From Symbol to Icon: The Aesthetic Regime of the Meme in the Post-Discursive Age

AI image Introduction: From Tweet to Meme Over the past decade, the landscape of digital communication has undergone a radical transformation. The era of brief, aphoristic tweets—where linguistic wit condensed virality into a few characters—seems to have given way to a new form of writing: the visual meme. Today, internet culture is no longer structured around text but around the image infused with affect. This passage from language to visuality marks a profound mutation in the economy of the sign—one that can be interpreted, following Peirce, Derrida, Baudrillard, and others, as a shift from symbol to icon, and more broadly, from logos to pathos . Contemporary virality is no longer measured by the argumentative strength of discourse, but by an image’s capacity to circulate, to affect, to provoke reaction. From political memes caricaturing public figures with Mexican hats to endless ironic variations on gestures or phrases, the sign has become instantaneous, plastic, and globally ...