Citations:Tumblrista


 * 2016, Ryan M. Milner, The World Made Meme: Public Conversations and Participatory Media, Cambridge/: The MIT Press, ISBN 9780262034999, chapter 3: “Vernacular: Everyday Expression in the Memetic Lingua Franca”, page :
 * "en"

- Even massive, diverse sites like YouTube have a core of self-identifying collectivist participants. Shifman says of memetic remix videos on the site that “uploading such videos may thus serve as another way to maintain the links underscoring a huge and highly heterogenic crowd” (2013, 371). Out of these spaces emerge folktales (like 4chan’s “Chip Chan,” who broadcasts her life over webcam and is purportedly a prisoner in her own home, monitored by a deranged police officer), landmark events (like Reddit’s 2013 “mystery vault,” which had participants guessing what could be inside a safe found in a redditor’s basement), and even stereotypes (like denigrations of the “social justice warriors” and “tumblrista feminists” associated with Tumblr).


 * ibidem, page :
 * "en"

- One well-circulated 4chan screen capture alleges that the way Reddit uses image memes is like making a cake “composed entirely of frosting.” In return, some participants on Reddit critique the regressive reputation of 4chan. Others on Reddit critique the progressive reputation of Tumblr (here they’re joined by vocal participants on 4chan, which also houses critiques of “tumblristas” and “tumblrinas”).


 * 2016, Lauren Southern, Barbarians: How The Baby Boomers, Immigration, and Islam Screwed My Generation:
 * Sounding like a less hysterical but still incomprehensible version of your average Tumblrista, Marcuse wrote an essay called “Repressive Tolerance”
 * 2016, Conor Thompson, "An open letter to His Majesty", The Michigan Daily (The University of Michigan), 14 October 2016, page 4:
 * Shame on you for implying that people's identities are less legitimate because the pronouns that come with them aren't "real English words" (for the record, language is defined by usage, and the first recorded use of gender-neutral third-person pronounces was in 1884, so this has nothing to do with “Tumblristas,” “feminazis” or whatever other ridiculous straw-man is in vogue these days).