Consuming Catastrophe PDF
Consuming Catastrophe PDF
Consuming Catastrophe PDF
CATASTROPHE
CONSUMING CATASTROPHE
TIMOTHY RECUBER
TEMPLE UNIVERSITY PRESS
Philadelphia, Pennsylvania 19122
www.temple.edu/tempress
987654321
CONTENTS
Acknowledgments
Conclusion: The Deepwater Horizon Oil Spill and Disasters Still to Come
References
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
Iandhavewriting
been tremendously fortunate to spend the past eight years thinking
about disasters and their media representations, all while
supported by talented advisers, generous colleagues, and loving friends and
family. I owe them all much more than these brief acknowledgments, but at
the very least I want to bear witness to their benevolence.
I began graduate school at the University of Maryland in the fall of 2001
and woke to news of the September 11 attacks the morning after moving into
my first apartment with Jenna Kryszczun, who is now my wife. We moved to
Brooklyn in late August 2005, as I had decided to pursue a doctorate at the
Graduate Center of the City University of New York, and we got our
television hooked up just in time to see the first images of people stranded on
rooftops in an inundated New Orleans after Hurricane Katrina. As we
experienced these and the other disasters covered in this book, Jenna was by
my side at every turn, helping me make sense of this turbulent, tumultuous
world. She has supported me in every imaginable way throughout this project
—as a critic, a proofreader, a benefactor, and a promoter—and without her
this book simply would not have been possible.
At the Graduate Center, Stuart Ewen helped me conceive of this project
in its earliest stages and kept me focused on the bigger picture throughout.
John Torpey provided thoughtful and encouraging comments on my work, as
well as invaluable professional guidance. Sharon Zukin helped shape and
sharpen my theorizing with her keen insights. My work and career have
benefited greatly from the influence and friendship of all three. Others at the
Graduate Center who aided my efforts include Patrick Inglis, who
commented on an early draft of a chapter, and Kristen Van Hooreweghe and
Elizabeth Bullock, who helped me clarify ideas over drinks in our Greenpoint
neighborhood. While I was at the Graduate Center, the New York Public
Library generously provided space in its Wertheim Study for me to pursue
much of my preliminary research.
My colleagues at Queens College supported me as I was finishing my
doctorate and writing the earliest draft of this book, and for their help and
encouragement, Jason Tougaw, Ken Nielsen, and Judith Summerfield
deserve many thanks. In addition, were it not for the care and stewardship of
my intellectual career at its earliest stages provided by my mentors at the
University of Maryland—Lory “Tomni” Dance, Bill Falk, George Ritzer, and
the late Richard Harvey Brown—I would not be a sociologist or an academic
of any kind.
I have learned a great deal about the craft of writing from my colleagues
at the Princeton Writing Program (PWP), where I have taught for the past
five years. Ali Aslam and Rebekah Massengill provided valuable feedback on
drafts and proposals related to this project. I have benefited from the talents
of my fellow lecturers in many discussions, workshops, and presentations at
the PWP offices, and I have been especially fortunate to be able to teach
courses such as my “Witnessing Disaster” seminar to so many bright, young
first-year Princeton students. Their interest in and dedication to this topic
have continually inspired my own.
Parts of Chapter 4 are derived from my article “The Prosumption of
Commemoration: Disasters, Digital Memory Banks, and Online Collective
Memory,” American Behavioral Scientist 56, no. 4 (2012): 531–549. I thank
the anonymous reviewers of that essay and the reviewers of two of my
preliminary essays that also fed into this book: “Disaster Porn!” Contexts 12,
no. 2 (2013): 28–33, and “The Terrorist as Folk Devil and Mass Commodity:
Moral Panics, Risk, and Consumer Culture,” Journal of the Institute of
Justice and International Studies 158 (2009): 158–170. I am also grateful to
the reviewers of this book for their generous and enthusiastic suggestions and
to Micah Kleit for his skilled editorial guidance.
While I have immersed myself for years in tales of disaster and
destruction, I have been constantly surrounded by the love of my wife, my
parents, my brother and brother-in-law, my friends, and especially my
children—Margot and Simon. They remind me every day of the good and
beauty in this world. By understanding disasters and their mass mediation, it
is my hope that we can work to protect that beauty, promote the common
good, and create a more just future for all.
CONSUMING
CATASTROPHE
INTRODUCTION
A DECADE OF DISASTER
Despite the rhetorical flourish that this is all “more than we can let
ourselves imagine,” such imagination is precisely what the quote encourages
from its readers. Indeed, the passage makes the case that these victims’
stories are valuable because of the sort of personal, empathetic reflection they
engender. While such engagement with the suffering of others is not
necessarily, as some critics would have it, insincere or voyeuristic, the irony
of disaster consumption resides in the fact that the catastrophes and crises
experienced as the most real, the most harrowing, the most authentic contain
the greatest potential for steering or manipulating public opinion. Indeed, the
most seemingly authentic disasters ultimately can have the most inauthentic
political ends. At the very least, the harrowing spectacle of mass-mediated
disaster provides no guarantee that institutions will take the appropriate
measures to safeguard us from future calamities. Far from it.
Instead, the assumption that consuming catastrophe allows us to learn
from these tragedies and improve ourselves and our society as a result is
often shattered when the next disaster strikes. For example, another New York
Times editorial took the occasion of the four-year anniversary of the
September 11 attacks to ponder Hurricane Katrina’s recent devastation. “It
took a day or two after Hurricane Katrina hit the Gulf Coast to understand
that it could affect our feelings about what happened at the World Trade
Center, at the Pentagon and in rural Pennsylvania” (“Revising 9/11” 2005).
Lamenting the fact that “everyone did not behave well” and “the federal
government was less prepared than it had been” before 9/11, the authors were
forced to revise the “tidy story arc” about 9/11 in which “mistakes were
made, but we would learn from them, and wind up stronger and better
prepared” (“Revising 9/11” 2005).
This shock at the repetition of disasters, this disappointment at the lack
of lessons learned, is a common feature of disaster media. After the Virginia
Tech shootings in 2007, comparisons to the mass shootings at Columbine
High School in 1999 were, of course, commonplace. As the Times once again
exclaimed, “Sympathy was not enough at the time of Columbine, and eight
years later, it is not enough” (“Eight Years after Columbine” 2007). Yet
sympathy and empathy are often all that we, as distant spectators of others’
misfortune, have to give.
The book thus tells the story of how authenticity came to be a crucial
element in the mass-mediation of disaster; how the authenticity of disasters
works in tandem with the rise of empathy as a cultural norm; how empathy is
connected to other emotions, such as fear and trust; how this focus on
empathy for suffering others gets channeled toward the individualistic rather
than the communal; and how this individualism makes disasters amenable to
the manipulation of elites and reactionary forces. Ultimately, it argues that
the ineffability of disasters—their stubborn refusal to provide a full
understanding, or a complete catharsis, to their distant spectators—makes
them a particularly powerful force in contemporary American mass culture.
In fact, this quality encourages a kind of empathetic hedonism, in which the
desire to understand the suffering of others is pursued doggedly, though
always necessarily unsatisfactorily. But how did we arrive at this point?
The contemporary consumption of disaster is itself the product of a
history of shifts in ways of knowing and responding to the suffering of
others. The invention of the printing press first made tales of misfortunes
suffered by distant others available to mass audiences, and discourse on the
appropriate moral and political responses to such suffering has been a feature
of social life since at least the Enlightenment. But the speed, frequency, and
intimacy of our exposure to others’ suffering has increased exponentially
with the growth of consumer culture and the rapid development of a host of
mass-media technologies. Today, audiences and consumers engage with
disasters and tragedies through television news programs, reality television
shows, documentary films, and digital archives, as well as the myriad other
commodities that cater to some aspect of disasters—comic books with
patriotic themes, T-shirts or records that benefit disaster-related charities,
home and office security devices designed to protect against future disasters,
and social networking sites devoted to sharing one’s grief over a mass
tragedy, to name a few examples. Thus, to fully understand the consumption
and mediation of recent disasters such as September 11, Hurricane Katrina,
the Virginia Tech shootings, and the 2008 financial crisis, one must explore
the very development of the modern public sphere, as well as its recent
transformations.
Disaster sociologists might find the grouping together of these events
problematic inasmuch as the social disruption and social changes in
communities affected by these disparate events have varied greatly (see
Quarantelli and Dynes 1977). But the farther one moves away from
victimized communities, or the more distant and mediated one’s experience
of a disaster becomes, then the more likely it becomes that these events will
be experienced through similar cultural frameworks. Although the processes
by which communities respond to and cope with disasters have been expertly
investigated by sociologists such as Kai Erikson (1976, 1994), Eric
Klinenberg (2002), Thomas Drabek (2010), and many others, the effects of
disasters on national audiences who experience them only through media
images and mass commodities remain less thoroughly explored within this
sociological subdiscipline.
Scholars outside the traditions of disaster sociology have debated the
effects of disasters as generators of media, consumption, and capitalism.
Mike Davis (1999) has critiqued the denials about real disasters and
inequality that are embedded in fantastic disaster-themed media, focusing on
the especially disaster-prone city of Los Angeles. Marita Sturken (2007) has
examined the ways in which kitsch consumerism helped construct a “culture
of comfort” that depoliticized the national traumas of the Oklahoma City
bombing and the September 11 attacks. E. Ann Kaplan (2005) has coined the
term “empty empathy” to describe the emotions generated by harrowing
images of war and disaster when the news media fails to adequately
contextualize them. Kevin Rozario (2007) has highlighted the historical
development of an American perspective on disasters in which they are seen
as opportunities for both spiritual renewal and capitalist expansion. And the
current neoliberal manifestation of this perspective may be the “shock
doctrine” described by Naomi Klein (2007), in which elites in business and
government depend on, and in some cases engineer, crises and catastrophes
to shock the public into accepting aggressive and exploitative privatization
schemes. Yet her account neglects the fact that, rather than shocked public
acquiescence to elite schemes and frameworks, disasters often trigger
spontaneous outpourings of nationalist sentiment, expressed through diverse
forms of mass media and mass consumption, in support of many expansions
of neoliberal governance.
One form of mass media has long been a focal point for these types of
debates: the photograph. A deep discomfort with photographs of suffering
emerged as early as 1945, when images of World War II and the Holocaust
began to be labeled “pornographic” (Dean 2004). The effects of such so-
called pornographic imagery were often believed to be a kind of deadening or
flattening of audience engagement. John Berger has suggested that
photographs of conflicts such as those in Vietnam or Northern Ireland
became commonplace only once newspaper editors realized that their
supposed radicalizing effect was “not what it was once presumed to be”
(Berger 1991, 38). But if their effects on audiences were limited, such
photographs nonetheless left their producers and consumers open to charges
of exploitation. In On Photography, Susan Sontag argued that to photograph
a moment of pain or trauma was “to be in complicity with … another
person’s pain or misfortune” (Sontag 1990, 12). Later, Arthur and Joan
Kleinman reminded readers that “images of trauma are part of our political
economy. Papers are sold, television programs gain audience share, careers
are advanced, jobs are created, and prizes awarded through the appropriation
of images of suffering” (Kleinman and Kleinman 1996, 8).
These arguments certainly present a moral dilemma for the consumers of
such images, who may be sympathetic to others’ suffering but wary of
exacerbating or exploiting it. Yet these critiques of photography, and the
larger media culture in which it is embedded, may be overestimating the ill
effects of mass-mediated pain. Sontag herself came to revise her position on
these matters, writing that “such images cannot be more than an invitation to
pay attention, to reflect, to learn” (Sontag 2003, 117). She went on to provide
an interesting rationale for criticisms such as her earlier ones: “The
frustration of not being able to do anything about what the images show may
be translated into an accusation of the indecency of regarding such images, or
the indecencies of the way such images are disseminated—flanked, as they
may well be, by advertising for emollients, pain relievers, and SUVs. If we
could do something about what the images show, we might not care so much
about these issues” (Sontag 2003, 117). These remarks offer an alternative
take on consumer culture’s relation to suffering and disaster and the ethical
condemnations surrounding them. Seen in this light, the consumption of
catastrophe signifies less of a flattening of interest or emotion than a
frustration with distant audiences’ fundamentally limited possibilities for
understanding and action. No matter how intimate their images, or how
spectacular their broadcasts, disasters remain immeasurably complex, and
others’ suffering remains, in a way, inscrutable to its distant observers.
Nonetheless, as the phrase “consuming catastrophe” suggests, I believe
that consumption is an appropriate rubric with which to assess and understand
the predominant ways of experiencing crisis and catastrophe today. Raymond
Williams (1985, 78) has pointed out that the earliest English uses of the word
“consume” came with negative connotations of destruction, using up, or
wasting. In this sense, the consumption of disaster refers not only to the fact
that disaster-related products, services, and media are increasingly available
for purchase but also to the fact that the heavily mediated experience of
disaster in a consumer society involves using up the raw material of human
tragedy, devouring the spectacular, tragic, and even the mundane aspects of
catastrophes. Although the suffering they caused may persist, and the work of
rebuilding may remain undone, once disasters lose their novelty or their
resonance, one can expect to see fewer reminders of them on the evening
news, in TV or magazine advertisements, and on the shelves of stores.
The raw material that gets consumed in this process of covering,
packaging, and consuming a disaster is its authenticity. The contemporary
usage of authenticity is generally fraught with contradictory interpretations,
but I take authenticity to refer to the perceived quality of being unique,
genuine, or, for lack of a better term, real. Although the difference between
authentic and inauthentic sometimes seems natural—a home-cooked meal
with locally produced ingredients seems more authentic than a meal at a fast-
food chain, just as live news footage of a flooded New Orleans seems more
authentic than a Hollywood disaster film—authenticity ultimately refers to
subjective, aesthetic distinctions rather than to any quality intrinsic to
commodities, texts, or images. It is a social construct, but one that reveals
much about American values, desires, and fears. Disasters tend to attract
large numbers of viewers and consumers based on the perception that they
are much more real than the rest of what is available in contemporary media
culture. Each disaster strikes us as new and immediate, creative in its unique
pattern of destruction. Yet each also strikes primal emotional chords and
reminds us of ancient calamities. What is more, we know that disasters affect
real people and real communities and that ‘but for the grace of God’ we could
be victims of a similar fate.
In consumer culture today, such perceived authenticity is incredibly
valuable and highly sought after by all sorts of companies precisely because
it can inspire powerful emotional responses from otherwise jaded or detached
audiences. For instance, the management consultants Jim Gilmore and Joe
Pine have published a widely read guide entitled Authenticity: What
Consumers Really Want that teaches companies how to “manage the
perceptions of real and fake held by the consumers of your enterprise’s
output—because people increasingly make purchase decisions based on how
real or fake they perceive various offerings” (Gilmore and Pine 2007, xi).
Scholars such as Sarah Banet-Weiser (2012) have tracked the results of this
increasing commercial focus on the somewhat nebulous notion of
authenticity. Her research confirms that “in the US, the 21st Century is an age
that hungers for anything that feels authentic, just as we lament more and
more that it is a world of inauthenticity, that we are governed by
superficiality” (Banet-Weiser 2012, 3).
How, then, to study such consumption of authenticity? This book
focuses on the texts that are consumed during and after disasters, especially
those associated with factual media, including news, documentary films,
reality television programs, and digital archives. At times throughout the
book, these sources will be supplemented with discussions of other products,
services, and experiences associated with disasters, but the main analytic
focus of each chapter is on a small sample of media texts. After an initial
chapter focusing on the history of disaster-related media, each subsequent
chapter compares texts from two different disasters in the hope of drawing
out the common themes between them and highlighting the differences
among them.
The aim of this approach is to identify the larger meanings and
prevailing cultural norms at work in disaster-related mass culture. Certainly,
any particular text will generate some alternative readings as individual
audience members decode it in oppositional or idiosyncratic ways (see S.
Hall 1980). Still, at a minimum, one can say that media texts reflect the ideas,
norms, and values at work in the culture that produced them. The fact that a
number of news broadcasts, films, advertisements, television shows, and
websites reflect the same small set of norms and values across a variety of
different disasters tells us at least that these ideas were meaningful influences
on the lives of many viewers and consumers. As such, analyzing the texts
through which Americans experienced the disasters of the past decade can
tell us about the norms that guided these experiences.
Of course, too many texts were produced around the four major disasters
covered here to allow for a comprehensive sampling of them. Even a single
disaster such as September 11 generated so much media that a vast array of
scholarship has been devoted just to analyzing the mass media and popular
culture around it (see, e.g., Chermak, Bailey, and Brown 2003; Heller 2005;
Izard and Perkins 2011). But focusing only on September 11 has the potential
to reinforce some flawed conventional wisdom about the uniqueness of that
disaster relative to any other tragic or catastrophic events; this is often
expressed as the idea that September 11 “changed everything.” By contrast,
situating September 11 in a long history of mass-mediated disasters, then
comparing it with the disasters that immediately proceeded it, exposes the
larger normative structures at work around many different instances of mass
mediated suffering, and the continuities between these cases.
This book uses several text-based methods of inquiry to uncover these
continuities. Chapter 2 employs close reading of the narratives at work in
four different texts—two news broadcasts, a documentary film, and a reality
television program. “Narrative texts are packed with sociological
information” (Franzosi 1998, 517), and a close reading of these four texts
shows how narratives about suffering, misfortune, and violence get told in
ways that are meaningful but also problematic. Chapters 3 and 4 use the
methods of discourse analysis to investigate television news broadcasts and
users’ submissions to digital archives, respectively. In both cases, my
analysis focuses on the ways the texts offer “cues in the process of
interpretation” (Fairclough 1989, 24). What scholars engaged in the
somewhat overlapping practices of content analysis, discourse analysis, or
“ethnographic content analysis” (Altheide 1996) all have in common is the
use of documents to systematically “understand the process and meaning of
social activities” (Altheide 1996, 10). The study of texts and discourses can
reveal “how ways of talking in a society simultaneously reflect, constitute,
and reproduce social organization … cultural beliefs … and norms about
everyday living” (Grimshaw 2001, 752). It can even expose the ways “more
powerful groups in society can influence less powerful groups through
cultural models” (Gee 1999, 66). These are the central concerns of this book.
As mentioned, the wide variety of disasters covered here, and the
incredible number of texts representing these disasters that might be studied,
mean that any sampling of texts will necessarily be quite partial. There is no
scientific way to ensure that the sample analyzed here is representative of the
whole. However, in this book, as is common with discourse analytic methods,
I have attempted to keep my interpretations closely aligned with those of the
texts’ authors. I have also attempted to present to the reader many direct
quotations from the texts being analyzed. Both of these elements serve as
checks on the reliability of discourse analytic work such as this (see Potter
1996). Still, rather than traditional social science notions of generalizability
based on random sampling and large sample sizes, the types of qualitative
and textual interpretation in this book might best be understood as aiming for
“transferability.” The term “implies that the results of the research can be
transferred to other contexts and situations beyond the scope of the study”
(Jensen 2008, 887). The way researchers typically establish transferability is
to “describe the context of the case/situation in sufficient detail, so that the
receiver has an appropriate base to make a judgment” (Hellström 2008, 327).
