As we’ve seen, meme ecologies are shaped by the actions of meme-users navigating meaning space. But not all meme-types are equally viable. Some flare briefly and vanish; others persist, morph, and resurface across years or even decades. What gives certain memes this kind of sticking power?
To understand this, we turn to the concept of cultural attractors—semiotic configurations that draw repeated instantiation over time. In the dynamics of meaning, cultural attractors function like gravitational centres: they stabilise value, form, and resonance in the meme ecology.
What Is a Cultural Attractor?
A cultural attractor is not a fixed entity or meme-type, but a tendency: a pattern of convergence in the space of semiotic possibility. These patterns emerge because certain combinations of value, structure, and context are more selectable—more likely to be instantiated, remembered, and circulated.
Cultural attractors arise when:
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A meme-type resonates deeply with shared emotional or ideological values
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Its structure is easily reproduced or varied within known constraints
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It is adaptable across contexts, yet retains recognisable identity
In other words, attractors offer a sweet spot between stability and flexibility. They provide a semiotic affordance that invites variation without losing coherence.
Examples of Cultural Attractors
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The “Distracted Boyfriend” meme is not just a single image—it is an attractor for commentary on shifting loyalties, temptations, and priorities.
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The “Is This a Pigeon?” meme became an attractor for confused categorisation or mislabelling, abstracting far beyond its anime origins.
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Textual snowclones like “X be like: Y” or “Keep Calm and Z” are attractors because they combine familiar form with open-ended content.
Each of these has generated countless instantiations, because they pull meme-users toward familiar structures that invite creative variation.
How Attractors Emerge and Evolve
Cultural attractors are not imposed; they emerge from the repeated actions of meme-users. When a particular pattern proves useful—socially, emotionally, or rhetorically—it becomes more available, more selectable. Over time, this feedback loop of selection and instantiation:
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Sharpens the constraints of the meme-type
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Deepens its resonance through accumulation of meaning
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Encourages metacommentary and self-awareness
Eventually, a meme-type may become a meta-attractor—not just a form to use, but a cultural object to talk about. This is how memes evolve into durable semiotic resources.
Cultural Memory and Meaning Gravity
We can think of cultural attractors as points of meaning gravity. They pull instantiations toward them because:
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They are embedded in cultural memory
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They carry symbolic value (e.g., status, irony, rebellion)
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They make meaning-making easier in specific contexts
This is not a top-down effect. Rather, it’s a kind of distributed convergence, arising from many meme-users making local decisions about what works, what lands, and what’s worth repeating.
Attractors, then, are not static units—they are trajectories of value and form that gain inertia over time.
Why This Matters
Understanding memes as cultural attractors lets us move beyond the idea of “viral content” as random luck or sheer visibility. It helps us see:
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Why certain meme-types persist and others don’t
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How cultural values become stabilised in form
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How meme ecologies organise around symbolic gravity wells
And most importantly, it shows that meaning is not just a matter of expression—but of orientation in relation to cultural forces.
Coming Up Next
In our next post, we’ll ask a deeper question: What is the ontology of a meme-type? If memes are not physical objects or Platonic forms, what kind of thing are they? We’ll explore meme-types as relational configurations—dynamic potentials instantiated through interaction.