What Defines a Meme?
Our world is a place where information can behave like human genes and ideas can replicate, mutate and evolve
- By James Gleick
- Photographs by Stuart Bradford
- Smithsonian magazine, May 2011, Subscribe
(Page 2 of 4)
Catchphrases. One text snippet, “What hath God wrought?” appeared early and spread rapidly in more than one medium. Another, “Read my lips,” charted a peculiar path through late 20th-century America. “Survival of the fittest” is a meme that, like other memes, mutates wildly (“survival of the fattest”; “survival of the sickest”; “survival of the fakest”; “survival of the twittest”).
Images. In Isaac Newton’s lifetime, no more than a few thousand people had any idea what he looked like, even though he was one of England’s most famous men. Yet now millions of people have quite a clear idea—based on replicas of copies of rather poorly painted portraits. Even more pervasive and indelible are the smile of Mona Lisa, The Scream of Edvard Munch and the silhouettes of various fictional extraterrestrials. These are memes, living a life of their own, independent of any physical reality. “This may not be what George Washington looked like then,” a tour guide was overheard saying of the Gilbert Stuart portrait at the Metropolitan Museum of Art, “but this is what he looks like now.” Exactly.
Memes emerge in brains and travel outward, establishing beachheads on paper and celluloid and silicon and anywhere else information can go. They are not to be thought of as elementary particles but as organisms. The number three is not a meme; nor is the color blue, nor any simple thought, any more than a single nucleotide can be a gene. Memes are complex units, distinct and memorable—units with staying power.
Also, an object is not a meme. The hula hoop is not a meme; it is made of plastic, not of bits. When this species of toy spread worldwide in a mad epidemic in 1958, it was the product, the physical manifestation, of a meme, or memes: the craving for hula hoops; the swaying, swinging, twirling skill set of hula-hooping. The hula hoop itself is a meme vehicle. So, for that matter, is each human hula hooper—a strikingly effective meme vehicle, in the sense neatly explained by the philosopher Daniel Dennett: “A wagon with spoked wheels carries not only grain or freight from place to place; it carries the brilliant idea of a wagon with spoked wheels from mind to mind.” Hula hoopers did that for the hula hoop’s memes—and in 1958 they found a new transmission vector, broadcast television, sending its messages immeasurably faster and farther than any wagon. The moving image of the hula hooper seduced new minds by hundreds, and then by thousands, and then by millions. The meme is not the dancer but the dance.
For most of our biological history memes existed fleetingly; their main mode of transmission was the one called “word of mouth.” Lately, however, they have managed to adhere in solid substance: clay tablets, cave walls, paper sheets. They achieve longevity through our pens and printing presses, magnetic tapes and optical disks. They spread via broadcast towers and digital networks. Memes may be stories, recipes, skills, legends or fashions. We copy them, one person at a time. Alternatively, in Dawkins’ meme-centered perspective, they copy themselves.
“I believe that, given the right conditions, replicators automatically band together to create systems, or machines, that carry them around and work to favor their continued replication,” he wrote. This was not to suggest that memes are conscious actors; only that they are entities with interests that can be furthered by natural selection. Their interests are not our interests. “A meme,” Dennett says, “is an information-packet with attitude.” When we speak of fighting for a principle or dying for an idea, we may be more literal than we know.
Tinker, tailor, soldier, sailor....Rhyme and rhythm help people remember bits of text. Or: rhyme and rhythm help bits of text get remembered. Rhyme and rhythm are qualities that aid a meme’s survival, just as strength and speed aid an animal’s. Patterned language has an evolutionary advantage. Rhyme, rhythm and reason—for reason, too, is a form of pattern. I was promised on a time to have reason for my rhyme; from that time unto this season, I received nor rhyme nor reason.
Like genes, memes have effects on the wide world beyond themselves. In some cases (the meme for making fire; for wearing clothes; for the resurrection of Jesus) the effects can be powerful indeed. As they broadcast their influence on the world, memes thus influence the conditions affecting their own chances of survival. The meme or memes comprising Morse code had strong positive feedback effects. Some memes have evident benefits for their human hosts (“Look before you leap,” knowledge of CPR, belief in hand washing before cooking), but memetic success and genetic success are not the same. Memes can replicate with impressive virulence while leaving swaths of collateral damage—patent medicines and psychic surgery, astrology and satanism, racist myths, superstitions and (a special case) computer viruses. In a way, these are the most interesting—the memes that thrive to their hosts’ detriment, such as the idea that suicide bombers will find their reward in heaven.
