[publication] “‘Teh Internet is Serious Business’: On the Deep Vernacular Web Imaginary and its Discontents”

At the fringes of the personalized web of social media exists another anonymous “deep vernacular web”, where, still to this day, nobody knows you’re a dog.

Daniël de Zeeuw and Marc Tuters published an article in Cultural Politics. The text deconstructs the unique “mask culture” of anonymous forums and imageboards, tracing its roots in the cyber-separationist imaginary of early internet culture, in a way that can be seen to undermine the new “face culture” of social media platforms like Facebook. The practices that characterize this “deep vernacular web” are anti- and impersonal rather than personal, ephemeral and aleatory rather than persistent and predictable, collective rather than individual, stranger-rather than friend-oriented, and radically public and contagious rather than privatized, filtered, and contained.

Characterised by its ephemerality and anonymity, and preoccupied with dissimulative identity play, memes, and trolling, the set of subcultural attitudes that characterises this part of the web can be summarised by the ironic and intentionally misspelled phrase “Teh internet is serious business.” By exploring the vernacular significance of this saying and how it can be seen to articulate an oppositional attitude to the currently hegemonic platform culture, this article simultaneously aims to contribute to contemporary debates on the reactionary turn in internet culture associated with the global rise of the alt-right.

Read the text here.

The article is accessible through most university networks.

Teh Internet is Serious Business': On the Deep Vernacular Web Imaginary and its Discontents

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