#KnowYourMeme
Illustration by Dana Heimes

Footage of āyourā FBI agent bringing gifts when everyone forgets your birthday. A bride getting married on Friday because Saturdays are for the boys. The guy who spots a king, but is looking in a mirror.
You probably recognize those memes, but for Olga White, these media are less a laughing matter than an important window into how we communicate. Sheās become an expert at creating āfamily treesā of memes, thinking critically about their origins to understand what they say about the cultures and creators who build them.
āOn their own, we donāt remember these micro-content interactionsāif you see a meme about kings, or the boys, and donāt see the topic for a few minutes, you donāt retain what you saw earlier,ā said White,Ģża PhD student in CMDIāsĢżmedia studies department who researches surveillance and online identity. āOur social media feeds are so jumbled together that the narrative gets broken up, and it becomes difficult to see the underlying patterns.
āThere needs to be a voice encouraging us to look at these as a group, and say, āIsnāt itĢż
weird how all these memes are about someone watching what youāre doing?āā
A late-night doomscrolling session kicked off Whiteās scholarly interest in the topic. As she went through her Instagram feed, she saw an image of a text message setting up a hookup, helped along by an FBI agent.
āI just felt there was something there. And then I started coming across more memes related to the FBI agent,ā she said. āSo I essentially curated this family of memes around surveillance, and how this character is helping to hyper-normalize that.ā
To illustrate the connections linking these media, White curated a gallery of memes in ATLAS earlier this year that highlight patterns related to surveillance. For the exhibit, she printed the images and put them in ostentatious frames, highlighting the ugly meme aesthetic while emphasizing that the media were being shown out of their elementāāone way memesĢż
have left the digital sphere,āĢżas she put it.
ĢżĢżThere needs to be a voice encouraging us to look at these as a group, and say, āIsnāt it weird how all these memes are about someone watching what youāre doing?āā
Olga White, PhD student
Another example of this is when the language of memes creeps into our speech, something White sees in GenerationĢżAlphaās adoption of āOhio,ā āsigmaā and other terms into everyday speech.
āNow, to understand what a person is saying, we have toĢżunderstand what a particular meme meant,ā she said. āAnd thatās hard, because memes are rooted in the context of the culture that created them. It becomes a āyou had to beĢżthereā moment.ā
She brought her classes to the exhibit, asking them to deliberately spend time with each meme, as they might in a museum, to understand the patterns on display.
āThe most gratifying comment I got was from a student who said, āI want to tell my mom she was rightāthat when I spent a lot of time diving into gamer culture, I didnāt realize what I was taking out of it,āā White said. āHearing students say things like that convinced me there was valueĢżto this work.
āAnd I hope he called his mom afterward.ā
Joe Arney covers research and general news for the college.