A Laugh Riot: Photoshopping as Vernacular Discursive Practice

Authors

  • Andrew M. Peck University of Wisconsin-Madison

Keywords:

Internet, Meme, Pepper Spray Cop, Photoshop, Vernacular Discourse, Visual Rhetoric

Abstract

 This essay examines “photoshopping” as an important emerging genre of vernacular practice on the Internet. By sharing digitally altered images across networks, users engage in a vernacular process that creates and participates in discourses concerning shared expectations and communal values. To demonstrate this process, this essay analyzes how photoshopping was used as a response to the pepper-spraying of a group of peaceful protesters on theUniversityofCalifornia,Davis, campus. Enabled by the affordances of networked communication, this essay argues that photoshopping represents a powerful new form of vernacular expression for the digital age. 

Author Biography

Andrew M. Peck, University of Wisconsin-Madison

Ph.D. Candidate, Department of Communication Arts. Phone: (763)-447-1262

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Published

2014-06-16

Issue

Section

Articles