Indeed, “it is the responsibility of the inquirer to provide sufficient base to
permit a person contemplating application in another receiving situation to
make a judgment of similarity” (Lincoln and Guba 1985, 360). My approach,
then, has been to provide a chapter’s worth of historical context in order to
situate the present cases. Within each chapter, I have aimed to provide
enough background information on the disasters and the texts analyzed to
convince readers that the themes and meanings I uncover are present across
these cases and even potentially in cases that have not been studied here.
Such attention to historical context helps reveal that the public appetite
for mass-mediated disasters, and the taste for disaster representations that are
both undeniably real and spectacularly unfamiliar, are important if somewhat
overlooked elements of modernity itself. For instance, although the ancient
destruction of Pompeii left behind only a single eyewitness account, the
rediscovery and excavation of the city in the eighteenth century helped
inspire a host of commodities, from silverware and pottery mimicking ancient
styles to novels dramatizing Pompeii’s last days. Coupled with a devastating
earthquake in Lisbon, Portugal, in 1755, these disasters helped steer
Enlightenment thought toward new understandings of natural disasters that
were secular, scientific, and even occasionally romantic. Subsequent
technological developments in mass production and communication
continued to stoke public appetites for tales and artifacts of disaster, but the
twentieth-century critique of modern culture as conformist and inauthentic
really set the stage for disasters to achieve their contemporary status as
uniquely valuable carriers of authenticity. Walter Benjamin believed that new
forms of mass-producible media, such as photography and film, had
eliminated the authentic existence in a particular time and place characteristic
of the “aura” of older forms of art (Benjamin 1969), while other members of
the Frankfurt school assailed the mass deceptions of the burgeoning “culture
industry” of the 1940s (Horkheimer and Adorno [1944] 2002). But
Benjamin’s earlier writings on the topic portrayed the aura as a sort of specter
of reality that haunted its photographic reproductions (Duttlinger 2008; see
also Benjamin 1999). Thus, one may understand the aura of disaster as the
haunting traces of the real still captured in its many representations. These
traces attract a consumer culture in thrall to such authenticity yet are also
always already in decay as media coverage and mass commodification begin
to transform the disaster into spectacle, kitsch, morality play, or political
platform.
Much of mass-media spectatorship and mass consumption today
involves an exercise in determining the authenticity or genuineness of people,
products, or experiences—be they reality television stars (Andrejevic 2004;
Rose and Wood 2005), tourist sites (Grayson and Martinec 2004),
automobiles (Leigh, Peters, and Shelton 2006), ethnic handicrafts (Wherry
2006), jeans and sneakers (Botterill 2007), or urban neighborhoods (Zukin
2008, 2010). In this same sense, audiences and consumers are tasked with
assessing the authenticity of disaster-related texts and commodities and
balancing potentially inauthentic aspects, such as their mass-produced, for-
profit nature, against the seemingly undeniable kernel of real loss and pain
with which they have been imbued. The results of those assessments of
authenticity tend to determine the level of socially acceptable economic,
emotional, or political investment in these texts and products. Judging from
the sheer amount of disaster-related media and consumption that is discussed
in this book, it appears that although there are a variety of competing
standards concerning the authenticity of disaster-related media and products,
there is certainly no blanket, normative prohibition against the consumption
of catastrophe. For instance, watching the digital videos created by the
Virginia Tech killer Seung-Hui Cho on network television news offered an
authentic, uncensored glimpse into the mind of an alienated young killer for
some viewers or, perhaps, a chance to understand and prevent future school
shootings, while for others the broadcast smacked of a sensationalist ratings
grab that resulted in the glorification of a murderer. In any case, such ethical
debates concerning disaster mediation tend to coalesce today around the
theme of authenticity and the appropriate emotional responses to such
authentic depictions of suffering and pain.
This process of assessing the authenticity and trustworthiness of media
texts also helps audiences and consumers determine their levels of
apprehension over looming risks and future threats. The “risk society” first
envisioned by Ulrich Beck (1992) and Anthony Giddens (1990, 1991)
appears to operate affectively as much as rationally and often in a kind of
retrospective fashion. Rather than being informed of potential disasters and
then acting preventatively, governments, media, and consumers often seem to
only really appreciate a threat that has already materialized as a spectacular
catastrophe. Social responses to such disasters thus tend to look backward, in
an almost nostalgic panic, with the aim of preventing a recurrence of the
same disaster rather than proactively anticipating new and different ones. The
deployment of media frames—persistent discursive principles that structure
social reality and create shared cultural meanings (Reese 2003)—can inspire
widespread public acceptance of government risk claims in the wake of a
disaster or engender fierce political opposition to official policy proposals. In
either case, public understandings of risks and their possible prevention in the
future both rely on and shape normative codes concerning the spectacles of
real suffering generated by mass-mediated disasters. Trust in the risk
assessments of government officials, technical experts, media icons, and
other authority figures is thus a heavily mediated and highly emotional
process.
This affective component of disaster representation, mediation, and
consumption has been somewhat neglected by mainstream sociology. For
instance, sociologists who study disasters have long disputed the
conventional wisdom that mass panic is the usual public response to
disasters, especially on the ground in affected communities (Quarantelli
2001; Tierney 2007). But while it is true that disaster-struck communities
tend to exhibit a whole host of positive, pro-social responses, it does not
mean that mass-media accounts of disaster may not inspire panic in distant
spectators who are less directly affected. Divorced from the kinds of
sustaining, ad hoc, local communities that maintain order and provide support
during and in the immediate aftermath of disasters (see Solnit 2009), those
who merely consume distressing stories and images at a distance may be
more likely to take drastic measures or respond with overwrought emotional
displays. Of course, mass media today tend to operate in crisis mode at all
times, even over seemingly trivial matters (McRobbie and Thornton 1995),
making the shock and immediacy of disaster-related stories an overly familiar
style of communication, and thus potentially contributing to the onset of what
has come to be known as “compassion fatigue” (Moeller 1999). However,
American audiences of disasters have demonstrated over the past decade that
distant or unaffected spectators are likely to feel that they too have been
vicariously traumatized and thus enfranchised to participate in mass-mediated
rituals of commemoration, or to claim the social and political status of victim
(see Kaplan 2005; Savage 2006).
Such vicarious emotional connections to disasters and their distant
victims are increasingly common today, and one of the most powerful,
emergent norms in this regard is the obligation to show empathy toward those
directly affected. Media texts have particular ways to present the suffering of
others, designed to draw out these reactions, which engender a kind of
empathetic gaze rooted in reality television but now transcending that genre.
This stylized or idealized empathy for the suffering of distant others is
rehearsed today even in non-disaster-related media programming, but it is
particularly prevalent when large-scale tragedies result not only in live
television news broadcasts but also in the many commemorative events and
product sales that are supposed to benefit those distant others. Consuming
such experiences and products marks one as a moral person with the capacity
to understand the pain of others. Unlike classical forms of Enlightenment
sympathy, however, in which detached spectators sought to actually alleviate
the suffering of unfortunate others whose causes they found worthy, the
empathy on display when one buys a Virginia Tech T-shirt or a record that
benefits New Orleans musicians, or when one watches television programs
devoted to these disasters, seems to be as much about self-improvement as
about the improvement of the conditions of those who are less fortunate. This
can be thought of as a kind of empathetic hedonism inasmuch as there is
pleasure to be gained in attempting to imagine what others are feeling—even
if those feelings are painful. This is not to say that such consumption is not
driven by sincere concern for disaster victims, but simply that mass culture
tends to direct such concern toward viewing habits and consumption
practices that help the self-image of the viewer or purchaser at least as much
as they help any disaster-stricken communities.
The consumption of disaster thus encourages a kind of “political
anesthesia” (Szasz 2007) that reduces one’s ability to recognize the collective
solutions to problems, as well as one’s willingness to work toward them. As
Andrew Szasz (2007, 4) puts it, “A person who buys some products because
those products promise to shield them from trouble is not at that moment a
political actor. He or she is, instead, in the modality of a consumer.” While
that distinction may be too sharp, the authentically threatening quality of
disasters does often nurture a paradoxically fantastic desire to secure the
safety of oneself and one’s family through private acts of consumerism.
These fantasies are often backward-looking; they envision the next disaster as
a similar chain of events that, having recently happened, is actually unlikely
to happen again due either to officialdom’s new awareness of the problem or
simply to the remote odds of two similar disasters happening in such close
succession. Of course, in the current American political moment of ascendant
neoliberal governance, such individualistic strategies of preventative
consumption may constitute the only measures being taken on one’s behalf.
These atomizing tendencies of consumerism have even fed back into
norms surrounding creative new forms of online experience. Rather than
promoting a simple one-way consumption of information, the Internet
increasingly encourages various types of digital content co-creation, which
are often referred to as prosumption because they blur traditional distinctions
between producers and consumers. New forms of media witnessing that rely
on raw, incidentally recorded footage of disasters and tragedies may at times
disrupt elite news framing strategies (Frosh and Pinchevski 2014; McCosker
2013). And new sites of collective memory such as digital archives and
online memorials similarly empower consumers to become active, creative
collaborators in the process of memorializing disasters. Yet despite the
communal nature of many online efforts at commemoration, the messages
collected there are frequently exercises in therapeutic self-help, in which the
act of reading or writing a message serves as a form of psychic healing for
oneself rather than for the community of other contributors. Such digital
forms of commemoration can also end up encouraging a kind of nationalistic
pride concerning the nostalgic or heroic aspects of disaster responses, while
abetting a national forgetting of a disaster’s more shameful elements and the
persistent social inequalities that such disasters often magnify.
This book seeks, then, to develop a model of disaster consumption that
holds true across diverse types of contemporary crises or catastrophes. In this
model, a disaster and the texts and commodities it generates stand out from
the normal flow of mass media and popular culture because they are
generally perceived as more authentic. This authenticity allows otherwise
skeptical consumers to invest genuine emotion in the media coverage of the
disaster, as well as in subsequent acts of consumption devoted to displaying
patriotism, securing one’s home, expressing empathy, enacting therapeutic
self-help, or any of the other goals and motivations of disaster consumerism.
It also encourages many of the kinds of economic or political “capitalizing”
described earlier in this Introduction. As time passes and images and
commodities from the disaster become increasingly commonplace, one sees a
disaster’s authenticity itself become increasingly consumed or used up. In
this period, with its aura of sacredness diminished, critical, oppositional, or
ironic responses to the disaster become more socially acceptable, and the risk
claims and emotional reactions that the disaster had inspired become subject
to retrospective scrutiny. This has certainly been the case with September 11
—writers at Time and Vanity Fair declared an end to the “age of irony” in the
weeks following the attacks (Nunberg 2001), but less than a decade later,
satirical pieces such as The Onion’s were fairly commonplace. Still, a trace of
that reality, an aura, tends to haunt disaster texts and commodities long after
those tragic events have dulled in our memories.
That is not to say, however, that all disasters are perceived as equally
authentic. Implicit in the very act of witnessing others’ suffering—or, at least,
in the use of the term “witnessing” to describe some kind of direct or
mediated experience of suffering—is a value judgment on what kinds of
experiences, media, and rhetoric are more truthful, objective, or genuine (J.
D. Peters 2001). Although there is always a degree of uncertainty about the
veracity of any testimony, John Durham Peters reminds us that society tends
to privilege “being there” over simply watching an event unfold via live
media transmission or visiting the site where an event transpired in the past.
When one merely watches the recording of an already transpired event, he
argues, “the attitude of witnessing is hardest to sustain” (J. D. Peters 2001,
720). While the description of a hierarchy of witnessing and spectatorship is a
useful starting point, the research in this book suggests that even recordings
of disaster or disaster-related souvenirs can be weighted with much the same
historicity as actual disaster sites and genuine artifacts. Such a connection to
real human suffering, in fact, is another way to understand what makes
disaster-related media and commodities appear genuine in the first place. For
this reason, our understandings of these phenomena need to move beyond the
assumption that a spectator’s spatial or temporal distance from an event
necessarily limits the authenticity of his or her experiences and emotions.
The geographical distance of spectators is, after all, largely immaterial
when they are subject to the kinds of “disaster marathon” (Blondheim and
Liebes 2002; Liebes 1998) television coverage in which normal routines and
programming are dropped in favor of a spontaneous focus on calamitous
events across multiple channels and platforms. The communication scholars
Elihu Katz and Tamar Liebes argue that media coverage of disasters and
accidents has become more influential today than coverage of staged “media
events” such as coronation ceremonies and athletic contests. However, they
suggest that these newly ascendant disasters are “disruptive” forces, “out of
the reach of establishment control” (Katz and Liebes 2007, 164), in contrast
to the “integrative” influence of staged and ceremonial media events. This
book suggests otherwise. At least as far as distant audiences and consumers
are concerned, the most seemingly disruptive, destructive, shocking, and
unprecedented disasters may exert the most integrative, unifying influence,
and provide the most leverage for elites looking to profit from the apparent
chaos. And that fact makes them all the more dangerous.
1
A HISTORY OF CATASTROPHE
[I] went dreaming among the trees … of this city which perished …
till a shrill whistle and the cry of “All aboard—last train to Naples!”
reminded me that I belonged to the 19th century, and [that I] was
not a dusty mummy, caked with cinders and ashes, 1,800 years old.
The transition was startling. The idea of a railroad train actually
running to old dead Pompeii, and whistling irreverently, and calling
for passengers in the most bustling and business-like way, was as
strange a thing as one could imagine, and as unpoetical and
disagreeable as it was strange. (Quoted in Pellegrino 2004, 147)
Bealer also described her experience as one of empathy. She lauded this
powerful sentiment and wrote, “As intense of an emotion as empathy is, I
never regret being able to feel it. In my opinion, empathy is an emotion that
connects us to each other. How else would we begin to understand the pain of
others without actually feeling it” (Bealer 2007, para. 13)?
Of course, her question need not be taken rhetorically. The pain of others
has not always been apprehended in the ways that American culture
encourages us to experience it today. Disasters have obviously always evoked
strong emotions in those they have directly affected, as well as in those who
have watched from afar or who have learned of them after the fact; bearing
witness to the misfortunes of others has always had the potential to generate a
feeling of commiseration and a desire to help those unfortunate others. But
the precise nature of this feeling and the socially appropriate forms of help
have changed over time. As disasters have assumed a prominent role in
contemporary popular culture, and as the news media have developed the
ability to transmit footage of mass catastrophes across the globe almost
instantaneously, the norms surrounding emotion and the spectatorship of
suffering have adapted and evolved. Alternative “structures of feeling”
(Williams 1977) and new “emotional regimes” (Reddy 2001) have appeared
to challenge the prevailing norms and rituals governing emotional expression
in today’s heavily mediated and consumed experience of disasters.
When contrasted with Enlightenment ideals of emotional expression, and
even with more recent examples of mass-mediated emotion in the wake of
tragic events, American mass culture in the first decade of the twenty-first
century encouraged a more intimate form of spectatorship focused on an in-
depth understanding and vicarious experience of the emotional pain of others.
Certainly, all media bring the experiences of others closer to us and thus can
surely be experienced as intimate or in-depth. For instance, an iconic war
photograph such as “Accidental Napalm” intimately exposed viewers to the
intense suffering of a Vietnamese child. Similarly, a radio broadcast such as
Herbert Morrison’s infamous narration of the explosion of the Hindenburg
captured in the subtle, audible details of his voice the despair of witnessing
that tragedy. Nonetheless, recent technological developments such as
camcorders and smart phones have the potential to do more than even this.
They can bring us the innermost thoughts of disaster victims, recorded as the
disaster unfolded in the midst of their struggle to survive. They can even
reveal the last words of a mass murderer, spoken directly to his own camera
and broadcast across the globe a mere two days after his murderous rampage
ended in suicide. In such texts, and in more mundane forms of contemporary
media, a new empathetic way of looking is both encouraged and implicated.
Scholars such as Alison Landsberg argue that such media engagement can
force audiences to empathize with others who are radically different from
themselves and might therefore encourage “more radical forms of democracy
aimed at advancing egalitarian social goals” (Landsberg 2009, 221). But is
the empathetic, mediated engagement with disasters necessarily so
democratic or egalitarian?
This chapter examines the cultural products that emerged from
Hurricane Katrina and the Virginia Tech shootings, paying specific attention
to the codes surrounding emotional expression that they exhibit. After a
general overview of the consumption and mediation of both disasters, the
chapter focuses on four particular media products that exemplify current
trends. A close reading of the September 1, 2005, broadcast of CNN’s
Anderson Cooper 360 Degrees (AC 360) and the documentary Trouble the
Water (2008) provides evidence about specific features of the consumption of
disaster during Hurricane Katrina, while the NBC Nightly News broadcast
from April 18, 2007, and an episode of the Biography channel’s show I
Survived, which dealt with the Virginia Tech shootings, offer similar
evidence concerning that tragedy’s mediation.
These two news broadcasts were chosen because of their particular
cultural importance in the unfolding of these disasters, and the two other texts
were selected because of the ways they exemplify the empathy-generating
power of factual media and disaster narratives. For instance, Anderson
Cooper’s highly emotional performance in this particular broadcast was
called “a breakthrough for the future of television news” (Van Meter 2005,
para. 1). Similarly, the exclusive broadcast of the Virginia Tech killer Seung-
Hui Cho’s package of self-made footage on NBC Nightly News was largely
unprecedented. As the Washington Post explained, “Until the package arrived
at NBC, the story had almost started following what might be considered a
template for national tragedies, a series of stages that has become
dismayingly familiar: the initial shock; reaction to the event; essays on
historical perspective that keep the story in the forefront of news; and, finally,
criticism of the media for how the story has been played—or, more likely,
overplayed. The Virginia Tech tragedy was clearly about to enter that last
phase when the prototype was shattered, and in a uniquely 21st-century way”
(Shales 2007, para. 12–13). The I Survived series has been lauded for its
focus on “real people and candor” and for the unique and inspirational nature
of the “raw humanity” it portrays in its stark depictions of near-death
experiences (Courson 2009, para. 1–2). Finally, Trouble the Water’s
emotional focus on real people and the authenticity of their encounters with
disaster has led critics to proclaim that “only the most heartless of individuals
would fail to empathize with the victims” (“‘Trouble the Water’ Examines
Katrina Aftermath” 2008, para. 9).
