Conviviality and collectives on social media: Virality, memes, and new social structures

Authors

  • Jan Blommaert Tilburg University and Ghent University
  • Piia Varis Tilburg University

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.14426/mm.v2i1.50

Keywords:

phatic communion; social media; virality; memes; meaning; function; community; identity

Abstract

There is a long tradition in which 'phatic' forms of interaction are seen as (and characterized by) relatively low levels of 'information' and 'meaning'. Yet, observations on social media interaction patterns show an amazing density of such phatic interactions, in which signs are shared and circulated without an a priori determination of the meaning. We address the issue of 'virality' in this paper: the astonishing speed and scope with which often 'empty' (i.e. not a priori determined) signs circulate online. We address 'memes'-signs that have gone viral on the internet- as cases in point. Virality as a sociolinguistic phenomenon raises specific issues about signs, meanings, and functions, prompting a shift from 'meaning' to 'effect'. This effect, we can see, is conviviality: the production of a social-structuring level of engagement in loose, temporal, and elastic collectives operating in social media environments.

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Published

2017-06-09

How to Cite

Blommaert, J., & Varis, P. (2017). Conviviality and collectives on social media: Virality, memes, and new social structures. Multilingual Margins: A Journal of Multilingualism from the Periphery, 2(1), 31. https://doi.org/10.14426/mm.v2i1.50