It came from something awful How a toxic troll army accidentally memed Donald Trump into office

Dale Beran

Book - 2019

"An insider's history of the website at the end of the world, which burst into politics and memed Donald Trump into the White House. The internet has transformed the ways we think and act, and by consequence, our politics. The most impactful recent political movements on the far left and right started with massive online collectives of teenagers. Strangely, both movements began on the same website: an anime imageboard called 4chan.org. It Came from Something Awful is the fascinating and bizarre story of 4chan and its profound effect on youth counterculture. Dale Beran has observed the website's shifting activities and interests since the beginning. 4chan is a microcosm of the internet itself--simultaneously at the vanguard of... contemporary culture, politics, comedy and language, and a new low for all of the above. It was the original meme machine, mostly frequented by socially awkward and disenfranchised young men in search of a place to be alone together. During the recession of the late 2000's, the memes became political. 4chan was the online hub of a leftist hacker collective known as Anonymous and a prominent supporter of the Occupy Wall Street movement. But within a few short years, the site's ideology spun on its axis; it became the birthplace and breeding ground of the alt-right. In It Came from Something Awful, Beran uses his insider's knowledge and natural storytelling ability to chronicle 4chan's strange journey from creating rage-comics to inciting riots to--according to some--memeing Donald Trump into the White House"--

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Subjects
Published
New York : All Points Books 2019.
Language
English
Main Author
Dale Beran (author)
Edition
First edition
Physical Description
xxi, 279 pages : illustrations ; 25 cm
Bibliography
Includes bibliographical references and index.
ISBN
9781250189745
  • Introduction: The Garbage Fire Eternal
  • Part I. Counterculture and the Screen
  • 1. Countering Counterculture
  • 2. The Two Sprouls
  • 3. It Came from Something Awful
  • Part II. 4Chan
  • 4. Moot in Raspberry Heaven
  • 5. Memes, Trolls, and Chan Girls
  • 6. 2008: Anonymous Accidentally Starts a Worldwide Revolution
  • 7. 2008-2011: From Hope to Despair to Change
  • 8. Anon Peeks into the Palantir
  • Part III. The Pivot to the Right
  • 9. From Gentlemen to Robots
  • 10. From Robots to Nazis
  • 11. Gamergate: 4chan's Depression Quest
  • 12. Trump the Frog
  • 13. Steve Bannon: Nerd out of Time
  • 14. #War on the Sea Owl
  • 15. Tumblr and the Mosaic of Identity
  • 16. Politics Steps Through the Looking Glass
  • 17. Tumblr Goes to College
  • 18. 2016: Ejecta Assemble
  • 19. 2017: The Alt-Right Implodes
  • 20. 2018: What a Time to Be Alive
  • Acknowledgments
  • Notes
  • Index
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

From the festering online ids of nerds comes America's vitriolic right-wing politics, according to this scintillating study of the ideology of 4chan. Expanding a widely shared article published on Medium.com, Beran recounts 4chan.net's history as a social media platform for disaffected, socially awkward, deliberately offensive white man-boys steeped in nihilistic trolling and jokey memes like the now-infamous Pepe the Frog. 4chan's mutating ethos, he contends, married the victim culture of its self-labeled low-status "beta males" to the alt-right's prescription of white nationalism, patriarchy, and fascist power politics as a salve for the grievances of dispossessed men, culminating in a half-sincere, half-cynical embrace of Donald Trump. (He also explores the opposing movement of intersectional-justice-focused identity politics spreading from Tumblr to left-wing campuses.) Writing in funny, caustic prose-right-wing provocateur Gavin McInnes is "a punk [rocker] venerating the square suburban values of the 1950s"-Beran dissects the noxious political runoff of 4chan's "depravity and weirdness." Equally stimulating is his argument, invoking cultural theorists from Hannah Arendt to Herbert Marcuse, that capitalism's blend of Darwinian competition and consumerist fantasia makes everyone feel like powerless losers. Beran's focus is narrow and doesn't encompass the full roots of Trumpian politics, but he offers smarts insights into its most lurid constituency. Photos. (July) © Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved.

(c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved
Review by Kirkus Book Review

A complex, speculative murder board that probes the ascendance of American fascism.Beran begins with a basic premise: to examine how certain obsessive pastimes have evolved into the development ofinternet sites such as 4Chan and Reddit, which still incite much of the alt-right's violence and trolling today. The author floats the idea that right-wing toxicity is simply another counterculture, but taken together, its memorable moments are, for the most part, deplorable. The author carefully parses the origins of rallying sites like 4Chan ("another constraint that 4Chan abandoned was common decency") and the titular Something Awful, a site that had subforums like "Anime Death Tentacle Rape Whorehouse." But there are a whole bunch of other degenerates and less-than-savory characters to cover, too, from Steve Bannon to the trolls that threatened to kill Zo Quinn during Gamergate to the infamously radical Milo Yiannopoulos to the infamous cartoon frog Pepe, co-opted by the alt-right as their chosen mascot. Beran also offers a surprising number of pop-culture references, name-checking, among others, William Gibson, Tom Cruise, and Leslie Jones, and he makes some questionable analogies about movies like The Matrix and Ready Player One. Regardless, the author's coverage of neo-fascist movements is chilling, though peppered with clever cartoons that explain certain aspects. It's a blow-by-blow study of the devolution of American culture, especially during the past few years: the rise of the radical "proud boys"; the use of the word "cuck" to insult liberals; the proliferation of offensive memes; the seemingly endless racist, inflammatory rhetoric; and the death of 32-year-old Heather Heyer, who was hit by a car driven by a white supremacist in Charlottesville in 2017an event that prompted Donald Trump to say there were good people on both sides. God bless America?A deeply disturbing, mostly well-crafted history of how we the people, more divided than ever, got here. Copyright Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.