This paper offers a phenomenological analysis of the "Italian brainrot" phenomenon, a genre of internet content characterised by chimeric visual figures paired with nonsense pseudo-Italian vocalisations. Rather than approaching this phenomenon through the dominant frameworks of media studies (simulation, attention economy, algorithmic capture), I argue for a return to the things themselves: the pre-predicative bodily attunement that explains why these sounds and these images grip, while countless others dissipate. Drawing on Merleau-Ponty's ontology of flesh, Husserl's analysis of internal time-consciousness, and Heidegger's notion of Gelassenheit, I propose that Italian brainrot performs a "hermeneutic epochē," a suspension of the compulsion to interpret, while simultaneously disclosing what I call the "carnal a priori": the body's pre-linguistic attunement to phonemic shape. I further argue that the child engaging with brainrot is caught in what I call "double enframing": the platform's algorithmic extraction of attention and the parent's compulsion to surveil and interpret that attention converge on the child as the same gesture from different directions, and brainrot's semantic vacancy resists both simultaneously. Situating this phenomenon within a longer historical arc, from Commedia dell'arte through Dada and Surrealism to contemporary platform aesthetics, I argue against what I call epochal narcissism: the tendency to treat one's own era's nonsense as unprecedented decline. The paper concludes by leaving deliberately open the question of whether this phenomenon constitutes genuine liberation from the hermeneutic attitude or a new mode of technological capture.
Moreno Nourizadeh (Fri,) studied this question.