A pandemic of jokes? The Israeli COVID-19 meme and the construction of a collective response to risk

Author:

Sebba-Elran Tsafi1

Affiliation:

1. University of Haifa , Haifa , Israel

Abstract

Abstract The COVID-19 pandemic that broke out in Israel in February 2020 prompted widespread public response, which included a deluge of humorous memes. The current article discusses the main meme cycles of the pandemic with the aim of uncovering the functions of the humorous meme, and particularly its singular language, which incorporates the universal and the particular, the global and the local, the hegemonic and the subversive. The memes are examined in their immediate context, as responses to news announcements, restrictions, and rumors relating to the pandemic, and from a comparative perspective, with emphasis on the various functions of disaster jokes and the use of folklore in response to previous epidemics, crises, or risks. Alongside the hybrid nature of the genre, these meme cycles demonstrate that COVID-19 is not just a threatening virus but a new reality that undermines our experience of time and space, evoking old beliefs and new, and threatening to change everyday practices. These narratives not only reflect the incongruities evoked by the virus, but also give vent to anxieties and aggressions brought on by the pandemic and convey a communal need to protect and foster group cohesion and a local sense of belonging.

Publisher

Walter de Gruyter GmbH

Subject

General Psychology,Linguistics and Language,Sociology and Political Science,Language and Linguistics

Reference69 articles.

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3. Beiner, Guy. 2011. Giluya mehadash shel magefat hashapa’at hagdola [The rediscovery of the great influenza pandemic of 1918–1919]. Zmanim: A Historical Quarterly 113. 4–13.

4. Bergson, Henry. 2008 [1900]. Laughter: An essay on the meaning of the comic, translated by Brereton Cloudesley and Fred Rothwell. Rockville, MD: Manor.

5. Blank, Trevor J. 2009. Introduction: Toward a conceptual framework for the study of folklore and the internet. In Trevor J. Blank (ed.), Folklore and the internet: Vernacular expression in a digital age, 1–20. Utah: Utah State University.

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