If you’re young and hip like me, you’ll have come across the term dank meme, and know that a dank meme is a cool image or video that becomes popular. Goes viral, if you will.
Though the word meme is strongly associated with internet culture, it’s got a longer history than you might imagine. The term was coined by Richard Dawkins in his 1976 work on evolutionary biology, The Selfish Gene. It referred to an idea, behaviour, or style that spreads between individuals within a culture. A particular fashion or popular opinion that spreads quickly, like a virus, could be considered a meme. Dawkins came up with the theory of the meme in a book on evolution, as he considered that ideas could be under the same pressures to adapt and replicate as biological organisms.
It’s logical enough then, that the term has come to refer to an artefact of internet culture, whether it be a gif or an image macro, that spreads virally, but can also mutate and adapt itself to different contexts. But how on Earth could dank come to mean cool? Until very recently, the only meaning for dank I knew was unpleasantly damp and cold. After a little research (googling), I discovered that it came to be used by marijuana smokers to refer to high-quality product. Apparently, to make it really potent, one needs to keep it double-bagged. Storing it thusly reduces its exposure to light and air, thus making it cold and damp to the touch. Or dank.
It’s easy to complain about young people using neologisms we’ve never heard before, or using words with different meanings from what we expect. But there’s still always a logic lurking behind it. There aren’t many steps between dank as damp and cold, and dank as cool. So next time you hear some insufferable teenager refer to dank memes, just remember that they couldn’t do so with the expert knowledge of marijuana growers and a world-renowned evolutionary biologist.
Fascinating about the evolution of words — although I am not young and hip enough to follow it! Still trying to figure out how ‘sick’ came to mean ‘cool’ and how a ‘pimp’ went from a sex trafficker to a ‘cool person’ LOl!!
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I’ve never understood how “sick” can be cool at all. Or “ill:” as well as the less-than-pleasant connotations of “sick,” it’s also so polite!
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I don’t get it either! Although there is probably some reason to it…
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Okay, so I did some research on ‘sick’. Apparently, the slang began as a skateboarder’s term — when one of them tried a crazy stunt, they would call it ‘sick’ — as in, ‘that was sickly- insane! You could have killed yourself!’. However, it also had a connotation of approval — the idea that one would be so bold as to attempt the ‘sick’ stunt. Then eventually it spread among the youth — ‘sick’ meant bold, crazy, outlandish, but also worthy and courageous.
Kind of like how ‘bad’ as in ‘badass’ came to mean ‘noble, great, courageous’.
Interesting stuff! Language does fascinate me.
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That’s cool, it does make sense in that context. I was thinking that “bad” was similar, and it goes to show how much we welcome transgression, probably as a necessary break from banality.
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Yes. We love the rebels and the transgressors! In language, there are a lot of trends with that type of thing. Something that once had a negative meaning is given a new, positive meaning.
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Even a word like “cool” can easily shift between positive and negative. There’s a big difference between being cool, and being cool towards somebody.
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Yes, exactly. And all of it a far stretch from using the air conditioning to stay cool 🙂
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I remember when meme’s were really picking up popularity, I was a managing a shop in a town where my house could not receive cable or internet. My employees would refer to the term “meme” all the time, sometimes telling me I’m a walking “hipster meme”, though I was quite perplexed what a meme even was. Each time they spoke the word I’d tried to go back in my catalog of schooling, though I didn’t have a complete recollection what it was, I did know the term had nothing to do with hipsters from my knowledge bank. 😉 Seriously took about a year before I realized what a meme was.
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It would be very hard to figure out the meaning without a lot of context: it doesn’t really relate directly to many other words!
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Like Christine says, language is fascinating. Thanks for sharing your knowledge, I’ll follow your ramblings from now on 😉
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Thanks for hopping on board, you’re welcome on the journey :).
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I’ve seen the word “memes” before and wondered what it means, so thanks for the enlightenment. As to other expressions mentioned here, I had no clue. Too old and out of touch. 🙂 But that’s okay. In five years all this current slang will be replaced with new stuff. 🙂
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