Cyberfeminism Now: Hopecore, Cyborgs, and the Platformed Self
Pop Culture, Internet, Feminism, Tech Charlotte Lewis Pop Culture, Internet, Feminism, Tech Charlotte Lewis

Cyberfeminism Now: Hopecore, Cyborgs, and the Platformed Self

There is something distinctly cyberfeminist about hopecore; the strange, dissonant meme format pairing low-resolution animals with WordArt affirmations and early, internet aesthetics. Its visual language recalls the surreal gloss of 1990s desktop environments, evoking a moment when the internet still felt unstable, open, and full of possibility. Yet hopecore is not utopian. It emerges from what Polyester mag describes as a “fragmented soup of life,” in which online culture mirrors a broader social drift toward disarray, and where existentialism and nihilism increasingly underpin everyday experience (Quin, 2026.).

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The Loneliness of Visibility: Crowded but Unseen
Tech, Health & Lifestyle Charlotte Lewis Tech, Health & Lifestyle Charlotte Lewis

The Loneliness of Visibility: Crowded but Unseen

We live in an age of constant exposure. Every scrolling thumb, every tap, every share carries the unspoken promise of being seen. Yet somehow, being seen has become its own kind of invisibility. The feed never ends, the lights never dim. Still, we keep performing, hoping the algorithm looks back.

Our world is built to be watched. We document our trips, our opinions, our outrage. We measure our relevance by the model of our iPhone, as if the upgrade also upgrades us. But attention, as it turns out, is a weak substitute for connection. We are surrounded by images of ourselves and others, but feel increasingly unseen. Real understanding doesn’t come from visibility — it comes from community, from the slow work of being known by others over time. Building that kind of closeness takes effort, and in a culture trained for instant validation, patience feels like a lost art.

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Critical Thinking Is Dying and ChatGPT Is Holding the Knife
Tech, Health & Lifestyle, Pop Culture Charlotte Lewis Tech, Health & Lifestyle, Pop Culture Charlotte Lewis

Critical Thinking Is Dying and ChatGPT Is Holding the Knife

For generations, education has prided itself on more than just memorising facts, but also the ability to think critically, to ask questions, to weigh arguments, and to sit with uncertainty. That habit is now slipping away, and the culprit is not ignorance, but convenience. 

ChatGPT and similar tools offer a sense of quick clarity on demand. They generate paragraphs that flow, essays that read well, and convincing arguments. But fluency is not the same as thought. By outsourcing our thoughts to a machine, we risk losing the very skill education was meant to protect: critical thinking.

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