In these four programs, aesthetic and technological cues about the
authenticity of media texts served as de facto evidence of the personal,
emotional authenticity of their producers and audiences, as well as the
performances of the subjects on screen. Moreover, these cultural products
announced a change in notions of spectatorship relative to classical
discussions concerning the moral ramifications of the suffering of others.
Whereas classical notions of sympathy required one to act or speak out on
behalf of the suffering other, these texts evinced a shift away from sympathy
and toward empathy as the moral responsibility of the spectator. This chapter
argues that as mass mediation has increased the amount of attention paid to
tragedies and catastrophes, and as therapeutic culture has placed increasing
value on emotional intelligence and the ability to adapt to multiple roles or
identities, and as reality television has cemented intimate new styles of
viewing others’ emotional lives, a new empathetic gaze has emerged. This
empathetic way of relating to narratives of others’ suffering, which prioritizes
simply understanding what others are going through, has developed as a kind
of alternative to an older, sympathetic moral requirement that more explicitly
linked such understanding with concrete action to help alleviate the suffering
of others. The narratives examined here still “create a particular kind of social
world, with specified heroes and villains, deserving and undeserving people
and … the construction of social problems” (Bennett and Edelman 1985,
157). Yet this chapter argues that the empathetic way of looking at social
problems may steer us away from the kinds of long-term actions that such
problems often require.
In sum, the four texts analyzed in this chapter all rely on a way of
looking at others’ suffering that is designed to induce empathy in spectators.
The presence of this empathetic gaze points to the growing normative value
placed on empathizing with others’ suffering in contemporary American
culture at large. This emergent norm and the forms of mass culture that
embody it encourage spectators to try to really feel what others have felt, to
vicariously experience the pain of others. But by lauding this kind of deep,
intimate engagement with the suffering of distant others, and the concurrent
performance of having been moved by it, the empathetic gaze places less
importance on correcting the social and political conditions that facilitated
such suffering in the first place.
For the last four days, I’ve been seeing dead bodies in the streets
here in Mississippi. And to listen to politicians thanking each other
and complimenting each other, you know, I’ve got to tell you, there
are a lot of people here who are very upset, and very angry, and
very frustrated. And when they hear politicians slap—you know,
thanking one another, it just, you know, it kind of cuts them the
wrong way right now, because literally there was a body on the
streets of this town yesterday being eaten by rats because this
woman had been laying in the street for 48 hours. And there’s not
enough facilities to take her up. Do you get the anger that is out
here?
Interestingly, although the interview began with a question about the material
inadequacy of the government’s response, the substance of Cooper’s anger at
Landrieu involved the emotional inadequacy of her personal response, which
he felt did not reflect the gravity of the situation and was insufficiently
sensitive to the suffering of those on the ground—including himself. The
visual elements of the exchange reflected this imbalance of empathy. While
Landrieu was thanking politicians, CNN cut to aerial shots of flooded
swampland and overturned boats, then back to the senator on dry ground in
front of a government building with people leisurely talking in groups behind
her and SUVs driving in and out of the frame. In contrast to the pristinely
made up Landrieu, Cooper was filmed with his sleeves rolled up, in front of a
giant pile of debris and wooden planks that used to be houses.
Later in the program, Cooper offered himself as an example of a
properly empathetic emotional response to such suffering. The show
broadcast footage of a family in a pickup truck parked in front of piles of
wooden beams, an overturned boat, and other debris while the white men and
girls in the back of the truck held up a torn and muddy American flag for the
camera. The camera cut back to Cooper, who began to explain the footage in
very emotional, therapeutic terms, stating, “We are seeing things like this,
just an outpouring of love and care for, uh, for people in this community, and
people in this community are helping one another, and standing by one
another. There has been some looting, yeah, but uh, but uh, well …” At that
point, Cooper appeared to wave to the people in the truck who were off-
camera, then tried to resume speaking, with an obvious lump in his throat.
His voice cracked as he sputtered out another “um,” then he paused and
looked away from the camera for three or four seconds of dead air as he tried
to compose himself, clearly fighting off tears. Excusing himself to the
audience for his emotional outburst with a quick “sorry,” he preceded then to
the next segment.
This moment of dead air and choked emotion had a big impact on
audiences and media critics alike. During this first week of hurricane
coverage, viewership of AC 360 increased by 400 percent (Van Meter 2005).
Cooper was hailed for his empathy, for allowing viewers a peak behind the
news anchor veneer to his genuine humanity. Even before the hurricane,
Cooper had been regarded as a new breed of “emoanchor,” an exemplar of “a
reality TV ‘authenticity,’ with human dimensions, rather than the stentorian,
scripted authority of the network era” (Hagan 2005, para. 11). But his
reaction to the suffering of Hurricane Katrina’s victims cemented that
position and seemed to confirm a shift in expectations about the emotional
responses of the news media to tragic events. As one commentator put it,
“Not long ago, television was a no-cry zone. The top newsmen were
celebrated for their emotional control in the face of gut-punching
developments. War, death, terrorism, plague—nothing rattled their
composure… . These days, everywhere you look you see anchors seemingly
on the verge of losing their composure” (Gillette 2009, para. 2, 9). Although
Walter Cronkite famously choked up when he announced President
Kennedy’s death, he later expressed regret, explaining that his momentary
loss of composure had been inappropriate for a news anchor (Lloyd 2009).
Cooper and the new generation of emotional cable news personalities like
him are largely unrepentant about their on-air displays of emotion (Gillette
2009; Van Meter 2005).
But there are limitations to this kind of on-air empathy. Cooper’s
broadcast crew were stationed in the predominantly white suburb of
Waveland, and the anchor’s personal interactions with others took place
there, including his coverage of a husband and wife returning to find that
their home was little more than a pile of wreckage. As the wife picked out
photos and other possessions from the rubble in the background, Cooper
intoned that “reporters are supposed to remain distant observers. There is no
distance in Waveland anymore.” Such a statement, especially as CNN’s
cameras focused uncomfortably closely on this sobbing woman kneeling in
the littered debris that was her home, served to excuse that kind of intensely
intimate coverage of the suffering of others. After all, audiences saw how
moved Cooper had been by the devastation in Waveland and the resilience of
its residents, and he had expressed their anger to Senator Landrieu. Clearly he
had their best interests in mind. But even though emotionally identifying with
the people of Waveland offered some justification for publicly broadcasting
their suffering in intimate detail, it seemed to forestall identification with
slightly more distant others.
Despite Cooper’s attempts to extend the reach of his empathy to the
predominantly African American residents of New Orleans, many of the
segments that focused on the city and its residents were filled with
stereotypes about looting and chaos. There were as many examples of
“othering” as of empathizing, and this fear of violence and lawlessness
loomed large over the entire broadcast. Perhaps because the network lacked
enough footage of this sort of behavior to match the frequency with which the
topic was discussed, at least four different video clips containing antisocial
behavior or violence in New Orleans were broadcast more than once during
this hour-long program. The need to replay these same images of inner-city
chaos should have clued producers in to the potentially overstated quality of
this threat, but it did not. Instead, voiceover narration reframed the reused
footage without acknowledging its previous context. For instance, one shot of
a man with his back to the camera drawing a gun on an apparent looter was
broadcast in black and white at the beginning of the program as the narrator
declared “shop owners armed and dangerous.” Later, when the same footage
was broadcast in color, it became apparent that the gunman was a law
enforcement officer, not a shopkeeper, and the footage was part of a segment
on lawmen “restoring order.” In both cases, the image portrayed an African
American, who may or may not have actually been engaged in illegal
activity, as a kind of inhuman or stereotypical other, the target of a defensive
shopkeeper or a courageous police officer, not a victim himself of the larger
circumstances surrounding the hurricane and its aftermath.
Perhaps the most egregious form of racial othering on this broadcast
came from a series of images of a black man attempting to break into a store.
The footage showed a young, shirtless man with his back to the camera
repeatedly swinging a metal baseball bat into the glass door of what appeared
to be an upscale store or bank. In many ways this young man epitomized the
type of male African American who scares mainstream white America, with
his dark skin and muscular frame and his low-hanging, baggy jeans exposing
the top of his buttocks. As if the subtext about this stereotypical image
needed emphasizing, the voiceover during these images did not describe this
particular man’s story or even talk about looting in conjunction with the
image. Instead, CNN’s Chris Lawrence reported that “some women were
walking by. The police officers told them—ordered them, in fact—that they
could not go down one particular street, told them that there have been
groups of young men going around, shooting people, attempting to rape
women, and ordered them to continue walking in the other direction.” The
fact that the image of this man’s violent—though ultimately unsuccessful—
attempt to break into a store was accompanied by an anecdote about the
threat of rape suggests, once again, that the African American population of
New Orleans was subject to frequent racial stereotyping almost as a
counterweight to the hyper-empathetic coverage of whites in Waveland.
Of course, many moments of pathos were exhibited by black New
Orleans residents during the program, and some very humane, empathetic
representations of those residents were exhibited during the course of the
show. One man, interviewed at the start of the program moments after he had
disembarked from a bus in Houston that had picked him up from the
Superdome, described in a voice fraught with tension, “I’m just disgusted
right now. My head is killing me. I’m just stressed out right now. I’m tired. I
need a bed. I need a bath. I’m just overdue, for everything.” The man spoke
with the camera in a closeup shot of his face the entire time, his palpably
fragile emotional state a testament to the toll that the storm had taken on the
New Orleans evacuees.
But CNN’s Adori Udoji immediately followed that footage up by
mentioning lawlessness and looting, using the oft-repeated, if
unsubstantiated, claim that “some took only what they needed to survive,
others took whatever they could: appliances, clothes, guns.” The footage that
accompanied this claim involved African Americans walking into and out of
a closed Walgreens pharmacy. The first woman caught on camera covered
her face as she exited with apparently looted groceries, including a package
of Huggies diapers. Real pathos could have been found in that image, as well,
and the reporter could have urged the audience to imagine the conditions that
would drive this woman, clearly uncomfortable with her decision, to have to
steal diapers in the middle of a flooded, dangerous city. But the image was
instead presented as little more than a virtual “perp walk”—not a means to
elicit fellow feeling but an impediment to audience identification and
empathy.
None of this is to say that the program’s producers maliciously edited
their footage or scripted their stories with explicitly racist intent. Certainly,
the logistical difficulties of reporting from New Orleans in the storm’s
aftermath contributed to a lack of footage and sources through which a more
nuanced and factual take could have been constructed. But without even
speculating about the producers’ intent, the broadcast itself tells a story in
which the empathetic ideal does not extend equally to all demographics of
storm victims. This was reflected in the imbalance with which blacks and
whites were portrayed as empathetic victims; although empathy sometimes
extended to black victims, shown waiting desperately at the Superdome or
begging the government on-camera for help, it always extended to the white
residents of Waveland, even occasionally transforming into acts of
sympathetic aid. Twice the program offered a white hurricane survivor the
chance to say his name and have his picture on camera to let his family and
friends know that he was safe. No similar announcements were made by
nonwhite survivors. The show also told the story of Tad and Helena Breaux,
a white couple who had been trying to track down their baby, who had been
left in an evacuating New Orleans hospital. With the help of media outlets,
including CNN, they were able to locate their infant son and were about to go
to Fort Worth, Texas, to pick him up when they appeared on AC 360. Again,
no nonwhite couple appeared to receive a similar level of assistance from the
show or network. While this may be due to the logistics of producing a news
program outside a major city in which normal lines of communication have
been disrupted, the over-reliance on whites for the most in-depth, humane
coverage in the broadcast served to magnify the stereotypical representations
of African Americans. This disjunction in news media coverage was reflected
in large racial differences in attitudes about the storm, with black audiences
more likely to feel that race was a factor in the government’s treatment of
victims (Herring 2006) and more likely to strongly empathize with those
victims (Haider-Markel, Delehanty, and Beverlin 2007).
The empathetic ideal requires the spectator to identify emotionally with
an unfortunate victim, but the representation of that victim is highly
susceptible to racial stereotyping and othering. The same can probably be
said for audiences themselves, who bring their own class, racial, and political
biases to the viewing situation. Classical expressions of sympathy were, at
least in theory, free from such problems in that they required the sympathetic
spectator to prove his emotional commitment was based on only rational
consideration for the suffering of another. A valid commitment had to “be
purely moral, that is to say free from any determination by interests and
consequently from any prior communal ties” (Boltanski 1999, 31). Such
morality had to be established “without recourse to notions of tribal solidarity
or emotional community” (Boltanski 1999, 38). The same cannot be said of
the contemporary empathetic ideal—the kind of vicarious, intersubjective
emotional bond that constitutes this ideal appears vulnerable to a variety of
prejudices.
One might wonder, however, what the story of Hurricane Katrina and its
poor African American victims would look like when told by one of those
victims and whether different processes of emotional expression and
audience identification might be at work. Certainly, initial coverage of
Katrina in the black press was more critical of both the government and
mainstream news sources (Dolan, Sonnett, and Johnson 2009). But one film
that further explored these issues was Trouble the Water (2008), which told
the story of Kimberly Roberts, a twenty-four-year-old aspiring hip-hop artist
who rode out the storm in her Lower Ninth Ward house with her husband,
Scott, and their neighbors. Although the film was directed by Tia Lessin and
Carl Deal, collaborators of Michael Moore’s who had come to New Orleans
to do a story on the return of the Louisiana National Guard from Iraq to its
flooded hometown, much of the film consisted of camcorder footage Roberts
shot of her neighborhood and her experiences before, during, and after the
storm. Upon meeting up with Lessin and Deal, in addition to being filmed by
their crew, Roberts continued to record her experiences on a camcorder as
she and her husband tried to reconnect with family and friends and begin a
new life. With a title that references the old spiritual song “Wade in the
Water,” the film is ultimately a story of redemption for Kim and Scott,
though with some pessimistic undertones about the fate of New Orleans as a
whole.
At film festivals, during its limited theatrical release, and when it was
broadcast on the HBO network, the film received a host of positive reviews,
many of which made reference to the film’s ability to expand the empathic
capacity of its audience. As one reviewer put it, “No human being I can
imagine could watch ‘Trouble the Water’ and not be overwhelmed by grief
and joy, and humbled by one’s sudden awareness of one’s own prejudices
about the lives, passions and dreams of poor people. George W. Bush would
weep buckets at this movie” (O’Hehir 2008, para. 7). It is not hard to
understand why critics found Trouble the Water so emotionally resonant. The
film contained numerous acts of heroism: Kim offered food and shelter to
neighbors in her flooded house’s attic; she videotaped her neighbor Larry
ferrying stranded people back and forth between houses using a punching bag
as a flotation device; and she commandeered an unused truck with her
husband and neighbors and drove everyone out of the city after four days
stranded there. It also exhibited the harsh and often maddening realities of
post–Katrina New Orleans, specifically the bureaucratic indifference with
which the local and federal authorities handled the storm’s poorest victims. In
one scene, Kim, Scott, and a friend named Brian return to Kim’s uncle’s
house in New Orleans and find his corpse there, despite the fact that search-
and-rescue teams have already marked the house as having no bodies inside.
Later in the film, Kim’s brother tells of being abandoned in a New Orleans
prison as guards evacuated without explaining to the prisoners what was
happening and without providing food or water. The grandmother who raised
Kim also died during Katrina in a New Orleans hospital, and the film briefly
records the funeral.
Certainly, through all of this there were many moments of emotional
expression that seemed likely to inspire empathetic audience responses. The
aesthetic features of the footage itself contributed to this authenticity. The
low-resolution “rawness” of such amateur video often “conveys both the
massive scale and strikingly intimate details of suffering” (McCosker 2013,
383). Some of these are small moments: after Kim and Scott drive their
fellow refugees out of the city, one of the elderly neighbors thanks Kim for
saving her life, and Kim’s sheepish, almost embarrassed grin proves
revealing and heartwarming. Others are focal points of the film: when Kim’s
cousin meets her at her temporary residence in Memphis, while playing the
only surviving copy of her music on his car stereo, her unbridled joy is quite
powerful. It also leads to perhaps the most iconic moment in the film, in
which Kim raps along to a song she wrote and recorded about her life and the
obstacles that she had faced and overcome.
But that moment also exposed some of the film’s weaknesses and some
shortcomings of the empathetic gaze in general. Throughout the film, one
could not escape the feeling that one already knew the outcome.
Paradoxically, in the case of such a major disaster, the audience understood
from the outset that the story would be a tale of overcoming and
perseverance, of forging a better self through adversity and suffering. While
such narratives perhaps have always had their appeal, the merger of
psychotherapeutic ideas with popular entertainment in formats such as
television talk shows has made them more commonplace (Illouz 2003). Not
only have audiences come to expect this theme; in this case, the film’s
subject seemed to be hyper-aware of the potential public interest in the
footage before Hurricane Katrina even hit. Early in the film, when she took
her camera into a small grocery store to record people stocking up for the
storm, she declared, “This is a little doc I’m doing, just in case it’s all gone, I
got it all on tape. See, I’m showing the world that we did have a world,
before the storm came.” Her almost eerily prescient comment there was
followed by a later discussion with some neighbors of the more explicitly
promotional possibilities of her recording. “If I get some exciting shit,” she
joked, “I might gonna send it to them white folks, ya heard!” And indeed, at
the start of the film the audience is shown footage of Kim and Scott
approaching the filmmakers and promoting the footage that she collected.
She tells them that “this needs to be worldwide. All the footage I’ve seen on
TV, nobody ain’t got what I got. I got right there in the hurricane!”
Of course, this is not to cast aspersions on Kim, her husband, or the
documentary filmmakers with whom she created Trouble the Water. Her
actions during and after Katrina were indeed heroic, and her desire to
promote herself and her fledging music career using the footage of those
actions was certainly no different from the motives of any of the thousands of
reality television contestants, although her story was far more compelling.
But that is also part of the problem. In the end, while the film was highly
critical of the government’s response to the hurricane, its need to graft the
standard narrative of overcoming and perseverance onto Kim’s life story felt
almost unfair to the thousands of other Katrina victims for whom the storm
offered no redemptive possibilities. Certainly, the film’s narrative did justice
to Kim’s personal interpretation of suffering as the key to building a better
self, which she emphasized throughout. Discussing her impending move to
Memphis, she stated that she planned to “go out there, start my music career,
find me a church where I can go worship. I’m already at the bottom, I can’t
go down, I can’t do nothing but go up. Hope I can put this hurricane stuff
behind me, but if not I’m ready to face them head on, nose to nose, neck to
neck too. It don’t matter to me, but at least I’m trying to do something
different, trying to, you know, trying. When you try, you know, you get
results, so I’m trying to better my life.”
