LOL cats. Grumpy Cat. Dog-rating Twitter. Pet Instagram accounts. It’s generally understood the internet is for pictures of cute cats (and dogs, and otters, and pandas). But what motivates people to make and share these images, and how do they relate to other online social practices?
The Internet is for Cats examines how animal images are employed to create a lighter, more playful mood, uniting users within online spaces that can otherwise easily become fractious and toxic. Placing today’s pet videos, photos, and memes within a longer history of mediated animal images, communication scholar Jessica Maddox also considers the factors that make them unique. She explores the roles that animals play within online economies of cuteness and attention, as well as the ways that animal memes and videos respond to common experiences of life under neoliberalism.
Conducting a rich digital ethnography, Maddox combines observations and textual analysis with extensive interviews of the people who create, post and share animal media, including TikTok influencers seeking to make their pets famous, activists tweeting about wildlife conservation, and Redditors upvoting every cute cat photo. The Internet is for Cats will leave you with a new appreciation for the human social practices behind the animal images you encounter online.
Author(s): Jessica Maddox
Publisher: Rutgers University Press
Year: 2022
Language: English
Pages: 253
City: New Brunswick
Cover
Title Page
Copyright Page
Contents
Introduction
1. Kittens in Context
2. “I’ve Heard People on TikTok Love This”: Attention as Materiality and Looking Relation
3. Beyond Doomscrolling in an Internet of Cute
4. “You Can’t Buy Happiness, but You Can Rescue It”: Neoliberal Pets and Animals
5. Feels Good, Man: Collisions, Collusions, and Cloaks in Pet and Animal Social Media
6. Nature Is Healing, We Are the Virus: Beyond Signifiers
Appendix
Acknowledgments
Notes
Bibliography
Index
About the Author