Memes could travel wordlessly even before language was born. Plain mimicry is enough to replicate knowledge—how to chip an arrowhead or start a fire. Among animals, chimpanzees and gorillas are known to acquire behaviors by imitation. Some species of songbirds learn their songs, or at least song variants, after hearing them from neighboring birds (or, more recently, from ornithologists with audio players). Birds develop song repertoires and song dialects—in short, they exhibit a birdsong culture that predates human culture by eons. These special cases notwithstanding, for most of human history memes and language have gone hand in glove. (Clichés are memes.) Language serves as culture’s first catalyst. It supersedes mere imitation, spreading knowledge by abstraction and encoding.
Perhaps the analogy with disease was inevitable. Before anyone understood anything of epidemiology, its language was applied to species of information. An emotion can be infectious, a tune catchy, a habit contagious. “From look to look, contagious through the crowd / The panic runs,” wrote the poet James Thomson in 1730. Lust, likewise, according to Milton: “Eve, whose eye darted contagious fire.” But only in the new millennium, in the time of global electronic transmission, has the identification become second nature. Ours is the age of virality: viral education, viral marketing, viral e-mail and video and networking. Researchers studying the Internet itself as a medium—crowdsourcing, collective attention, social networking and resource allocation—employ not only the language but also the mathematical principles of epidemiology.
One of the first to use the terms “viral text” and “viral sentences” seems to have been a reader of Dawkins named Stephen Walton of New York City, corresponding in 1981 with the cognitive scientist Douglas Hofstadter. Thinking logically—perhaps in the mode of a computer—Walton proposed simple self-replicating sentences along the lines of “Say me!” “Copy me!” and “If you copy me, I’ll grant you three wishes!” Hofstadter, then a columnist for Scientific American, found the term “viral text” itself to be even catchier.
Well, now, Walton’s own viral text, as you can see here before your eyes, has managed to commandeer the facilities of a very powerful host—an entire magazine and printing press and distribution service. It has leapt aboard and is now—even as you read this viral sentence—propagating itself madly throughout the ideosphere!
Hofstadter gaily declared himself infected by the meme meme.
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Comments (40)
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If you acknowledge the role for the gene that 'The Selfish Gene' proposes in the process of natural selection, regardless of how dominant the idea is, then the 'meme' can be considered in the same way as it helps in understanding how some beliefs and activities have become and are still active. Dr Susan Blackmore published and excellent analysis in her book 'The Meme Machine' published by the Oxford Univ Press: http://www.susanblackmore.co.uk/Books/Meme%20Machine/MM.htm
Posted by Rob Willox on November 21,2012 | 07:19 AM
Memes have nothing to do with "science," hate to tell you. This is what happens when "scientists" are allowed to think outside their own little world of so cakked expertise and exert some kind of rationality with the very idea of the symbols called language.
They simply need to research a lot deeper into the nature of language, philosophy, speech acts, psychology, visual imagery, aural (in)tonations, iteration, and much, much more, et all.
In less than 10 years, we will all laugh at the very idea of "meme." We should be doing so right now. I am.
I'd provide a list of reading material, but everyone would simply Wikki it, thus degrading the narrative, mythos, legend-izing of the very idea of "meme."
However, start with Plato...read through Derrida. Include Auerbach, Hegel (all),
....anyway...."meme' is a degradation of so much that has, as Derrida writes, "always already" existed in our own secret mythos of utterance in langauage as a symbol of a symbol of a symbol... through infinity and back..The idea "Meme" as is presented above is, at best, truncated and stupid at worst....
Posted by chris on January 3,2012 | 07:59 PM
bubbaganoosh;Leo Schlosserand G.L. -- enjoyed reading your comments on the Dawkins article. I am, in no way, a scientist; am an artist; designer of clothing; cook, homemaker; diletante writer..READER; very much interested in "how the Universe works"; the human mind;etc.
Posted by B. Black on July 16,2011 | 06:18 PM
In James Gleick's article he gives Richard Dawkins credit for inventing (!)the word "Meme" but I think he has only formed a contraction of the word "memory"! OF COURSE thoughts and ideas TRAVEL from mind to mind; which has long been known as "telepathy"! Dawkins hasn't invented ANYTHING. He has only "renamed" mental processes.