Scott expressed a similar desire to start his life over, to “see how it is to
do it right from the beginning,” and Kim explained how she was refusing to
let her fear about the move control her. While these were laudable sentiments,
they didn’t sound that different from the concluding remarks of reality show
contestants on even tawdry shows such as Temptation Island. One such
contestant, whose long-term relationship was almost ruined because of his
behavior on that show, put it this way: “Every time I made a choice, I made
the difficult choice because I knew that would be the way of growing and that
would be my way of learning about myself and becoming who I am and
learning about my individuality” (quoted in Andrejevic 2004, 192). In both
cases, suffering was seen as an opportunity for personal growth.
However, if such giant catastrophes as Hurricane Katrina end up boiling
down simply to opportunities for their victims’ self-improvement, then
certainly the onus is no longer on spectators to take sympathetic action in the
wakes of catastrophes. Rather, the emotional work of empathizing with
suffering others as they attempt to better themselves is proof enough of one’s
moral worth and a chance to improve oneself vicariously in the process. At
the end of the film, Kim is shown working on a song in a music studio, and
her husband is seen enjoying his new job doing construction work. Both are
back in New Orleans, seemingly better for the experience. These are
definitely stories to be celebrated, especially given how hard the storm hit so
many of the area’s other poor African American residents. Yet the viewer’s
identification with this against-all-odds success story offers a sense of
narrative closure that is perhaps anathema to the film’s larger political
mission. After all, the film’s advertising tagline, “It’s not about a hurricane.
It’s about America,” suggests that it will offer a systemic critique of
inequality and racism in the urban United States, but in Kim and Scott’s
story, one may instead see a variant of the Horatio Alger myth. By displaying
these two disaster victims as actually empowered and improved by the
experience, the film establishes the vicarious consumption of others’
suffering as the audience member’s primary moral requirement: viewers can
feel good about themselves simply by feeling for these ultimately fortunate
protagonists.
Thus, in stories of tragedy or triumph, the empathetic ideal drains
disaster of its political potential. Although anger at the government’s inept
response to Hurricane Katrina was certainly a big part of the emotional
response to Trouble the Water and AC 360, that anger was steered away from
some explicitly political avenues. The process of translating emotional
identification with a suffering unfortunate into an active critique of the social,
economic, or governmental forces behind that suffering, and of making
compensatory demands on the responsible parties, exemplifies classical
notions of sympathy within a robust public sphere. Although such a process
was at times suggested by these two texts, both ultimately went in other
directions that highlight some of empathy’s limitations. In this way, the
conditions for an active, critical, and sympathetic public sphere are
challenged by this alternative, empathetic, consumerist style of apprehending
the suffering of others and the potential for racial and class bias in its
emotional forms of identification.
Mainstream American culture in the first decade of the twenty-first
century was more familiar with individualistic narratives of self-help than
collective struggles for civil rights or fair labor practices, a fact that helps
explain why individualistic, empathetic ways of looking at disaster resonated
so much. Coupled with the almost limitless amount of others’ suffering to
which contemporary mass media can expose audiences today, one can see
why a kind of depoliticization of such suffering may be desirable for
audiences. This is especially true when one considers the time frame over
which these events develop. News stories in a consumer society, even ones as
monumental as Hurricane Katrina, have a shelf life; they get consumed and
quickly lose their appeal. Eight months after the hurricane, news coverage of
the painstakingly slow reconstruction of New Orleans had dissipated, due
supposedly to audiences’ and producers’ “Katrina fatigue” (Kurtz 2006).
Even Anderson Cooper was criticized for CNN’s seeming abandonment of
the story he himself promised not to give up on in a June 21, 2006, interview
on The Daily Show with Jon Stewart. The empathetic gaze offers the
assurance of personal catharsis as an alternative to the uncertainties of
political commitment in our fast-moving, media-saturated world. Thus, the
deeply empathetic response to the suffering caused by Katrina could not
outlast the speed of contemporary news cycles and, less than a year later,
seemed to have made little difference in on-the-ground reconstruction efforts
that have continued into the present day to privatize the city’s public goods,
gentrify its neighborhoods, and leave out its poorest residents (Akers 2012; L.
Graham 2012; Green, Kouassi, and Mambo 2013).
Conclusion: Empathy and the Paradoxes of Authenticity
In some ways, Hurricane Katrina and the Virginia Tech shootings were very
different kinds of catastrophes. In terms of the loss of life and property, and
their immediate political implications, the two events varied greatly. The
government’s inadequate response to Katrina was regarded by many as a
referendum on the Bush presidency and on the persistence of racial inequality
in urban America, while the Virginia Tech shootings prompted a brief
“advocacy free-for-all” (Furedi 2007b) that resulted in little public consensus
and in some ways seemed to rehash familiar media frameworks adopted after
the Columbine shooting in 1999. Even the news broadcasts and documentary
films discussed in this chapter have vast differences. The anchors of the two
news broadcasts, Brian Williams and Anderson Cooper, have very different
emotional styles that were reflected in their news coverage. And the
purposefully somber narratives delivered by Virginia Tech shooting victims
on I Survived varied greatly from the eyewitness camcorder footage and
occasional exuberance of Trouble the Water. Yet the mass consumption of
both disasters, as reflected in all four of the media texts examined here,
exhibited certain common themes.
Although the empathetic ideal encourages emotional identification with
the people on screen, it requires some guarantee of the genuineness or
authenticity of what one is watching. In the programs discussed in this
chapter, such guarantees were based on a combination of the technical or
aesthetic qualities of the media at hand and the personal self-performances of
those on-screen. The technical qualities of the slightly shaky and grainy
footage of stranded, grief-stricken, or frightened Katrina victims lent added
weight to their emotional on-camera testimony. When the broadcast lacked
any traces of this aesthetic, as in the footage of Anderson Cooper anchoring
the live broadcast from Waveland, Cooper painted himself as a fellow
sufferer of the storm by losing his composure on camera. Kim Roberts’s
camcorder footage from the eye of the storm served a similar function: it
cemented her identity as a compassionate, heroic, and authentic storm
survivor and propelled that status through the long, post-hurricane portion of
the film, where the camera quality improved and outside filmmakers got
involved.
When no live disaster footage was available, as in the I Survived episode
dedicated to the Virginia Tech shootings, an intense focus on the personal
experience of the victims sufficed as an assurance of authenticity. That
program eschewed the use of recycled news footage and reenactments of
dramatic events, and even edited the interviewer completely out of the
traumatic narratives relayed by the shooting’s survivors, to focus on the
interviewees’ intimate, personal performances of trauma and grief. By
contrast, the episode of NBC Nightly News with Brian Williams that
contained Cho’s multimedia manifesto attested, once again, to the incredible
power of first-person disaster footage, although in this case the person in
question was actually the cause of the disaster. American consumer culture
venerates such footage of the tragic or disastrous precisely because it is
thought to be more authentic than the rest of the media landscape, and in this
case Cho’s authorship of the images imbued them with a powerful aura. This
aura attracted Brian Williams and NBC’s producers enough for them to
ignore the public outrage that airing such controversial documents was bound
to, and did, stir up. But the empathetic ideal extended to Cho, too, as
Williams and his guests led the audience through his words and images on a
search for psychological clues to the killer’s mind-set and motivation.
Film theory has long established the potential of cinema’s projection
technologies and viewing conditions to create audience identification with the
camera’s objectifying gaze. More recently, scholars of reality television have
described the different kinds of audience identification associated with that
genre of entertainment. This chapter has suggested that a kind of empathetic
gaze, derived in part from the ways of seeing associated with reality
television, is embedded in the four media texts analyzed here and the
consumption of disaster more generally. This gaze involves a way of looking
at and identifying with the subjective experiences of those on whom the
camera’s gaze is fixed. Rather than the detached, voyeuristic gaze of
Hollywood cinema, the empathetic gaze elicits the spectator’s vicarious
emotional connection to the subject on the screen and is especially prominent
when that subject has been shown to have genuinely suffered. In a culture
that greatly esteems the ability to empathize with one’s lovers, family
members, or co-workers, the emotional work of empathizing with on-screen
suffering is itself a pleasurable aspect of the viewing experience called forth
by the empathetic gaze.
In stark contrast to the ideal of sympathy, which involves acting or, at
least, speaking out on behalf of those who suffer, this mediated empathy is
more about self-improvement than improving the condition of unfortunates.
In that way, the empathetic gaze meshes well with other forms of mass
consumption such as the purchasing of T-shirts, athletic apparel, CDs, or
souvenirs. While much of the proceeds from these kinds of purchases have
gone to relief efforts for victims of Hurricane Katrina and the Virginia Tech
shootings, such purchases also serve to mark consumers as emotionally
sensitive individuals who care about the fate of others. The positive impact
on one’s own identity of such seemingly altruistic behavior is a motivating
factor even for people who volunteer directly (Hayes 2004; McMurria 2008).
Rather than reawakening the long-standing debate over the possibility of
truly altruistic behavior (see Piliavin 2008), the consumption of disaster
mitigates the tension between egotistic and altruistic actions, suggesting that
empathetically motivated consumption is in and of itself a moral action,
regardless of its limited effect on the conditions of those who suffer. This
ideal works in tandem with contemporary pop-psychological attitudes that
suffering and victimhood can always be transformed by victims themselves
into opportunities for self-improvement and renewal.
This sort of consumption-oriented empathy for distant others has its
limits and lacunae, however. Basing one’s fellow feeling for distant others on
how identifiable one finds them leaves the entire empathetic process
vulnerable to personal prejudices. The philosopher Jesse Prinz (2011, 227)
has noted, “Empathy is partial; we feel greater empathy for those who are
similar to ourselves.” The fact that looped, often out-of-context footage of
African American looters co-existed on AC 360 with a segment in which the
news anchor was close to openly weeping at the site of a truckload of white
hurricane victims suggests no less. Studies, in fact, have confirmed the
existence of empathy’s racial biases; one found that whites who strongly
identified with their own racial group heavily biased their charitable giving
against black hurricane victims (Fong and Luttmer 2007), and another
confirmed that even on a sensory level, we experience more empathy for
people with the same skin color (Avenanti, Sirigu, and Aglioti 2010). In this
sense, Enlightenment notions of sympathy that disqualified communal,
familial, or ethnic considerations in favor of a more rational, objective
consideration of others’ suffering are superior to the empathetic ideal, at least
in theory. Of course, in practice the same racial biases, as well as class and
gender prejudices, likely rendered many unfortunate sufferers invisible to
classical advocates of sympathy such as Smith and Hume.
More than simply racial biases, then, the empathetic gaze is vulnerable
to the larger paradoxes of authenticity. If one is to properly identify with the
suffering of others, one must first be assured that their suffering is genuine.
But unlike the rational consideration of claims to victimhood associated with
sympathy, this empathetic ideal rests on the spectator’s subjective evaluation
of the authenticity of the other’s suffering. Although skillfully presented
personal narratives such as those on I Survived are often enough to guarantee
that the subjects’ emotions are genuine, first-person footage and live
broadcasting from disaster zones are more effective, and the aesthetic and
technological cues associated with these scenarios transform the authenticity
of unfortunates from a question into a given. The results, however, are a
ceaseless quest for increasingly intimate footage of suffering; an increasing
number of reporters on the scene as a disaster unfolds and mounting pressure
to broadcast traumatic images, regardless of who produced them or what their
broadcast might mean for victims or potential imitators.
This is part of the empathetic hedonism of catastrophe consumption.
Disasters are undeniably real, and empathy for their distant victims marks
one as an authentic, moral human being. At the same time, the exhilaration of
these emotions and the novelty of the most harrowing disasters are
themselves pleasures with a very powerful appeal to consumers. “Indeed, so-
called ‘negative’ emotions often evoke stronger feelings than the others, they
actually provide a greater potential for pleasure” (C. Campbell 1987, 70).
But, of course, empathy is never fully achieved. We can never be sure how
well we really understand another’s pain. And coverage of that pain could
always be timelier, more intimate, more emotional. Thus, the appetite for
empathy cannot be easily sated and must be fed repeatedly, frequently
resulting in the kinds of “disaster marathon” (Blondheim and Liebes 2003)
coverage for which news organizations are often criticized.
Such coverage is, in its pursuit of deeply authentic emotional
experiences, often experienced as highly insensitive and inauthentic.
Throwing a camera in the face of a shocked Virginia Tech student moments
after the shootings or following a Waveland homeowner as she combs
through the rubble of her house may generate a certain kind of intimacy, but
it can also appear craven and obvious. What is more, the stubborn distance
between spectator and sufferer persists no matter how intimate the coverage.
The only thing that is certain in the quest for such a fleeting authenticity is
that it will continue to rely on the raw materials of tragedy and disaster,
mining the ore of real emotion that such harrowing events contain.
In strict terms, it is inaccurate to call contemporary disaster consumption
voyeuristic. The contemporary emphasis on empathy means that spectators of
suffering are less likely to objectify the on-screen sufferer and more likely to
identify with him or her. It is similarly unfair to call such consumption
immoral; instead, one might more accurately suggest that alternative moral
and normative codes concerning the suffering of others have emerged that
encourage ethically minded consumers to engage in an empathetic form of
spectatorship. This approach recasts the consumers of disaster from
voyeuristic spectators to ethical bystanders. But the empathetic ideal does
serve to neutralize the political potential of disasters. If, in the face of mass
destruction, one is asked only to empathize with the victims, then even the
most widespread anger, outrage, and sorrow need not motivate any political
act more involved than the purchase of a T-shirt whose proceeds go to
charity.
This discontinuity between actual aid and emotional connection was
perhaps best reflected in a moment on AC 360 in which Kathleen Koch, a
CNN reporter who grew up in Waveland, talked with Cooper about her
emotional response to the devastation there. The lack of resources for
survivors, Koch said, “[made me] want to throw down my microphone and
just take all the water that we have in our vehicle and give it to them and start
driving up and down the streets,” a sentiment with which Cooper appeared to
agree. But, of course, Koch and Cooper did not drop what they were doing
and give away all their water; nor had they planned to. It is particularly
indicative of the contemporary cultural moment that Koch’s failure to follow
through on her desire to help was not seen as an indictment, yet her
expression of the emotional urge to do so was presented as laudatory in and
of itself. In such a context, disaster victims can expect powerful, widespread
public support for their recovery, but that will likely mean emotional support
and psychological recovery. The empathetic gaze is thus a means to cope
with our own powerlessness as we watch tragedies unfold, not a tool to
encourage positive social and political change. What is more, as the next
chapter shows, this sort of empathy can lead to heightened levels of fear and
their manipulation by elite interests.
3
O n September 15, 2001, after four days of live coverage of the September
11 attacks without commercial breaks, network television began to return to
its regularly scheduled programming. This pause in the televisual routine was
the longest in American history, surpassing the three days of nonstop
coverage triggered by President John F. Kennedy’s assassination and funeral
in 1963 (Carter and Rutenberg 2001). The nightly news shows and cable
news channels continued their coverage of the attacks, however, focusing as
they had been on the victims and their families, the recovery efforts at the
World Trade Center, and the investigations into who was responsible. And
like the rest of the American public, a majority of whom believed that another
terrorist attack was likely (Pew Research Center for the People and the Press
2001b), television news began to look ahead. As the CBS reporter John
Roberts suggested in one Evening News broadcast, “American fears have
turned to what might be next.” He went on to claim, “This most recent attack
was of such an Apocalyptic nature we may have to redefine the very meaning
of the word ‘terrorism.’”
Roberts’s commentary was prescient on multiple levels. In the month
and a half that followed, the United States launched its global war on terror
with the invasion of Afghanistan and signed into law the Uniting and
Strengthening America by Providing Appropriate Tools Required to Intercept
and Obstruct Terrorism Act (the USA PATRIOT Act, which is commonly
referred to as simply the Patriot Act). With these two moves, the word
“terrorism” was indeed redefined; no longer simply describing a particular
tactic, it became the justification for foreign wars, the rationale behind an
explosion of domestic security procedures and surveillance programs, and a
buzzword for a host of new fears and suddenly looming threats. One new
threat was biological warfare. Unknown sources started sending anthrax
through the mail to seemingly random targets in the government and news
media beginning on September 18 and proceeding for several weeks.
Although only seventeen people were infected and five died, these anthrax
attacks were presented as proof that the threat of terrorism persisted in the
United States beyond 9/11 in ways that were not necessarily suggested by
9/11 and that could affect any and all Americans. As one unidentified female
bystander said in an October 12, 2001, edition of CBS Evening News,
“Checking your mail just took on a new meaning.”
Roughly six-and-a-half years later, a very different sort of threat
exploded into public consciousness. From March to October 2008,
Americans came to understand themselves as enmeshed in a global financial
crisis, as major banks and venerable investment houses began to admit to
insolvency and lawmakers started debating the merits of massive federal
intervention in the financial markets. As the months proceeded and new
revelations made clear that the entire U.S. financial industry was threatened,
officials and experts came on television to repeatedly make the case for
government intervention. The resultant federal legislation, the Emergency
Economic Stabilization Act, like the Patriot Act before it, was a wide-
reaching and controversial act of governance with vast consequences that
were only dimly understood at the time.
These two very different catastrophes were nonetheless treated similarly
in American media and political culture. Both inspired extensive news
coverage, political commentary, advertisements, and a variety of consumer
goods and services. Both disasters were described by politicians, financial or
military experts, and journalists as worst-case scenarios that were largely
unforeseeable, even though warning signs and historical precedents existed
for both cases (see Eichenwald 2012; Reinhart and Rogoff 2009). Most
important, the news media presented both terrorism and financial crisis as
potential threats to all Americans, not just those living in major cities or
working in the finance industry. As Diane Swonk, chief economist at
Moody’s, cautioned the audience of ABC World News on March 17, 2008,
“What you care about on Main Street is that this crunch on Wall Street
doesn’t spill over to Main Street.”
Yet although both the Patriot Act and the Emergency Economic
Stabilization Act were successfully signed into law in response to these two
threats, only one of these was the subject of fierce public resistance. The
Patriot Act was quickly enacted with almost unanimous support from
lawmakers, and opinion polls showed widespread public support for it
initially and even two and three years after its passage (Moore 2003; Saad
2004). But the Troubled Asset Relief Program (TARP), the initial name for
the federal government’s proposed intervention into the markets, faced heavy
public opposition, resulting in its rejection in the House of Representatives
(Hulse and Herszenhorn 2008). A few days later, TARP was passed in the
Senate and then in the House in the form of the Emergency Economic
Stabilization Act of 2008, thanks to increased public relations efforts by
government spokespeople and financial industry experts and, presumably,
much behind-the-scenes arm twisting of hesitant elected officials.
Nevertheless, in this case the public had initially reacted much less trustingly
to the government’s proposed solution to a crisis than it had in the days after
September 11.
Understanding the public reaction to these catastrophes necessarily
entails understanding how fear is socially distributed and constructed.
