A meme is an idea that spreads autonomously through social groups. Memes are more than just a community’s inside jokes; they can help articulate a widely felt feeling, catalyze social change, inform the development and evolution of a culture, and more. Creating and spreading memes have been an important part of rolequeer culture since its inception and continue to be used often for the purposes of satirizing and critiquing the overculture. Mimesis is the quality of memetic replication. Rolequeers generally prioritize mimetics over attribution:
A closely related concept to memes in rolequeer theory is what some rolequeer theorists call “idea sex.”
I ruptured and reconstituted myself an intellisexual cyborg who thrived on the orgiastic exchange of conceptions rather than bodily fluids, a kind of idea-sex in which hyperlinks are sex toys. (Probably strap-ons.) My persona is now so thoroughly projected on the thin surface of cyberspace that I feel offering you this digitized dossier has cost me the depth of my life. Yet it has also rewarded me with a kind of awkward attractiveness I could not attain when decoupled from my electronic prosthetics.
By the same reasoning, it is also no accident that I am a brutal critic of the BDSM Scene at this moment in history, nor that I would critique it using the lore of radical transparency, diversity, and accessibility—all gleaned from techno-privileged open sources. For all intents and purposes, I am the illegitimate offspring of The Scene and The State at a time when the literary telepathic non-magic of the Internet threatens them both. And, still borrowing from Haraway, “illegitimate offspring are often exceedingly unfaithful to their origins. Their fathers, after all, are inessential.”
—maymay (source)