Elemento
Funny corona beer meme
Título (Dublin Core)
Funny corona beer meme
Disclaimer (Dublin Core)
DISCLAIMER: This item may have been submitted in response to a school assignment. See Linked Data.
Description (Dublin Core)
HIST30060 - submitted as part of a history assignment. This meme uses symbolism in order to compare the pandemic to disastrous world events. The background depicts an atomic bomb exploding into a mushroom cloud and is overlaid with photographs of an empty toilet roll (alluding to the rush on toilet paper that occurred early in 2020), a bottle of Corona beer (a company unfortunate enough to share a name with the virus), empty shelves (from where people had panicked bought), graphics of the virus and the muppet Elmo wearing a mask, looking into the middle distance. The combination of these graphics suggests that in the future, ‘corona’ will be inextricably linked to the virus and that just saying its name will induce traumatic flashbacks. This suggests that the collective experience of wider society this year could be deemed a sort of shared trauma. It is noteworthy that the vast majority these memes, this one included, do not make light of personal hardships faced by people in order to be malicious and the events alluded to (such as the food hoarding) are not “serious” (like, for example, the economic crisis or the coronavirus death toll) but more trivial inconveniences.
Date (Dublin Core)
May 17, 2020
Contributor (Dublin Core)
Emily Shallcross
Event Identifier (Dublin Core)
HIST30060
Partner (Dublin Core)
University of Melbourne
Tipo (Dublin Core)
Meme (found on Pinterest)
Link (Bibliographic Ontology)
Controlled Vocabulary (Dublin Core)
English
Humor
English
Education--Universities
English
Social Media (including Memes)
Curator's Tags (Omeka Classic)
meme
disaster
Pinterest
Melbourne
mask
beer
toilet paper
Collection (Dublin Core)
Humor
Linked Data (Dublin Core)
Date Submitted (Dublin Core)
11/10/2020
Date Modified (Dublin Core)
02/22/2021
03/09/2021
04/15/2022
Date Created (Dublin Core)
05/17/2020
Colecciones
This item was submitted on November 10, 2020 by Emily Shallcross using the form “Share Your Story” on the site “A Journal of the Plague Year”: http://mail.covid-19archive.org/s/archive
Click here to view the collected data.