Although the sociological conception of risk or a “risk society” contains
somewhat obvious affective dimensions—as people are likely to have
emotional reactions to the notion that their well-being is in jeopardy—social
science research often neglects this facet of risk perception and rhetoric
(Lupton 2013; Zinn 2006). If one takes both the threat of terrorism after
September 11 and the threat of a financial collapse in 2008 as legitimately
fearful topics, the divergent public reaction to these two possibilities still
begs the question of why. Why do some fears resonate where others do not?
Why do some proposed solutions to these fears seem acceptable while others
do not? When do widespread social fears lead to acceptance of authority, and
when do they lead to resistance?
Examining the ways that television news responded to the threat of
terrorism and financial crisis can help us answer these questions. To do so, it
is not necessary to argue that the news media imposed an agenda concerning
these catastrophes on the public or that the media manipulated public
opinion. After all, the news media may simply reflect public concern over
newsworthy events rather than creating these concerns, and the causal
direction of that relationship can be hard to determine (see Kosicki 1993,
108–110). But it is fairly uncontroversial to suggest that the news media both
shapes and reflects social norms as one component of a broader public
discourse surrounding fear and risk. An examination of television news
broadcasts thus provides access to one important component of mainstream
discourses about the appropriate responses to threats such as terrorism and
financial crisis.
This chapter analyzes the transcripts of television news programs in the
month and a half between the September 11 attacks and the signing into law
of the Patriot Act on October 26, 2001, and compares them with television
news programs from an early point in the financial crisis until the signing of
the Emergency Economic Stabilization Act on October 3, 2008. The analysis
focuses on not only what claims were made about fear, risk, and panic but
also who was allowed to be part of this public discussion. Despite significant
similarities in the discourse at work in both samples, the post–September 11
coverage featured commentary from more average citizens than did the
financial crisis coverage. In that coverage, finance industry experts and
politicians spoke more frequently than average people. This discrepancy
helps us understand the larger public reaction of acquiescence to the Patriot
Act and resistance to TARP: in the case of September 11, the public could
more easily identify and empathize with those people making risk claims
around terrorism since they were often made by people like themselves. The
over-representation of government officials in discourse surrounding the
financial crisis, by contrast, surely contributed to public distrust of those risk
claims. Furthermore, the shared spectacle of the September 11 attacks and the
resulting sense of national unity discouraged critical discourse concerning the
Patriot Act in ways that had no analogue during the financial crisis. As such,
both cases offer larger lessons about the dangerous ways that publics engage
with disasters and come to understand risks.
The main distinction between these two samples, however, came from
the number of government sources and the number of average citizens who
appeared on these broadcasts. Average citizens, defined as members of the
general public who did not fit into any of the other categories in the sample,
made up the largest percentage of speakers in the post-9/11 coverage, at 39
percent. And yet these accounted for only 18 percent of the financial crisis
news. This ratio was reversed with government officials, who made up a little
over a quarter of the post-9/11 sample (at 28 percent) but who accounted for
almost half of the financial crisis guests, at 48 percent. What accounts for this
discrepancy?
The “mood of the nation,” as Peter Jennings called it in a segment on his
October 8, 2001, World News Tonight broadcast, became an important story
after 9/11. Much coverage in this sample was devoted to the way ordinary
Americans coped with the emotional aftermath of the attacks. Although
Jennings’s segment featured one unidentified man asserting, “We can’t live
in fear,” other average citizens on the broadcast expressed fears such as “I
don’t think that the terrorist attacks are over” or attested to anxiety such that
they “just keep looking over [their] shoulder.” Still others in that same
segment voiced support for the invasion of Afghanistan, as when one man
intoned, “It’s going to be a hard, maybe long fight. But we got to do it.”
Another segment on a September 16 broadcast of CBS Evening News focused
on how “a congregation looked for hope after a week of horror.” On that
broadcast, even the minister of a church in Ridgewood, New Jersey, said, “It
does sound that in some way we are going to go to some variety of war.” In
these ways, the discourse of post-9/11 national unity (see Hucheson et al.
2004; Spigel 2005) was reflected and amplified in these programs by this
inclusion of average citizens voicing the same sorts of fears and concerns,
and supporting the same sorts of policies, as government officials.
Interestingly, other content analyses have argued that post–September 11
news coverage leaned too heavily on government sources. Immediately after
the attacks, on September 11 and 12, newspapers and television news
programs relied mainly on government officials as sources (Li and Izard
2003), though this may have been a result of the demands of breaking news
coverage, since government sources are likely to be more readily available in
the beginning stages of this sort of crisis than those with opposing or minority
viewpoints. Similarly, Altheide (2006, 417) compared newspaper coverage
from eighteen months before and after the 9/11 attacks and found that
“reliance on government officials as news sources promoted reports that
joined fear to terrorism and victimization.” This finding might be true for my
sample, as well, if one were to count the total number of words uttered by
each variety of speaker, since government officials often had more to say and
more time to say it than average people. But it is still important to note that in
comparison with the financial crisis, the post-9/11 coverage of terrorism
actually looks more balanced.
After all, the many average citizens quoted in the post-9/11 coverage
largely disappeared in the 2008 sample. Despite the fact that the financial
problems of “Main Street” were a frequent concern voiced by journalists,
government officials, and financial experts in these samples, actual voices
from Main Street were few and far between. Instead, it was more common for
the program’s elite guests to speculate about the effects of the crisis and the
bailouts on average people. For instance, on September 15, Larry King asked
his guests, Andy Serwer and Paul Krugman, about what would be “the effect
on a bus driver in Hialeah” of the bailouts. Sensibly enough, Krugman
reminded King that “if he’s got a 401(k), he has to worry … and also, he’s
got to worry about his job,” but, of course, an average person could have
been asked about her worries for her job or her 401(k). A week later, this
trend of elites speaking for average people reached perhaps its most absurd
moment when King asked Donald Trump to “try to put yourself in their
shoes, the average American family,” to which Trump replied, “It’s both a
very tough time and a great opportunity” before urging average Americans to
“go out and make a deal.”
On aggregate, then, the financial crisis coverage featured much discourse
concerning the fate of average Americans, either explicitly or through
framing that implicitly connected Main Street and Wall Street as rhetorical
equals in the crisis and equal beneficiaries of the resultant bailouts. But few
average Americans were actually allowed to participate in that discourse. In
this way, the crisis coverage both reflected and likely amplified the public’s
initial distaste toward the bailouts and distrust of the TARP proposal—a
distrust that led directly to TARP’s initial defeat in the House of
Representatives.
1. Three of the dates in the financial crisis had to be shifted slightly for Larry King Live because many
of his shows dealt with a single, predetermined issue and thus did not cover breaking developments in
the financial crisis until a day or two after they happened.
4
MEMORY AS THERAPY
A recent CNN.com article told the story of Judson Box, a man whose
firefighter son, Gary, had died in the attacks of September 11. Buoyed by
their daughter’s visit to the National 9/11 Museum’s Tribute Center in 2009,
Mr. Box and his wife, Helen, spent hours scouring images available at the
museum and those directly uploaded by users on the museum’s website. They
hoped to find an image of Gary and learn more about what he had done that
day and how he had died. The Boxes eventually did find a photo online,
taken by a Danish businessman who had been stranded in traffic in the
Brooklyn Battery Tunnel. It showed their son rushing on foot through the
tunnel from Brooklyn to Manhattan, since his company’s fire truck could not
get through the traffic. Mr. Box described his reaction to the photo as “out of
control, emotionally … [t]hanking God, being so happy that [we] had
something to see” (quoted in Solomon 2010, para. 10). Since finding the
photo and eventually meeting the photographer during a fundraiser, Judson
Box has helped promote the National 9/11 Museum because, in his words,
“too many people forget” (quoted in Solomon 2010, para. 21).
Thanks to this relatively new form of online commemoration and
archiving, the Box family was provided with the comfort of a new image of
their son, and a new understanding of his last day on Earth, nine years after
his passing. As this story illustrates, the Internet is changing the way that
society stores information and relates to the past. Of course, collective
memory has always been constituted through the development of “mnemonic
technologies” used to extend social capacities for storage and recollection
beyond those of the individual human brain (Olick 1999, 342). From the “arts
of memory” associated with medieval storytellers to the nineteenth-century
creation of museums and archives in Europe and more recent developments
in broadcast media, technologies of information collection and
communication have helped shape the ways in which societies remember
(Olick 1999). Yet there are distinctive features of new online forms of
commemoration that require further investigation, especially given the
critiques of mass culture in the preceding chapters. Many scholars have
highlighted the revolutionary potential of the Internet’s public accessibility.
“Just as the printing press gave everyone access to readership,” Douglas
Rushkoff has proffered, “the computer and internet give everyone access to
authorship. The first Renaissance took us from the position of passive
recipient to active interpreter. Our current renaissance brings us from a
position of active interpretation to one of authorship” (Rushkoff 2002, para.
13). Similarly, Clay Shirky has suggested that new online forms of
communication offer “long-term tools that can strengthen civil society and
the public sphere” (Shirky 2011, para. 17). But when disaster strikes, does it
matter? Do spaces of digital commemoration offer a distinct alternative to
television news and documentary media? Are the forms of emotional
expression in online spaces and the uses to which they are put noticeably
different?
One way to investigate these questions is to explore the growing variety
of websites that are devoted to the exercise of collective memory and the
creation of memorials devoted to tragic or catastrophic events. In addition to
the online component of the National 9/11 Museum, the September 11
attacks have been commemorated and memorialized online in a number of
other websites, as has another recent disaster, Hurricane Katrina. This chapter
focuses on two digital memory banks devoted to these disasters, the
September 11 Digital Archive (http://911digitalarchive.org/) and the
Hurricane Digital Memory Bank (http://hurricanearchive.org/), to examine
the kinds of meaning created for, and by, contributors to these new online
sites of commemoration.
Digital archives and memory banks are online databases that allow users
to upload images, music files, links, news items, and personal messages or
stories to an archive that other users may then browse or search. Although the
roots of such databases predate the September 11 attacks, a software platform
developed by the Center for History and New Media (CHNM) at George
Mason University has been used since 2001 to create digital memory banks
for many historical events, not only the attacks of September 11 but also
hurricanes Katrina and Rita and the Virginia Tech shootings, among others.
The architecture of these memory banks seeks to “embody the relationships
of participatory cultures and communal memories that are being constructed
through next-generation Internet technologies such as Second Life, blogs,
wikis, and social networking sites such as Facebook and MySpace” (Jesiek
and Hunsinger 2008, 193). Although the objects in these memorials are not
rewritable in the same vein as Wikipedia entries, some memory banks allow
users to add tags to existing items, and memory bank developers are currently
exploring new possibilities for added interactivity in future iterations (Jesiek
and Hunsinger 2008, 193).
This chapter examines the September 11 Digital Archive and the
Hurricane Digital Memory Bank as forms of prosumption, because the users
who produce and upload content to these sites are also the consumers of the
sites. By analyzing the stories and messages uploaded to these two digital
archives, this chapter attempts to better understand the uses and rhetoric of
online commemoration. It argues that the messages and stories left at these
sites frequently featured claims about emotions, trauma, and healing that
reflected a therapeutic ideal, in which the restoration of one’s mental health
after a tragic or difficult event is of paramount importance. Although this
therapeutic ideal has been a salient feature of American culture for a century,
by some accounts (see Moskowitz 2001), it has emerged as a goal of
commemoration and collective memory only in the past thirty years (Savage
2006). The contemporary convergence of therapeutic principles with new
forms of online collective memory accounts for the power of digital archives
today, as exemplified by the Box family’s experience. However, their story is
also in many ways exceptional, and the everyday uses of online memory
banks rarely feature such dramatic ends. Instead, the sort of therapeutic
experience on offer at the digital memory banks studied here was primarily
about individual catharsis, not helping others. Thus, what one views at digital
archives and memory banks is the convergence of the practice of therapeutic
self-help with new forms of user-generated online media. This chapter seeks
to discover whether these new spaces of online collective memory might still
offer challenges to the memorial strategies of traditional media, and how they
may either confront or reinforce many of the inequities embedded in
mainstream responses to September 11 and Hurricane Katrina.
Prosumption as Self-Help
Visitors who submit messages to digital memory banks can be described as
prosumers. Like other forms of online activity associated with the
phenomenon commonly described as Web 2.0, in which websites offer users
a platform or framework that they can add to or modify, contributing to a
digital memory bank is simultaneously a form of production and
consumption. The consumption of these online archives and memory banks
constitutes a form of production, as well, because users frequently add their
own stories, submit files, add links, tag existing content, or even simply
search through the database as a means of customizing their experiences.
Today, an ever growing number and variety of websites are devoted to
various forms of user participation and information exchange (Beer and
Burrows 2010).
The ramifications of these interactive, participatory forms of online
prosumption remain hotly debated. Their advantages over older models of
web portals, which simply presented visitors with a one-way flow of
information, are in some ways obvious. Today, social networking sites, blogs,
and wikis can create new communities scattered over wide geographical areas
(Feenberg 2009), supplement face-to-face interaction and increase
participation in voluntary organizations (Wellman et al. 2001), and provide a
more reflexive, open, and democratic alternative to older forms of journalism
(Goode 2009), to name but a few benefits. However, many view this
incorporation of consumers into the production process as simply an
advanced form of exploitation. The popularity of open-source software,
online product reviews, and so-called citizen journalism does not change the
fact that today “consumers do these formerly paid tasks for no recompense”
(Ritzer and Jurgenson 2010, 26). Contemporary capitalism has sought to
increase the rate of innovation and invention by drawing consumers more
fully into the process (Thrift 2006), and these consumers generally receive
little economic reward for their work beyond the simple pleasures of co-
creation itself or the benefits when products and services are improved as a
result.
But the blurring of consumption and production far predates the
computer or the Internet. Alvin Toffler, who coined the term “prosumption”
(Toffler 1980), has pointed out that the ascendance of market economies
during the Industrial Revolution cleaved productive work from consumption,
and before then most economic activity consisted of a kind of “production for
self-use” (Toffler 1980, 295) similar to contemporary forms of prosumption.
One of Toffler’s earliest examples of modern prosumption involved the
growth of self-care and self-help in the 1970s. With the appearance on the
market of home pregnancy tests and blood pressure kits, and then the
increasing popularity of bereavement groups and twelve-step programs,
millions of people began to perform services for themselves that previously
would have been performed for them by a doctor—in other words, they
began actively prosuming their own physical and mental health care.
As Toffler explained, such self-help groups especially “rely entirely on
what might be termed ‘cross-counseling’—people swapping advice based on
their own life experience, as distinct from receiving traditional counseling
from the professionals” (Toffler 1980, 285). This is similar in some ways to
what happens today at digital memory banks, in which one user’s message of
hope or consolation might be read by a victim’s family member and perhaps
responded to in kind. These kinds of therapeutic dialogues between non-
experts are exceedingly common in a media culture filled with self-help chat
rooms and television talk shows focused on the public disclosure of one’s
psychic pain (Illouz 2003; Moskowitz 2001).
In fact, although self-help ideals were initially seen as incompatible with
the less optimistic Freudian notion of the psyche, the convergence of
Freudian psychology and the self-help ethos in American culture today was
made possible precisely “because the language of psychotherapy left the
realm of experts and moved to the realm of popular culture” (Illouz 2008,
155). This new language converted large numbers of Americans to what Eva
Moskowitz (2001) has called “the therapeutic gospel,” in which personal
happiness and self-fulfillment are primary goals, and unhappiness is a
condition that can and should be treated. While the therapeutic assertion that
one must make or remake oneself into a happier, more fulfilled person
certainly reinforces the power and prestige of professional counselors and
psychotherapists, it also serves as a powerful motivator for many forms of
prosumption. By taking one’s physical, mental, or spiritual health into one’s
own hands, one has already adopted the active stance of the prosumer. In this
sense, digital memory banks showcase a further intertwining of the ideals of
therapeutic self-help with newer forms of digital prosumption.
Spontaneous Commemoration and Therapeutic Monuments
The Internet is not the only place where prosumption and collective memory
intertwine, however. Some of these same cultural trends toward consumption
for self-use and the active participation of non-experts have been at work in
commemorative efforts in the physical landscape for at least thirty years. As
such, the growing preponderance of “spontaneous shrines” (Santino 1992)
and the contemporary mandate for therapeutic commemoration shed more
light on the ramifications of prosumption for collective memory in the
physical landscape and for other forms of prosumption, as well.
Traditionally, memorials have been constructed at the behest of elites to
enshrine dominant points of view and to celebrate the lives and deaths of
heroic individuals. The physical construction of a memorial frequently marks
a spot in the geographical landscape as meaningful and sacred, due either to
the lives lost there—as at the site of a famous battle—or simply to the ability
of memorial architecture to convey a sense of sanctity and solemnity. Such
memorials have the power to sustain a particular interpretation of events
within collective memory at least partly because of the physical durability of
the landscape to which they are attached (Foote 1997).
Despite their hallowed status, however, memorials do contain the
potential for alternative readings and interpretations outside the intentions of
their originators, and they are always evolving as new visitors and viewers
bring new interpretations (Santino 2006; Young 1993). In fact, the creation of
memorials, monuments, archives, and museums is necessarily a contested
process in which the adherents of competing views of history jockey for
control over its representation. The decisions undertaken by the archivists,
architects, historians, and politicians involved in such efforts to include or
exclude certain documents, images, or perspectives from institutions of
collective memory show that such memory is not merely guarded or acquired
but actively shaped through the very processes of its collection (Brown and
Davis-Brown 1998). While not the norm, these processes do occasionally
result in official forms of commemoration that challenge hegemonic
ideologies and elite histories, as has been the case with memorials and
monuments dedicated to the American Civil Rights Movement, for instance
(O. Dwyer 2000).
Moreover, rituals of mourning and commemoration are not undertaken
only by, or at the direction of, government officials and other elites;
vernacular forms of commemoration have long been a part of the memorial
landscape (Bodnar 1992), and spontaneous public memorialization appears to
be a growing trend (Santino 2006). Whether on the site of a deadly traffic
accident or at the spot where a political figure was murdered, or even
scattered around a city that has just been subjected to a terrorist attack,
spontaneous shrines composed of some combination of messages to the dead,
pictures, flowers, poems, teddy bears, and other kitsch commodities are an
increasingly common feature of mourning practices (Santino 2006; Sturken
2007).
These assemblages reflect a breakdown of boundaries between elite and
popular culture (Thomas 2006) and between production and consumption.
The spontaneous displays of commemorative artwork, sculpture, banners, and
other mementos that spring up quickly at the sites of tragedies and disasters
serve to personalize these events for their creators. Some commentators have
also argued that spontaneous commemoration is an inherently political act.