Daniel Dennet is absolutely correct for having said "like it or not we are seldom 'in charge' of our own minds". I, myself, have postulated the possibility that the human mind may not generate thoughts but acts as a channel through which thoughts move from the cosmos to realization.
Individually or collectively (as a group, conference, Senate or Congress) do we actually make decisions or simply proceed with the IMPLANTED "intelligence" of or for appropriate action?
Posted by B. Black on July 14,2011 | 11:04 PM
Is he, ah, seriously proposing that memes replicate themselves for their own sake? Or is it just metaphor? While I do get all wet and gitty over the aesthetic comparison between the spread of ideas and viruses, it seems to me that it's a bit of a jump to say information spreads itself via humans, rather than information is spread by humans (for human purposes).
Because then it's just a completely metaphysical argument. We would be here discussing it for long past eternity and then some.
Posted by bubbaganoosh on June 20,2011 | 09:27 PM
The "meme" is a confused and confusing term, routinely raised as an analogue of the gene without due care. I've spent the last few years stripping it back to establish whether it has any use in better understanding cultural evolution. I have to conclude that it does, but only when you correctly apply the analogy, differentiating the "genes of culture" from the "organisms of culture", the "populations of culture" and even the "species of culture". Only with this full-hearted approach can you visualise the memetic view of cultural evolution, and only then upon admiting the vaguaries of the definition of "a gene" in the first place. For more on this, I'd point you to my work on the meme, "On the Origin of Tepees".
Posted by Jonnie Hughes on June 2,2011 | 11:09 AM
What Defines a Meme? James Gleick. Smithsonian Magazine, May 2011
James Gleick presents an insightful account of the persistence, replication and wide dissemination of cultural or scientific ideas, behaviours, standards or physical objects/artefacts in our ever more interconnected world. He argues that memes are assured longevity and even perpetual life if their practical or cultural usefulness remained unsullied as when they were first born. Although mimetics (from the Greek “to imitate”) refers to the study of memes, memes remind one of self-promoting celebrities trying to draw our attention (therefore aptly labelled “Me! Me!”). Memes would ultimately aim to attain “memento” (signifying permanence) rather than momento status, with the latter paradoxically able to be read as implying transience.
Posted by Joseph Ting on May 25,2011 | 06:27 PM
great article
Posted by job on May 18,2011 | 06:11 AM
I am neither a theologian nor a scientist but this article was among the most exciting I have read in a long time. I am 81,and since my late teens,my personal concept of faith was considered irrational by most of my friends."Wandering" on my own,I saw faith and evolution as a spiritual process evolving steadily toward perfection, an ongoing, unstoppable and self-generating impulse or "force" linked to no organized religion. Needless to say, I would not have found the road I have followed ever since if I had not discovered Teilhard de Chardin, and particularly for his being silenced by the Catholic Church.Thank You, James Gleick, Teilhard would be smiling.
Posted by Regine Reynolds-Cornell on May 17,2011 | 09:31 AM
i've got your Mendel right here: http://knowyourmeme.com/
awesome article, by the way.
Posted by ronny on May 12,2011 | 07:54 PM
great article! We're preparing a contemporary art exhibition on this theme, so it's wonderful to see memetics making an appearance on The Smithsonian! Thank you!
Posted by Alois collective on May 8,2011 | 01:21 AM
He's onto something, it was words and directions:
and God said "let there be light"
and God said "let there be a division in the waters dividing the waters"
and God said "and let the waters under the heaven be gathered in one place and let the dry land appear"
and God said... and God said... and God said...
words. instructions.
No matter how much time you spend studying creation, it always leads back to the facts of its Creator.
Posted by Chappy on May 8,2011 | 03:16 AM
"Have Meme Will Travel" is a fascinating piece. When I read "infosphere" I immediately thought of the Jesuit priest/scientist/philosopher (and to some, heretic) Pierre Teilhard de Chardin, who suggested the existence of a "noosphere", a sphere of human thought surrounding the earth. Apparently de Chardin's idea has never achieved "meme" status since Mr. Glieck did not give the dead Jebbie a nod.
Earl McMillin
Merritt Island
Florida
Posted by Earl McMillin on May 6,2011 | 10:26 AM
Is this a meme?
plus ça change, plus c'est la même chose New Ager Byron Katie says "Who would you be without the thought? and Turn it around."
Its all the same to me (or meme).
Posted by John Grant on May 3,2011 | 12:15 PM
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