selfdefined/11ty/definitions/spongebob-case.md
Tatiana Mac d9f2f47bcb
Adds spongebob case (#436)
* Creates spongebob case term

* Additional edits
2021-09-22 16:03:45 -07:00

2.5 KiB

title slug flag defined excerpt speech reading
SpongeBob case spongebob-case
text level
ableist language avoid
true text styling that alternates lowercase and uppercase (often randomly) letters to indicate mockery or sarcasm, or to take a deragatory tone, popularised with a meme of SpongeBob Squarepants where he is deformed. adjective
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Twitter @traependergrast https://twitter.com/traependergrast/status/1296101920608792577?s=20
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Babycenter Community post @aolz https://community.babycenter.com/post/a77147834/psa-this-is-ableist
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Know your meme: Mocking SpongeBob https://knowyourmeme.com/memes/mocking-spongebob
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Wikipedia: Alternating caps https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Alternating_caps

text styling that randomly alternates lowercase and uppercase letters to indicate sarcasm or to take a deragatory tone, popularised with a meme of SpongeBob Squarepants where he is deformed; also known as Mocking SpongeBob, SpongeMock, or alternating caps.

Context

The meme, Mocking SpongeBob or SpongeMock, shows SpongeBob Squarepants in a deformed state (from an episode where SpongeBob is acting like a chicken, with his arms and torso askew). Read more about the meme's evolution. People overlaid text onto this image in the SpongeBob casing, typically in a call and response way to show mockery or a response to mockery.

The meme went viral and gained so much ubiquity that multiple libraries, packages, and online tools were made for people to convert text into SpongeBob case.

Issues

The meme and associated text styling mocks SpongeBob's appearance and erratic speech (implied by the random casing of the text). Disabled people are often abused, harassed, and mocked for their physical appearance, manner of speaking, and neurodivergence.

Further, writing in this way can add unnecessary cognitive load to both screenreader users and sighted readers. Sarcasm and mockery can also be difficult for people with intellectual disabilities, neurodivergent people, and people with anxiety.

Impact

By using and spreading both the meme and text styling, we are perpetuating ableist) language, violence, systems and of harm against Disabled people, regardless of our awareness and/or intent.

Usage Tip

Mockery in general is unkind and unhelpful. To convey sarcasm, closing with "/sarcasm" or "/s" or "🙄" for annoyance are some options to help people distinguish.