As Jack Santino (2006, 13) put it, “We who build shrines and construct
public altars or parade with photographs of the deceased will not allow you to
write off victims as mere regrettable statistics.” In any case, this prosumption
of memorialization speaks to the growing influence of increasingly diverse
constituencies who feel ownership over the commemoration of wars,
disasters, and other tragedies, as well as an increasing number of
“reputational entrepreneurs” (Fine 2001) who are emotionally and politically
invested in these processes. The designing of memorials and monuments has
increasingly become a hotly disputed affair in which elites, victims’ families,
survivors, and ordinary citizens struggle to establish guiding frameworks
(Linenthal 2001; Sturken 1997, 2007).
But despite the frequency and vigor of political debate over memorial
designs today, an increasingly common aspect of both official and
spontaneous commemoration is the requirement of a therapeutic component.
The design and construction of the Vietnam Veterans Memorial in the 1980s
inaugurated the ideal of the “therapeutic monument” (Savage 2006), which
aimed to help individuals and the nation as a whole heal the psychic wounds
inflicted by the Vietnam conflict rather than simply honor soldiers or make a
political statement. That ethos, with its emphasis on survivors and ordinary
citizens, has been applied to the creation of many subsequent monuments and
memorials, such as the U.S. Holocaust Museum and the Oklahoma City
National Memorial (Sturken 2007).
Of course, the healing function of memorial planning, dedication, and
construction has always been at least a latent feature of the process, given that
such activities have the power to reunite communities that have been
fragmented by wars and other disasters (Foote 1997). But beginning with the
Vietnam Veterans Memorial, monuments and memorials have been designed
as more open-ended and reflective experiences, which allow visitors
opportunities to empathize with victims, survivors, and their families or to
reflect on the personal and national meaning of the commemorated event
without being pushed toward a particular conclusion or overarching narrative.
This represents a form of prosumption in and of itself, since the consumer of
the memorial or monument is now expected to produce a therapeutic
experience for himself or herself rather than have the terms of such
experience explicitly dictated by the text, architecture, or imagery of the
memorial. Digital archives and memory banks flourish today within this
context of spontaneous, therapeutic, and prosumer-oriented commemoration.
The diversity of subjects described in the messages left at these two sites
means that very few themes appeared in a high percentage of the entries at
both archives. Nevertheless, some important ideas emerge from this analysis.
For instance, both archives made reference to the psychological after-effects
of these disasters, such as depression, stress, or compulsively reliving the
events in one’s head. Five percent of the entries in the Hurricane Digital
Memory Bank made these sorts of references to trauma, as did 8 percent of
those at the September 11 archive. A Hurricane Katrina survivor explained:
Hurricane Katrina has been a tremendous strain on my life and I
continue to try to put it behind me. It has been such a struggle for
almost 3 years. When I went back home after Katrina that I was so
traumatized that I chose to not remember much of those 6 months
there. I would always go to my house just so I could get disgusted
and angry… . Katrina didn’t just take my house. She took my home,
my childhood, and my mental state. The person I used to be was lost
along with everything else.
Watching the news the entire evening with our children was a
difficult but memorable experience. We had an opportunity to
explain why evil exist in light of what the Bible teaches. More
importantly, it provided a reference point for giving them an eternal
perspective to the fallen nature of this world and the hope we have
when Jesus Christ returns… . In many respects, although I would
never wish the atrocity on any other human being, I’m glad that my
children were exposed to the tragedy.
I’m still trying to work through why my life and the lives of my
children were spared. Why was I at the right place at the right time
when so many clearly were not? Do I have an obligation to the
people who suffered so directly and profoundly? If so, what is it? If
not, why not? Is life that random? And if life is that random then
why do we spend so much time in churches, synagogues, and
mosques?
Such musings combined questions about luck and theodicy with concerns
over the moral obligation to help others in need. These same sorts of
questions have become commonplace in other parts of American popular
culture, as well, especially on daytime talk shows (Illouz 2003).
Many entries at these sites reflected a basic desire to express or vent
one’s emotions, especially one’s fear, sadness, anger, or frustration. Some
expressed anger at the media for inaccurate or overly sensational coverage.
One submission to the September 11 Digital Archive asked, “The next time
there is a major attack or tradegy in America, … the media, please do not
constantly bombard us over and over and over with the same images. Think
of what this is doing to the minds and hearts of the victims families, children,
etc.” A Hurricane Digital Memory Bank contributor critiqued the unsettlingly
quick and ultimately inaccurate way in which television news media came to
consensus about the initial effects of the storm: “All these reporters were
reading from the same script. There was no healthy disagreement, as if the
source of all the information was one guy.” Still others focused their ire on
the longer period of post-Katrina coverage, as did one author who wished
“that the media would try to focus on the rebuilding efforts as they did with
the destruction.”
Similarly, anger was directed toward federal, state, and local government
in 14 percent of the entries at the Hurricane Digital Memory Bank. However,
such messages of anger were far less common in the September 11 Digital
Archive. Instead, entries in that archive were much more likely to praise the
federal government, as well as local police and firemen. When anger was
expressed, it was usually directed at terrorists. One user summed up these
post-9/11 sentiments this way:
As the day continued into days and weeks and months, I became
very proud to be an American as we were watching the heroics of
all the police & fireman and construction crews working around the
clock to save people and recover the bodies of the victims.
Regardless of the costs, we must continue the war on terrorism until
it is wiped from this planet.
Other messages referred to the fear and sadness associated with these
disasters. A typical user described September 11 as “such a sad day for
America.” Another stated, “I now felt that I was living in fear and that ‘they’
could attack from anywhere. Not only in the air, not only on land, but by
chemical warfare. They could put things in our water; they could put things
in our food, or even make us inhale things that were unsafe to humans. The
question that still remains is why? And when will this end?” By providing an
outlet for raw emotional expression, the September 11 Digital Archive
captured the grief and paranoia of post-9/11 America; both websites offered
the chance for users to undergo a kind of catharsis through such emotional
sharing.
Another common trope in the messages on both sites—albeit one that
appeared to span several of the categories I have tallied—was the notion that
these disasters might ultimately have served a beneficial purpose by inspiring
acts of kindness toward others, calling renewed attention to the preciousness
of human life, or offering a chance to rebuild in an improved fashion. For
instance, one user commented, “On that day, I saw the true New York that
everyone knows lies beneath the usual reputation. NYC became one big
village that day.” Another commenter asserted, “In some ways, I hope we
don’t return to the days before September 11. We were, I’m sorry, but such
greedy, selfish, self-absorbed, spoiled brats. Dear God, please don’t ever let
me lose my perspective again.” And a Hurricane Katrina survivor ended her
comments by writing that her “Katrina story now merges with that of all my
co-workers, neighbors and friends who have returned to ‘Rebuild a Greater
New Orleans.’ We are now part of a bigger story that will be written in the
history books. The same faith that sustained us all through our travails will
sustain us through the months and years ahead. Our individual stories will
serve as prelude to that story, not as epitaph.”
One contributor to the 9/11 digital archive said simply, “Remembering
that horrible day helps to bring some closure for me.” Indeed, this notion of
“closure” is another way in which the experience of posting a message or
story on a digital archive is a form of self-help. Such sentiments provided a
measure of relief by describing a world in which one’s nation, one’s family,
and even one’s self had suffered but had nonetheless transformed that
suffering into something positive. Of course, such closure is itself a construct
of a culture in which “the focus on people’s grief is common but mostly
constrained by limited patience and expectations that the person will solve
the problem within a brief amount of time” (Berns 2011, 11). Even in a
context where disaster victims and their families may be wary of being
exploited by the mass media, the assumption that “closure [is] real and
something people need” (Berns 2011, 9) is shared by many. In this sense,
contributing to a digital archive in the hopes of enacting some kind of healing
is still part of the larger cultural turn in which the market offers solutions for
grief and loss.
Some of the stories and messages posted by those with affected friends
or loved ones fulfilled a very basic function of memorials: commemorating
the dead. Like spontaneous shrines in the physical landscape, these entries in
the digital archives commemorated the life of a particular victim; in these
cases, the entries’ authors were usually friends or family members of the
deceased. Some messages described what it was like to experience the loss of
a loved one or commemorated aspects of a particular victim’s personality.
One user whose brother worked on the one-hundredth floor of Tower One
wrote, “I could not believe what was going on and then when the towers
collapsed my heart stopped. I sat there helplessly and watch as my brother die
right before my eyes and I could not do a thing to help him, it was the worst
felling in the world… . I will miss my brother very much.”
Another described the loss of her close friend who was a passenger on
American Airlines Flight 11: “My friend perished in the blaze aboard flight
11. She was a fighter and I am sure she did what she could to prevent those
men from trying to get into the cockpit… . She is a hero as all who were on
that plane and the other planes are. As the plane crashed through the tower
with what I can imagine as terrified faces of those aboard, I envision her
smiling face. Her lively personality, her generous spirit, her laughter is what I
think of.” Stories at the Hurricane Digital Memory Bank described such
losses in similar ways:
Yet messages written by those with affected loved ones were a relatively
small percentage of the overall number of messages on both sites. In my
sample of the September 11 Digital Archive, the large majority of stories (80
percent) were submitted by those not directly affected by the attacks, while
11 percent of the stories were submitted by those with an affected loved one
and 8 percent by those who were directly affected. (In 1 percent of submitted
stories, it was impossible to discern the author’s relationship to the 9/11
attacks.) By contrast, the large majority of stories (73 percent) in the
Hurricane Digital Memory Bank were submitted by those who were directly
affected by one of the storms, while 10 percent were submitted by those with
affected loved ones; 10 percent, by unaffected authors; and 7 percent, by
those whose relationship to the storms was impossible to determine. Part of
this discrepancy is surely due to the very different geographical reach of these
two catastrophes. Hurricanes Katrina and Rita destroyed countless homes and
properties across a huge swath of the country, and even those whose
properties and homes remained unharmed may have had to evacuate for
several days—a scenario that was described many times in the sample by
those directly affected. By contrast, only those in or near the World Trade
Center complex, the Pentagon, or the Shanksville, Pennsylvania, crash site of
United Airlines Flight 93 on September 11 were directly affected in this same
sense.
But another explanation for the fact that many unaffected people
submitted stories to the September 11 archive while far fewer did so in the
Hurricane Memory Bank has to do with the role September 11 played in
constructions of American nationalism overall. Five percent of Hurricane
Digital Memory Bank users framed their stories in terms of the local
community—either as a crisis in their towns or cities, such as Waveland or
New Orleans, or as a tragedy for the entire Gulf Coast—while only 3 percent
described the storms as affecting the entire nation or as having repercussions
for the United States as a whole. One user who applied a regional framework
to Hurricane Katrina said:
I love New Orleans, its people and culture. There truly is no other
place like it in the United States. During my evacuation travels,
people said ugly things like let it go, why go back, the sins of the
city caused this, etc. I explained the life style here. They all
marveled at it and understood. Do we tell the midwest to evacuate
and leave forever because of tornadoes; or California people to
leave forever because of fire storms and so on? Of course not. We
will rebuild I said.
Entries such as this reflected the sense that, as coverage of Hurricane Katrina
dragged on, Americans in other parts of the country began to blame the
citizens of New Orleans and the rest of the Gulf region for the terrible
aftermath. For instance, many messages sought to correct the national news
media’s portrayal of survivors as “looters,” as did one contributor who
argued, “The so-called looters are simply grabbing water, food, diapers and
medicines, because the federal and state officials have refused to provide
these basic necessities.”
By contrast, the commemorative messages at the September 11 Digital
Archive reflected an understanding of that disaster as a national event that
largely transcended the regional boundaries of affected areas. Thirty-five
percent of the September 11 archive sample framed the 9/11 attacks as part of
American national identity, while only 2 percent described them solely in
terms of the local community. One author commented, “Terrorists tried to
bomb the life out of New York City, but ordinary people saved each other,”
yet such a New York–centered framework was rare. Instead, many authors of
submissions to the September 11 archive ended their messages with some
variation of the phrase “God Bless America.” Similar national frameworks
did not appear nearly as frequently in the hurricane archive, although one
memory bank contributor did remark that “when Katrina hit, I saw a change
in the way Americans view ‘attacks’ on the United States even if it was a
national disaster compared to a terrorist attack.”
The nationalistic response in the digital archive mirrors the overall
reaction to the September 11 terrorist attacks in the mainstream media and in
public life in general, all of which were flooded by an immediate surge of
patriotism and support for the government. This was somewhat reflected in
the September 11 archive sample, as well: 4 percent of messages expressed
pro-government sentiments, while just 1 percent expressed anger at the
government. One digital archive contributor used the site to describe her
post-9/11 renewal of nationalism: “I’ve come to realize how much I love my
country. I appreciate the people in the armed services, the firemen and the
policemen more than I ever thought I would. I love the American flag.”
Another contributor expressed very similar sentiments on the one-year
anniversary of the attacks, but with a slightly ominous, militaristic tone:
“Today, a year later, our nation still stands proud, strong, and united, as
promised by President Bush. As we keep those lost in this act of terrorism in
our thoughts and prayers, the fight against terrorism continues. And trust me,
the battle has just begun.” This idea that the September 11 attacks were an act
of war and that the subsequent war on terror was a just one was perpetuated
by frequent historical comparisons to Pearl Harbor, which happened in 4
percent of the sample, making it by far the most frequent historical
comparison, much as it was in the print and televised media discussed in
Chapter 3.
In contrast, 14 percent of submissions to the Hurricane Digital Memory
Bank expressed antigovernment sentiment directed at federal, state, or local
authorities, while just 1 percent of those submissions praised government
authorities. As one fairly representative comment from the memory bank
stated, “In the immediate aftermath of Hurricane Katrina, the federal
government did a terrible job. No doubt about that. Americans stranded on
roofs. Americans without food and water. People in war-ravaged,
dysfunctional nations looking at us on television saw that our country could
be just as dysfunctional as their own.” Another user lamented the lack of
disaster preparedness on the part of the Army Corps of Engineers:
Of all the things that happened that week, the one I cannot get over
is that the city and the Army Corp of Engineers did not have an
emergency plan to patch a levee breach. Certainly they would have
a few helicopters or barges and a few hundred tons of sandbags
sitting around waiting to be rushed to a breach. It was inconceivable
that if a levee started to break the emergency plan was to watch it on
television. But that, in fact, was the plan.
Some might decide that the best way to create a memorial that
“evolves” is to avoid the question of meaning altogether, to create a
“neutral” memorial that asks visitors to generate their own “personal
and private” interpretations of the event. But another response to
these requirements would be to confront the question of meaning,
not to fix it or impose it in the traditional didactic manner but to
frame questions rather than answers, still leaving room for
understanding to evolve. (Savage 2006, 115)
In online memorials where users supply all or most of the content, the sites’
creators have little ability to guide visitors or frame questions. Instead, the
more haphazard navigation of online archives and memory banks allows for a
panoply of potential experiences for users that, to paraphrase Savage (2006,
115), are just as likely to “inspire hate and a desire for revenge,” as to create
some sort of psychic healing or deeper understanding, depending on the
particular entries one searches for or stumbles on. Moreover, one wonders
whether the sheer number of submissions to these sites will make it hard for
visitors in the future to find any particularly insightful or moving messages
amid this cacophony of commemoration.
This remains a potentially problematic aspect of this new and democratic
form of collective memory. Recollection of the past has always been an
“active, constructive process, not a simple matter of retrieving information”
(Schwartz 1982, 374). The “fundamentally interactive, dialogical quality of
every memorial space” (Young 1993, xiv) means that we are all, to some
extent, prosumers of history each time we visit even the most rigid of official
monument sites. Digital archives provide a more literal version of the kinds
of interactivity or co-construction associated with memorials in the physical
landscape, by inviting anyone and everyone to contribute, and by refusing to
rank those contributions. But the resultant hodgepodge of memorial messages
is likely to forestall certain kinds of user actions and interactions even as it
encourages others.
Most importantly, the difficulty of navigating as a reader through the
multitude of submissions on these sites reinforces the fact that they are
designed primarily as outlets for contributors rather than simply to be
consumed by other readers. While the experience of the Box family described
at the start of this article was certainly one in which a similar archive was
successfully “consumed,” these archives appear to be used more often for a
therapeutic form of self-help in which prosumers can leave their messages
and stories behind to enact their own psychological fulfillment. In that sense,
these archives provide ample opportunities to work through the trauma
associated with surviving a disaster or simply watching it on television and
can simulate a kind of cross-counseling dialogue with an imagined readership
of suffering others. Although emotional self-expression often generates new
and somewhat unpredictable emotions (Reddy 2001), it seems fairly
uncontroversial to believe that the public talking- or writing-through of one’s
pain or suffering surrounding a disaster can indeed elicit a positive emotional
transformation and at least help ease a tiny bit of that suffering. In that sense,
these digital archives and memory banks presumably fulfill their missions of
fostering “positive legacies.”
However, if one takes these digital memory banks seriously as
therapeutic experiences, then the memory banks also warrant scrutiny on
those grounds. Critics have taken America’s popular faith in therapy to task
for offering fast and simple solutions to complex problems and because “our
emphasis on the individual psyche has blinded us to underlying social
realities” (Moskowitz 2001, 283). Something similar may have been at work
in the therapeutic messages within these digital archives, which largely
presented disasters as obstacles that had caused pain and suffering for
individual authors but that could and would be overcome by those
individuals. Even messages that addressed the nation as a whole frequently
transposed this narrative of individual self-improvement to a national context.
As Eva Illouz (2003, 234) has pointed out, “Recycling narratives of suffering
into narratives of self-improvement … erases the scandal of suffering.” Thus,
when a user explained that September 11 offered a profound lesson on good
and evil for her young children and another hoped that America would never
return to the “spoiled” days before 9/11, and even when a Katrina survivor
spoke passionately about rebuilding a greater New Orleans, they risked
minimizing the real horror and scandalous injustice of both these disasters, no
matter how measured their language might have been or how understandable
the impulse was to positively reframe these tragedies.
Critics of therapeutic culture have long suggested that such individual
comfort may come at the expense of the larger, more conventional purposes
of community (see Reiff 1966). The past several decades in the United States
have seen “lifestyle enclaves” geared toward private forms of leisure and
consumption supplant more traditional forms of communal organization
(Bellah et al. 1985). Inasmuch as online sites of commemoration reflect this
trend, then the simple act of reaffirming one’s identity and having one’s
framework of meaning reinforced by others online is likely a therapeutic
experience.
“However,” writes Felicia Wu Song (2004, 144), “where communities
had once functioned as a source of these identities and moral frameworks,
there is now a tendency to emphasize how individuals can choose and
construct communities that share and affirm their pre-established, self-
derived identities. As a result, there is little to keep online communities from
being reduced to communities of therapeutic function alone, again at the
expense of external communal ends.” Thus, one wonders about the aggregate
effects of this largely individualistic, therapeutic approach to
commemoration.
