Abstract
Abstract
During the early stages of the COVID-19 pandemic, many users around the world exploited internet memes as a
digital source of humour to cope with the negative psychological effects of quarantining. Drawing on multimodal discourse analysis, this study investigates a set of COVID-19 internet memes to explore the quarantine activities and routines to understand ordinary people’s mindsets, anxieties and emotional
narratives surrounding self-isolation as well as the pragmatically generated humorous meanings relying on verbal and visual components of memes. The findings revealed that quarantine humour is centred around themes including quarantine day comparisons focusing on the perceived effects of home quarantines on physical and mental well-being, quarantine routines, and physical appearance predictions at the end of quarantine. Intertextuality was a productive resource establishing connections between quarantine practices and popular texts. In addition, humorous meanings were created through anomalous juxtapositions of different texts and
incongruity resolution is largely dependent on the combined meanings of verbal and visual components.
Publisher
John Benjamins Publishing Company
Subject
Computer Networks and Communications,Linguistics and Language,Language and Linguistics
Cited by
18 articles.
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