate in polarizing and personalizing rhetoric that emphasizes conflicts and the mischiefs of others on social media and beyond. This raises the broader question of how populist leaders might be criticized and their actions subjected to scrutiny in political memes without feeding into their own communicative patterns and logics, and thus unintentionally confirming their worldview and interpretations of events.",
author = "Kristensen, {Nete N{\o}rgaard} and Mette Mortensen",
note = "Genudgivelse af artikel med samme titel, fra Information, Communication & Society vol. 24, nr. 16",
year = "2023",
language = "English",
editor = "Mette Mortensen and Christina Neumayer",
booktitle = "The Playful Politics of Memes",
publisher = "Routledge",
address = "United Kingdom",

}

RIS

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T1 - “Don’t panic people! Trump will tweet the virus away”

T2 - Memes Contesting and Confirming Populist Political Leaders during the COVID-19 Crisis

AU - Kristensen, Nete Nørgaard

AU - Mortensen, Mette

N1 - Genudgivelse af artikel med samme titel, fra Information, Communication & Society vol. 24, nr. 16

PY - 2023

Y1 - 2023

N2 - When the COVID-19 pandemic triggered a global health crisis in early 2020, memes of populist political leaders were disseminated in abundance on social media. At first sight, these political memes satirized and exposed the hazardous actions, appearances and communicative strategies of the populist leaders in this unforeseen situation that not only unsettled existing power balances, but also standard modes of professional and personal conduct. Based on a thematic analysis of memes of British Prime Minister Boris Johnson and US President Donald Trump during the COVID-19 crisis, this paper finds, however, that the political memes’ critical and affirmative power conflated. This challenged their potential as counter-narratives to the actions and communication of these populist leaders. We argue that this can be explained by an overlap in the communicative form of populism and memes: Political memes are a social media genre that uses incongruent humor to expose the contradictions, conflicts and hypocrisy of populist politicians. Similarly, populist politicians communicate in polarizing and personalizing rhetoric that emphasizes conflicts and the mischiefs of others on social media and beyond. This raises the broader question of how populist leaders might be criticized and their actions subjected to scrutiny in political memes without feeding into their own communicative patterns and logics, and thus unintentionally confirming their worldview and interpretations of events.

AB - When the COVID-19 pandemic triggered a global health crisis in early 2020, memes of populist political leaders were disseminated in abundance on social media. At first sight, these political memes satirized and exposed the hazardous actions, appearances and communicative strategies of the populist leaders in this unforeseen situation that not only unsettled existing power balances, but also standard modes of professional and personal conduct. Based on a thematic analysis of memes of British Prime Minister Boris Johnson and US President Donald Trump during the COVID-19 crisis, this paper finds, however, that the political memes’ critical and affirmative power conflated. This challenged their potential as counter-narratives to the actions and communication of these populist leaders. We argue that this can be explained by an overlap in the communicative form of populism and memes: Political memes are a social media genre that uses incongruent humor to expose the contradictions, conflicts and hypocrisy of populist politicians. Similarly, populist politicians communicate in polarizing and personalizing rhetoric that emphasizes conflicts and the mischiefs of others on social media and beyond. This raises the broader question of how populist leaders might be criticized and their actions subjected to scrutiny in political memes without feeding into their own communicative patterns and logics, and thus unintentionally confirming their worldview and interpretations of events.

UR - https://www.routledge.com/The-Playful-Politics-of-Memes/Mortensen-Neumayer/p/book/9781032449500

M3 - Book chapter

BT - The Playful Politics of Memes

A2 - Mortensen, Mette

A2 - Neumayer, Christina

PB - Routledge

ER -

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