If there is a politics behind vernacular forms of commemoration such as
digital archives and spontaneous shrines, then it is an individualistic one, in
which the commemoration of individual victims serves as protest against the
urge to forget or the depersonalization that is somewhat inherent toward
victims of mass tragedies (Santino 2006). As John Torpey (2006) has argued
regarding reparations politics, however, such a perspective is in many ways a
poor substitute for the progressive visions of the future associated with older
political movements. He asserts that “a legalistic, therapeutic, and theological
attitude towards the past has tended to supplant the quest of active citizens
and mobilized constituencies for an alternative future” (Torpey 2006, 15).
This backward-looking, individualistic politics is essentially a form of
nostalgia. As Maurice Halbwachs recognized long ago, “That faraway world
where we remember that we suffered nevertheless exercises an
incomprehensible attraction on the person who has survived it and who seems
to think he has left there the best part of himself, which he tries to recapture”
(Halbwachs 1992, 49). Such nostalgia was often evident in the messages at
both archives, a fact that speaks to some of the more conventional or
conservative qualities of these new forms of online prosumption. It also
suggests that these archives have missed an opportunity to encourage a more
explicitly collective experience, as thousands of users have been motivated to
contribute to this new form of commemoration, but have done so in a largely
atomized, inward-looking manner.
In this sense, therapeutic online commemoration may be at odds with
progressive collective political mobilization around disasters, since it teaches
that the mass suffering brought about by catastrophes such as September 11
and Hurricane Katrina is something to be overcome through many disparate
acts of individual healing rather transformations in the social structure. Given
the many problematic aspects of the government’s response to both these
disasters and the general hostility to collective action in the current neoliberal
moment, it makes sense that digital memory banks and archives reflect the
predominantly individualistic, therapeutic attitude toward many social
problems in American society today. With no strong, progressive political
movements emerging from these two disasters, at least individuals may find
comfort for themselves at these digital archives, either by reading the
messages of others or by contributing their own stories and reflections. Still,
if the construction of “positive legacies” means more than simply making
individuals feel better—if it means contributing to the creation of a more just
society in which such tragedies are less likely to be repeated—then these
archives may not be living up to their admittedly enormous missions.
Such nuanced criticism shows that the Hurricane Digital Memory Bank
offered thoughtful, alternative perspectives on the media’s coverage of the
storm and its aftermath and a venue in which those who harbored such
perspectives could express themselves. Furthermore, unlike so many of the
examples of disaster consumption described throughout the book, these
archives have remained nonprofit ventures with no advertisements and no
access fees. It should be noted, however, that less than 1 percent of the
messages in the September 11 sample contained similar media criticism.
Besides critiquing mainstream media, both of these digital archives
essentially circumvented the political and cultural gatekeepers who normally
decide on the content of permanent, official memorials in the physical
landscape. Spontaneous commemorators of tragedy online and in the physical
landscape were able to have a say in the content of the memorials they helped
create, even if they had no training in architecture or design and even if
neither they nor any of their family members had been victimized.
Furthermore, these contributors got to decide for themselves what images,
messages, and stories were worth collecting and archiving, thus evading the
power of archivists and museum curators to make such determinations.
Like other forms of vernacular memorial expression, this online
commemoration also sped up the time frame of memorial creation. Rather
than waiting to visit an official memorial that might have taken more than a
decade to complete, spontaneous commemorators began to contribute to the
construction of memorials on the Internet and on street corners and in city
squares even while these disastrous events were still under way. This
emerging norm of near-immediate commemoration has actually begun to
change the pace with which official memorials are designed and constructed
—for example, the 1966 shooting at the University of Texas was not
commemorated with a memorial on that campus until 1999, but Virginia
Tech had begun planning a temporary memorial on campus within weeks of
its shooting in 2007 (Stearns 2008). New York City’s Union Square was a
similar site of spontaneous commemoration in the immediate aftermath of the
September 11 attacks (Zukin 2002). Yet one advantage of vernacular spaces
of online commemoration over spontaneous physical memorials is that online
memorials have actually tended to last longer: although some physical
locations of tragedy and death have become permanent shrines, the initial,
vernacular contributions to these spaces are usually eventually moved away
and either destroyed or housed elsewhere, especially if such sites are in
everyday use or have been slated to be rebuilt.
That said, the bulk of what has been collected at both the September 11
Digital Archive and the Hurricane Digital Memory Bank has tended to
reflect, rather than challenge, mass-mediated public opinion and conventional
wisdom about these two disasters. The most frequently occurring themes in
the messages of the September 11 archive, by a wide margin, were national
patriotism and religion, thus mimicking much mainstream discourse in
popular culture around that disaster. Along with the theme of pro-social
behavior, anger at the government was one of the two most frequently
occurring topics in the Hurricane Digital Memory Bank, followed very
closely by stories of antisocial behavior, religious topics, and rebuilding or
resilience. In both archives, such themes were entirely appropriate and
understandable, but they nonetheless echoed the sorts of ideas commonly
expressed in mass media and consumer culture, as well as those enshrined in
official memorials and archives. Even the therapeutic potential of reading and
contributing messages at these digital archives was very much in keeping
with prevailing norms surrounding mass-mediated emotion and the
empathetic consumption of others’ suffering.
This is in some ways not surprising. The digital and the physical are not
separate realms of existence but increasingly constitute each other (see
Jurgenson 2011). They are subject to the same social structures and
inequalities. But the fact that these digital archives reproduced the
mainstream rhetoric and ideology surrounding these two disasters at least
puts a damper on any kind of cyber-utopian longing for distinct alternatives
to disaster consumerism. The problems of disaster consumerism in the print
and televisual media follow it online, as well.
If the messages and stories of thousands of archive contributors are to be
believed, these sites facilitated genuine emotional reactions, thoughtful
responses, and descriptions of disaster in all of their messy, quotidian reality.
There is certainly value in collecting such responses for posterity, even if
they fail to contest prevailing belief systems or resist existing normative
structures. Indeed, the mundane and conventional character of these messages
are part of their seeming authenticity. As Pierre Nora put it in his discussion
of an explosion of pre-digital archiving, “The less extraordinary the
testimony, the more aptly it is taken to illustrate the average mentality” (Nora
1996, 9). An archive filled primarily with comments that were politically
challenging, aesthetically sophisticated, or wildly idiosyncratic would likely
be perceived as inauthentic and would appear as if it had been created by a
specialized audience or group. Sites such as the September 11 Digital
Archive and the Hurricane Digital Memory Bank, in which challenging or
oppositional entries were tempered by many others consisting of ordinary
details and conventional wisdom, are much more likely to radiate the
appropriately authentic aura, which serves as an assurance to visitors that
other regular people created these entries. If nothing else, such an aura helps
establish the kind of trust in strangers on which therapeutic online encounters
typically rely (see Song 2004).
Beyond its therapeutic purposes, the constitution of an aura at digital
archives calls into question the larger role of authenticity in disaster
consumption. As a set of subjective, aesthetic criteria, authenticity ultimately
has to do more with form than with substance. In these online archives,
authenticity was derived from open access to the process of record keeping
and from one’s ability to co-create a small portion of the records being kept.
In other examples discussed throughout this book, it has emanated from
shaky camera work, intimate close-ups of traumatized interviewees,
frightened voices of normally calm news anchors, the home-made digital
“manifesto” of a deranged killer, or artifacts and souvenirs taken from
physical locations marked by tragedy. These cues to the authenticity of
products or media have little to do with the substance of what is said or meant
by disaster-related texts and commodities. In this way, the authenticity of
disaster allows individuals with a wide variety of viewpoints and
backgrounds to forge vicarious emotional connections, but in ways that are
unlikely to challenge an individualistic understanding of disasters and their
consequences. Such an understanding often reinforces the existing
inequalities responsible for disasters in the first place.
To drive home this point, it is worth comparing these digital forms of
commemoration with the official, physical memorials devoted to September
11 and Hurricane Katrina. The idea of a 9/11 memorial became a national
priority almost immediately after the attacks, and the money devoted to that
tragedy’s three memorial sites reflects this. The cost of the Flight 93 National
Memorial in Shanksville, Pennsylvania, has been estimated at $56 million
and that of the Pentagon 9/11 Memorial, at $32 million. The budget for the
World Trade Center memorial and museum is more than $500 million, which
was drastically decreased after the initial plans topped the $1 billion mark
(BBC News 2006; T. Dwyer 2006; Frangos 2006; Pitz 2009). By contrast,
like much of the effort to rebuild New Orleans and the rest of the Gulf Coast,
plans for an official memorial to Hurricane Katrina have been modest and
have received little national attention. The blueprint for rebuilding New
Orleans initially called for a $3.5 million memorial (Bohrer 2007), but the
actual design conceived and stewarded by the New Orleans coroner Frank
Minyard is projected to cost just $1.5 million, plus $500,000 for perpetual
care (MacCash 2007). It is telling, then, that the digital memorials studied
here largely mimicked this unequal division of national interest and
resources: the September 11 Digital Archive had many times the number of
contributors as the Hurricane Digital Memory Bank, and those who did
contribute to the latter were usually residents of the affected geographical
area, in contrast to the national and even global reach of the September 11
Digital Archive. Thus, despite their potential to elicit powerful emotional
responses and occasional critical inquiry, these two online archives
constituted an authentic reflection of existing inequities rather than an
authentic challenge to them.
“The commandment of the hour is thus ‘Thou shalt remember,’” wrote
Nora. “It is the self that remembers, and what it remembers is itself, hence the
historical transformation of memory has led to a preoccupation with
individual psychology” (Nora 1996, 10–11). The same preoccupation with
individual psychology that Nora identified decades ago continues today at
these two digital archives, in which so many came together to commemorate
these two mass tragedies but did so in a series of largely atomized, inward-
looking bits of autobiography and therapeutic memory work. These messages
and their authors are ultimately a part of a collection but not of anything that
might be labeled a community. Perhaps in the future, forms of online
collective memory might emerge that are more explicitly concerned with
social, rather than individual, change. Until then, let us hope, as one
Hurricane Katrina survivor did, that “our individual stories will serve as
prelude to that story, not as an epitaph.”
1. At the time of my research, the Hurricane Digital Memory Bank had 1,209 user-submitted stories.
For this study, I read all of them, but I omitted several types of entries, including any that were written
in languages other than English, any that were not actually submitted by their authors (some people
posted news articles or other content that they had not written), and any that were classified incorrectly
(e.g., that described a picture and thus should have been in the Images section); I also omitted poetry,
on the grounds that having to interpret poetry would stretch the reliability of my analysis. This left me
with a sample of 963 stories or messages. I used the same criteria for the September 11 Digital Archive,
but because its section of Stories from Site Visitors contained 7,126 entries, I randomly sampled 41
pages of entries, for a total of 369 stories or messages, which decreased to 345 entries after entries that
met the exclusion criteria given above were omitted. All quotations from user stories are transcribed
verbatim and without interpolation.
CONCLUSION
THE DEEPWATER HORIZON OIL SPILL AND
DISASTERS STILL TO COME
O n April 20, 2010, the Deepwater Horizon oil rig owned by British
Petroleum (BP) exploded and sank in the Gulf of Mexico, killing eleven
workers and breaking open a well one mile beneath the surface of the Gulf
that began pouring 1.5 million–2.5 million gallons of oil a day into the sea
(CNN Wire Staff 2010). For the next eighty-seven days, BP crews, the U.S.
Coast Guard, and scores of volunteers cleaned beaches, deployed oil
containment booms, and worked to prevent more oil-related damage as BP
sought first to cap the damaged well and then to plug the leak. The depth of
the leak made the process of repairing the well and halting the flow of oil a
painstakingly slow and frequently unsuccessful one, however, as various
options failed or were halted due to bad luck, bad weather, or faulty
technology. But after a summer mixed with both failure and incremental
progress, the well was sealed on July 15. By August 4, the Obama
administration had held a press conference to announce that the “static kill”
procedure of pumping mud and then cement into the now capped well had
worked to stop the flow of oil. The administration also announced that three-
quarters of the leaked oil had already been captured on the surface,
dissipated, or otherwise dispersed (Achenbach and Mufson 2010; Gillis
2010). When all was said and done, the broken well and its rapidly leaking
oil had dominated the news media and the national consciousness during the
otherwise slow summer news season and stirred widespread fears of
ecological devastation.
Despite the positive pronouncements of relieved White House officials,
the public still had reason to worry about the spill’s long-term effects. White
House officials had already admitted that the spill was likely the worst
environmental disaster in U.S. history (Associated Press 2010), so many Gulf
coast residents refused to take BP’s and the White House’s word on the
amount of oil remaining in the water and about the degree of risk posed by
the oil that did remain (Bluestein and Weber 2010). Subsequent scientific
tests seemed to prove these residents right; they suggested that as much as 80
percent of the oil remained in the Gulf and confirmed that the sea floor was
covered in oil for many miles around the spill site (Gutman and Blackburn
2010; Gutman and Dolak 2010). Even if the initial assessments had been
correct, the amount of oil remaining in the Gulf would have been much
greater than the amount in Alaska’s Prince William Sound during the Exxon
Valdez spill of 1989, and many Alaskan fisheries have yet to recover from
that disaster (Klein 2010). Thousands of birds and other animals died or were
hurt in the weeks immediately after the BP spill, and the damage from oil and
oil dispersants to the larvae and eggs of crab, shrimp, and fish are expected to
be severe, although exactly how severe is still unclear (Biello 2011; Dute
2014). Taking into account the Gulf of Mexico’s incredible diversity and
already fragile ecosystem, it is likely that many more animals will ultimately
be hurt by the effects of this oil. Of the 1,728 species of plants and animals in
the spill zone, 135 are unique to the area and 74 are already endangered; in
the worst-case scenario, the spill will permanently alter the marine chemistry
of the Gulf to the point that many of these species will simply not survive
(Hotz 2010).
Thus, as with the disasters that preceded it, the deleterious effects of the
BP spill were likely to persist longer than the attention of most of the national
news media. One Washington Post story perhaps unwittingly revealed this
dynamic: “Analysts compared the spill’s tarnishing of Barack Obama’s
reputation to the damage Hurricane Katrina did to President George W.
Bush’s image. Both disasters tested presidential responsiveness and
sensitivity. Unlike Katrina, however, the spill had staying power. Katrina
came and went, leaving devastation behind, but the spill ‘is this ogre that
keeps coming at us,’ one administration official said a few weeks into the
disaster” (Achenbach and Mufson 2010, para. 14–15). Although the residents
of New Orleans and other communities that have yet to be fully rebuilt would
certainly quarrel with the notion that Hurricane Katrina “came and went,” this
quote unwittingly reminds us that all disasters eventually lack “staying
power” in contemporary media culture. As Susan Moeller (2006, 186) put it,
“Once the complications of reconstruction begin … the media cover ‘simple’
and ‘complex’ emergencies in much the same way, which is to say that they
do not cover either of them.”
Like most modern disasters, this one produced a variety of striking
images. Photographs of the massive Deepwater Horizon rig burning and
sinking into the ocean garnered early media attention, but the most iconic
images came on June 3 when an Associated Press photographer took pictures
of brown pelicans and other seabirds covered in, and presumably dying from,
a thick, brown coat of oil at Louisiana’s East Grand Terre Island. Video
footage of the birds soon followed on most major news networks. At a time
when the potential environmental impact of the vast and uncontrolled leak
was really just beginning to dawn on the American public, these images
provided the first concrete proof of the toll that the oil was surely taking on a
wide range of wildlife throughout the Gulf.
Although the American public did not initially watch this tragedy unfold
in real time as it had on September 11, and despite the fact that BP tried to
restrict and control images of the disaster, members of Congress eventually
received access to internal video feeds from BP’s underwater rovers, which
some of those representatives then displayed to news networks without BP’s
permission (J. W. Peters 2010). BP soon announced it would turn off this live
video feed during its first attempt at a “top-kill” procedure on May 26 but
relented under pressure from the White House (Werner 2010). The resulting
broadcast of what turned out to be a failed attempt to plug the leak was, in the
words of one journalist, “an Internet smash” (Jonsson 2010). More than one
million people viewed the video embedded in PBS’s website, and more than
three thousand websites used the feed, which many television news channels
also displayed. Although this video feed lacked the visual spectacle of other
disasters, its large audience nevertheless speaks to the continued public
appetite for live footage of disasters, as well as the perceived authenticity of
such footage. Although it was frequently difficult to tell what was happening,
and almost absurdly abstract at times, audiences trusted these images of oil
ceaselessly billowing into the deep sea to reveal the truth of the matter—or, at
least, to keep BP and the White House honest in their public
pronouncements.
BP’s initial attempt to withhold its own underwater footage of the spill
was matched by attempts to block the access of journalists to sites where the
oil had surfaced and reached land (J. W. Peters 2010). When coupled with the
numerous gaffes of BP’s chief executive Tony Hayward, which were heavily
covered by a news media attuned to stories on political missteps, the
company took a public relations hit that resulted in lowered stock prices and a
nationalist American backlash against the suddenly foreign British Petroleum
company (Gross 2010; Weber and McClam 2010). Many forms of spill-
related consumer culture reflected the company’s poor public image, as well.
The company CafePress, which prints logos and designs uploaded by web
users onto T-shirts, mugs, bags, and other products, had more than two
thousand spill-related designs for sale on more than seventy thousand
possible products, most of which contained slogans such as “give bp the bird”
around a drawing of an oil-covered pelican, or bumper stickers that read
simply “FUBP.”
Much of the spill-related merchandise for sale at CafePress advocated
boycotting BP, a sentiment with a strong presence in other online venues, as
well. The Facebook account Boycott BP had more than 800,000 fans; the site
BoycottBP.org boasted twenty-nine thousand unique visitors; and Public
Citizen’s boycott petition (http://www.citizen.org/boycott-bp) contained more
than twenty-two thousand signatures. But the efficacy of such boycotts has
also been called into question. As Newsweek’s Sharon Begley put it, “Just as
buying green products is better for our eco-esteem than it is an effective way
to save the planet, so consumer boycotts of the latest oil company to run afoul
of public opinion are emotionally satisfying but ultimately futile” (Begley
2010, para. 9). Indeed, competing oil companies that would likely benefit
from a consumer boycott of BP gas have similarly poor records on
environmental and human rights issues. Unlike other famous consumer
boycotts, such as the Montgomery, Alabama, bus boycott that jumpstarted the
Civil Rights Movement, or the 1980s boycott of canned tuna that led to the
adoption of dolphin-safe fishing techniques, few real alternatives exist for
consumers who are concerned about the environmental effects of deep sea oil
exploration and our general dependence on fossil fuels, since electric cars are
not an affordable option for the bulk of consumers at this time (Begley 2010).
