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Alumnus/Alumna profile

Saskia Kowalchuk

Thesis supervisor: Fenwick McKelvey

Thesis title: Post Memes or Post-Meme: TikTok and the Rise of Algorithmic Meme Cultures

Saskia is a recent master's graduate whose research focused on memes, participatory cultures, and their intersection with platforms. This has allowed her to work on the function of memes within partisan spaces online as artifacts of political communication and on the formal technique of “deep frying” memes as a meta-commentary on memetic communication, which she presented at the 2018 Association of Internet Researcher’s conferences.

For her thesis, she focused on TIkTok as a new horizon of memetic production, where participatory cultures meet algorithmic cultures and raise important questions about labour, attribution, and compensation.

Saskia completed her BA in Communication and Cultural Studies at Concordia, and was a proud recipient of both SSHRC and FRQSC funding for her thesis research.

Peer reviewed articles:

  • McKelvey, F., Donovan, E., Kowalchuk, S., DeJong, S. (In press). Mapping the Canadian network media system through image clustering. Canadian Journal of Communications.
  • McKelvey, F., Lalancette, M., Kowalchuk, S., Fitzbay, F. (2021). Les mèmes politiques commes nouveau discours critique [Manuscript submitted for publication]. University of Québec Press.
  • Kowalchuk, S. (2017). Man, Medium and the World About: Reflections on the Nature of Web Art vis-a-vis Twitter’s @Horse_ebooks. Medium: Concordia University’s Undergraduate Journal of Communications and Cultural Studies, 5, 4–7.

Non-peer reveiwed articles:

In progess:

  • DeJong, S & Kowalchuk, S. (2021). Political Memes During COVID-19: Using a qualitative ethnographic approach to explore political meme conversation during the Pandemic.

Social media links:

Saskia Kowalchuk's Twitter page
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