GIF and Meme Culture
Despite GIFs having no sound, there is something about
them that grabs our attention, Patkar describes them as “a little more than the
digital flip-book”[1]. With people believing
that GIFs are newly invented, we are wrong, the first viral GIF is back in 1996
when a popular video to GIF spread across the web. It is evident that GIFs have
evolved very much since then and become extremely popular over the recent
years, being names word of the year by oxford dictionary in 2012.
“Typically a GIF in conversation is used as a visual
analogy to a relevant topic,” Orin adds. “Feeling overwhelmed? Here’s a cat
being chased by a dozen puppies. Part of the humour – and humour is almost always
the reason for using a GIF – is finding a visual analogy that is completely
surprising but relevant. Maybe you’re doing a mundane task like filing expense
reports, but a clip from a Japanese game show, which is completely removed from
the task at hand, perfectly conveys your emotion at the moment. The phrase
‘surprising but inevitable’ comes to mind.”[2]
The GIF culture is perfect for social media platforms, to share how your
feeling through moving image but also just the whole journey of discovering a new
GIF and sharing it with others. In terms of language through the web, we obviously
do share for social media but it generates the emotional response from others
watching/viewing your profile.
[1] Patkar,
M. (2015). GIFs, The Language Of The Web: Their History, Culture, and
Future. Available: https://www.makeuseof.com/tag/gifs-language-internet-history-culture-art-future/.
Last accessed 2nd Jan, 2019.
[2] Patkar,
M. (2015). GIFs, The Language Of The Web: Their History, Culture, and
Future. Available: https://www.makeuseof.com/tag/gifs-language-internet-history-culture-art-future/.
Last accessed 2nd Jan, 2019.

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