Perhaps as a result, public protests of BP and the oil industry in general
took more symbolic, emotional approaches. For example, one organization
called Hands across the Sand (http://www.handsacrossthesand.com) held an
event on June 26, 2010, in which people gathered at beaches all across the
country to join hands for fifteen minutes as a show of support for “protection
of our coastal economies, oceans, marine wildlife, and fishing industry.” Like
the BP boycott, such events seemed geared more toward their participants’
emotional well-being than toward addressing any concrete changes or
policies. Indeed, one wonders whether the goals of protecting coastal
economies and the fishing industry are at all compatible with the goals of
protecting oceans and marine wildlife in any sense other than the symbolic.
But, as with other forms of disaster consumerism, the personal demonstration
of empathy in the face of others’ suffering is an increasingly important
cultural norm and participation in these sorts of symbolic protests is an
effective marker of both empathy and sincerity. Tony Hayward faced heavy
criticism precisely for his perceived lack of empathy, especially after he
infamously told the Times of London, “I want my life back” (quoted in
Guarino 2010) in the wake of a disaster in which eleven people literally lost
their lives. President Obama was also criticized early on in the crisis for
failing to exhibit an appropriate level of emotional connection. One
Associated Press reporter regarded that as a motive for the president’s later
public appearances: “Eager to demonstrate not just command but
compassion, Obama invited relatives of the 11 oil workers killed in the
disaster to meet him at the White House, where he cuddled the newborn baby
of one of those lost” (Benac 2010, para. 18).
The White House did take some concrete measures early on, including
banning the drilling of new wells and all deep water drilling off American
coasts. And two months after the spill began, BP started paying out claims to
those people and businesses who had been harmed financially by this
disaster. But by October 12, roughly three months after the leak was stopped,
the Obama administration lifted its moratorium on offshore drilling (Baker
and Broder 2010). Two years after that, BP pleaded guilty to fourteen federal
criminal charges, including manslaughter and lying to Congress, and agreed
to pay $4.5 billion as a settlement. “The terms were generally considered
favorable for BP, which made $25.8 billion in profit the previous year” (S.
Beck 2014, para. 27). That same year, BP agreed to an uncapped class action
settlement that could cost it billions more. Since then, however, after paying
almost $4 billion in claims, “BP has declared war against plaintiffs [and] their
lawyers” by quite abruptly challenging the terms and conditions of the
settlement (S. Beck 2014, para. 5). But whether or not these legal maneuvers
are successful, the long-term effects of the spill on the health of the company
are clearly less dire than its effects on the health of the Gulf. As one Forbes
writer put it:
In these ways, the case of the 2010 Gulf of Mexico oil spill was a fitting
end to this decade of American disaster. Like the September 11 attacks,
Hurricane Katrina, the Virginia Tech shootings, and the financial crisis, it
became a kind of “public drama” (Monahan 2010) or “disaster marathon”
(Blondheim and Liebes 2002) to which high numbers of media viewers
remained attuned. Although the initial sinking of the oil rig was not viewed in
real time as September 11 or Hurricane Katrina had been, the obsession with
the underwater footage and the ability to follow live as BP attempted to cap
the well does speak to the same desire for authentic and intimate ways to
experience disasters. The variety of souvenirs and forms of charitable giving
that the spill generated also speak to a trickling down of public concern into
more mundane consumer behaviors. Perhaps most importantly, the fact that
the broader causes of the disaster have not been systematically addressed—as
our dependence on fossil fuels extracted by intractable and poorly regulated
oil companies has continued unabated—means that like those disasters earlier
in the decade, the Deepwater Horizon spill has also not made the country
more secure in the long term.
It is not surprising, then, that Americans throughout the decade have
appeared both transfixed by and uneasy with their mass-mediated experiences
of these disasters. The September 11 attacks and Hurricane Katrina were the
two most closely watched stories of the decade, with 78 percent and 73
percent of Americans, respectively, having watched these stories very
closely. The condition of the U.S. economy in September 2008 was the fourth
most watched story, while the Gulf oil spill was twelfth (Pew Research
Center for the People and the Press 2010c). And yet a month after 9/11, 32
percent of the public thought there was too much coverage of the attacks
(Pew Research Center for the People and the Press 2001b). Similarly, 21
percent of Americans thought there was too much coverage of Hurricane
Katrina (Pew Research Center for the People and the Press 2005). For some
disasters, such as the Virginia Tech shootings, the number of Americans
objecting to the amount of news coverage has reached as high as 50 percent
(Pew Research Center for the People and the Press 2007).
Many academics have used this public discomfort about the amount of
disaster news coverage as a jumping-off point to critique the presumed
effects of such an abundance of disaster news and imagery. On the one hand,
there is a sense that such media inflame the public’s taste for “disaster
pornography” such that “viewers … do not need to comprehend the causes
and implications of disaster because they become addicted to a perverted
form of reality television” (Bates and Ahmed 2007, 197–198). At the same
time, scholars argue that this intense attachment creates a waning of affect, an
“empty empathy” that occurs when news organizations present their audience
“with a daily barrage of images that are merely fragments of a large, complex
situation” (Kaplan 2005, 93). As Susan Moeller (1999, 9) confusingly put it,
“How they typically cover crises helps us to feel overstimulated and bored all
at once.”
Such claims invite scrutiny. Disasters almost by definition generate a
surfeit of highly emotional stories and powerful images. How else would
news organizations cover such stories if not emotionally and with striking
imagery? Should they ignore these central features of many catastrophes?
Critics such as Joan and Arthur Kleinman admit that “the absent image is also
a form of political appropriation; public silence is perhaps more terrifying
than being overwhelmed by public images of atrocity” (Kleinman and
Kleinman 1996, 17). Yet they go on to advocate the simultaneously vague
and grandiose position that “we must first make sure that the biases of
commercial emphasis on profit-making, the partisan agendas of political
ideologies, and the narrow technical interests that serve primarily
professional groups are understood and their influence controlled” (Kleinman
and Kleinman 1996, 18). But what would such media look like? How would
it attend to the public’s concern for the suffering of others? How would it
“creat[e] public memory that could motivate efforts towards social justice”
(Bates and Ahmed 2007, 197)? How would it actually help the victims of
disaster in ways that our current media do not? Critics are typically
ambiguous on these matters, and history offers few examples to guide us.
Of course, this supposed media-induced waning of concern for the
suffering of others has not been born out when measured by the amount of
disaster-related charitable giving. Americans donated more than $2.8 billion
after the September 11 attacks and increased that to $5.3 billion after
Hurricane Katrina. This generosity was not focused only domestically—in
2004, Americans gave $1.93 billion to relief efforts for the Southeast Asian
tsunami, and by the decade’s end, even in the midst of a crushing recession,
Americans still gave $1.45 billion in response to the Haiti earthquake (Aaron
Smith 2011). The Ethiopia famine of 1984–1985 is often regarded as the
moment in which “instead of charitable giving being seen as worthy and a
little dull, it became hip and cool” (Franks 2013, para. 6). But according to
the American Red Cross, charitable giving for the disasters of this past
decade far outstrips American donations for crises in the 1980s such as the
Ethiopian famine or the Mexico City earthquake (Kasindorf 2005). Although
such donations are not the only way one might measure Americans’ concern
for the suffering of others, in the face of such charitable outpourings it seems
hard to argue that our increased attention to disasters results in mere boredom
or empty sentiment. In the aftermath of catastrophe, Americans clearly want
to help. What other avenues are open to us?
True, in the age of the Internet it has never been easier to make a
donation or buy a T-shirt whose proceeds go to charity—such gestures do not
require much commitment. But for most of us, this sort of consumption
remains the most readily available way to publicly express our feelings about
tragedies, disasters, and the suffering of others. Seen in that light, the
consumption of disaster is really an expression of powerlessness. Following a
disaster through the maelstrom of cable television news cycles, buying a
souvenir, attending a concert, texting a donation, watching a documentary, or
visiting a disaster site: all of these behaviors simulate a kind of control over
catastrophes that in reality eludes us. In this way, the empathic ideal behind
many forms of disaster consumption reveals itself as an illusion of agency: it
makes us feel better about our actual helplessness in the face of mass tragedy,
at least until the next disaster comes along to throw that sense of agency once
again into doubt. This marks the authenticity of disasters as particularly
paradoxical. Certainly disasters are deeply real, with terrible consequences
that can be felt by victims, seen by spectators, and measured by reporters,
scientists, and government officials. But disasters are also captured,
packaged, and sold to their distant spectators in ways that encourage
empathetic hedonism first and foremost. Imagining another’s pain is a
powerful form of engagement but, as an act of imagination, it is still
ultimately an illusory one.
One of the particular illusions encouraged by disaster consumption is the
notion that individual consumption choices can effectively ensure one’s
safety from future risks and threats. The “consumerism of security” (Sturken
2007) that became so visible after the attacks of September 11 allowed
consumers to attempt to take their protection into their own hands. Such
security-minded consumption often proves wrong-headed, however, and may
actually exacerbate risks. Moreover, by its very nature this sort of
retrospective consumption of security is doomed to fail, since it is geared
toward disaster scenarios that have already happened and are therefore very
unlikely to be repeated. That is the case with the various types of executive
parachutes that appeared on the market after 9/11, which are not proven to
work and may deter people trapped in skyscrapers from using fireproof
staircases or other, more realistic escape methods (ABC News n.d.). In a
different context, fear of environmental pollution and unsafe tap water have
spurred spectacular growth in the sale of bottled water over the past quarter
century, which ultimately has produced massive amounts of plastic waste that
is highly detrimental to the environment (Szasz 2007). Americans also
frequently keep guns in their homes as a form of protection, despite the fact
that those with firearms in the home are at much greater risk of homicide or
other violent death (Cummings et al. 1997; Kellerman et al. 1993). Similarly,
the ease with which Americans can purchase firearms in the name of self-
defense makes mass shootings such as the massacre at Virginia Tech more
likely (Kellner 2008). And if we think of the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan as
a kind of product that was marketed and ultimately sold to the American
public after 9/11 on the grounds that it would make us safer (see T. Miller
2007), it seems clear that this consumption of security has also backfired, as
these conflicts have spurred anti-American rage across the globe, inspired
more recent acts of terrorism, and generally destabilized the entire Middle
East. Thus, attempting to consume one’s way to safety and security can have
a variety of disastrous consequences.
At the same time, American society continues to showcase a profound
lack of risk aversion among its elite decision makers, at least in part because
ignorance of risks is so profitable for those in positions of power. As former
New York Governor Eliot Spitzer put it:
Like the giant financial companies whose “too big to fail” status assured
them of government bailouts when the wild profits from their riskiest trading
schemes dried up and their debt quickly turned toxic, BP’s status as the
largest oil producer in the United States (N. Graham 2010) has guaranteed
that it will continue to thrive after the spill, which may not be the case for the
Gulf’s ecosystem or its coastal economy (Elliott 2015).
Nonetheless, understanding the individualistic cultural and political
context in which disaster consumption takes place today makes denunciations
of those who engage in it seem patently unfair. As consumers, we are tasked
with purchasing our own safety and security from risk, despite the
aforementioned ways in which consumer society often generates or
exacerbates those same risks. This is necessarily an antisocial proposition,
because securing only oneself necessarily means shifting the threat to others.
Since consuming one’s own security has emerged as the norm, it has become
an increasingly large gamble to throw in one’s lot with that of one’s
neighbors and community. Zygmunt Bauman has explained the results of this
individualistic ideology: “Whatever happens to an individual can be
retrospectively interpreted as further confirmation of their sole and
inalienable responsibility for their individual plight—and for adversities as
much as successes” (Bauman 2008, 22). This individualism often intersects
with older forms of discrimination based on class and race but provides a new
way to blame the victims of inequality and structural racism. Such was
certainly the case during Hurricane Katrina, when the city’s evacuation plan,
based on access to private transportation, predictably failed the many low-
income residents who did not own automobiles (Bartling 2006). Although
decades of uneven development and terrible urban planning left many poor,
minority residents stuck in the city as the hurricane approached, those
residents were demonized in the storm’s aftermath for not driving out of the
city and then for “looting” much needed supplies from flooded or abandoned
stores.
Individuals are also urged today to perform and maintain an attractive,
authentic, and even saleable form of selfhood in the face of increasingly
unstable family situations and labor markets (Bauman 2007). Self-help
books, management guides, and psychotherapists frequently emphasize
multi-perspectivalism and empathy (Illouz 2008). Mass culture ultimately
translates America’s “grand meritocratic promise” into a matter of “self-
invention via commodities” (T. Miller 2008, 2). These trends converge
during catastrophes, when news media and popular culture make the
suffering of others a common public topic of discussion that requires our
attention and our demonstrations of empathy, lest we appear insensitive to
families, friends, employers, or potential love interests. As the empathetic
gaze becomes embedded in more forms of media and the norms associated
with empathic hedonism ascend, the lack of a strong, personal, emotional
response to any mass-mediated American tragedy is increasingly likely to
reflect poorly on individual consumers, just as it does for corporate
spokespeople and government officials.
When all is said and done, then, the atomistic properties of consumerism
make it a poor answer to disaster. Empathy may reflect well on us as
individuals, but can it inspire sustained social and political changes or just
disparate acts of charitable giving? While empathetically motivated donations
of money or time certainly help, they still suffer from a reactive, backward-
looking perspective that ensures the next disaster is as likely as ever. Of
course, consumption choices do not always crowd out other forms of
activism (see Willis and Schor 2012), but it may nonetheless be the case that
progressive, grassroots activism operates in a slower time frame than can
accommodate the immediacy of disasters. For instance, although Virginia
Tech was the center of a national outpouring of emotional and monetary
support after the massacre there, the lack of support for new federal gun
regulation afterward set the stage for subsequent shootings in places such as
Aurora, Colorado, and Newtown, Connecticut. The National Rifle
Association (NRA) has even used these more recent shootings to successfully
advocate for the relaxation of existing gun restrictions, including in some
instances those that keep firearms out of schools (Beauchamp 2013;
Childress 2013). Of course, a complicated politics with a multitude of interest
groups is at work here, but at the very least, the failure of gun control
advocates and the success of the ever-powerful NRA in the wake of high-
profile school shootings have shocked many observers (see Lucas 2014;
O’Keefe and Rucker 2013).
This should remind us that governments, corporations, and lobbyists can
respond to disasters much more effectively than individuals, though often in
only their own, elite interests. As individual consumers concerned with
making our world better and safer, we have limited options. Green
consumerism will be a niche market, or an empty marketing ploy, unless new
laws require many more products to become green and unless regulatory
agencies stringently enforce such laws. Even as mainstream consumers
increasingly seek out ethically produced commodities, those commodities are
subject to corporate “greenwashing” efforts that may merely simulate some
sort of social good (K. Brown 2013; see also King 2006). Similarly, tourism-
based redevelopment strategies in New Orleans that accentuate the city’s
authenticity and distinctiveness have often been “silent about issues of social
justice, equity, and inclusion” (Gotham 2007). Indeed, cities such as New
Orleans will likely be rebuilt only in the interest of developers who plan to
gentrify the most desirable areas and shut out the poorest residents unless the
federal government takes a more proactive role in the process and does so in
ways that take into account the needs of its poor and working-class citizens
(see Green, Kouassi, and Mambo 2013). This is, of course, in direct contrast
to the way the American government actually operates in the current political
moment, dominated by neoliberalism and its related privatization schemes.
Yet until these conditions change, the consumerism of security will resemble
a kind of “political anesthesia” (Szasz 2007, 195) that diminishes one’s sense
of risk and reduces the sense of urgency to make political demands about the
alleviation of potential hazards. And until those conditions change, the
benefits of empathetic spectatorship will manifest primarily for the individual
viewer, not for those suffering others to whom that empathy is directed.
Disasters are a kind of commodity, and the ones we value most are often
the most immediate and sensational. This does not bode well for their
progressive political potential. As we have seen, disasters such as September
11 that are spectacular and novel are easily steered toward disastrous policy
outcomes such as the Patriot Act and the wars in Afghanistan and Iraq.
Disasters that take longer to develop or that lack a sense of novelty and
spectacle may provide a greater opportunity for public debate, as was the case
in the financial crisis and, to an extent, in the Deepwater Horizon spill. The
oil spill did manage to generate some public debate about the disastrous
nature of that particularly cherished American commodity. But even with the
huge opportunity that the spill provided for environmental groups to highlight
the problem of global warming and the high economic and ecological costs of
fossil fuels, public opinion polls taken after the spill found little change in the
percentage of people worried about climate change (Fahrenthold and Eilperin
2010). One poll about American energy policy taken three months after the
spill showed slightly more support for “keeping energy prices low” than for
“protecting the environment from the effects of energy development and
use,” though both options were heavily supported (Pew Research Center for
the People and the Press 2010a). These results seem to suggest that grassroots
progressive activists cannot always capitalize on disasters the way that
governments, entrepreneurs, and corporations can.
History has shown, going back at least as far as the Lisbon earthquake of
1755, that elites frequently use disasters to consolidate power and eliminate
dissent. But fifty years of disaster sociology have also highlighted the
innumerable ways in which residents of disaster-stricken communities act
with kindness and compassion toward one another, even under the most
harrowing of conditions. As Rebecca Solnit (2009, 306) put it, “The joy in
disaster comes, when it comes, from that purposefulness, the immersion in
service and survival, and from an affection that is not private and personal
but civic: the love of strangers for each other, of a citizen for his or her city,
of belonging to a greater whole, of doing the work that matters. These loves
remain largely dormant and unacknowledged in contemporary postindustrial
society: this is the way in which everyday life is a disaster.”
Perhaps, then, what distant consumers express when they sit glued to the
television watching a disaster replayed over and over, when they buy T-shirts
or souvenirs, when they mail teddy bears to a memorial, or when they tour a
disaster site is a deep, maybe subconscious, longing for those age-old forms
of community and real human compassion that emerge in a place when
disaster has struck. It is a longing in some ways so alien to the world we
currently live in that it requires catastrophe to call it forth, even in our
imaginations. Nevertheless, the actions of unadulterated goodwill that
become commonplace in harrowing conditions represent the truly authentic
form of humanity that all of us, to one degree or another, chase after in
contemporary mass culture every day. And while it is certainly a bit
foolhardy to seek authentic humanity through disaster-related media and
culture, the sheer strength of that desire was evident in the public’s response
to all the disasters, crises, and catastrophes to hit the United States in the first
decade of the twenty-first century. The millions of television viewers who
cried on September 11, or during Hurricane Katrina and the Virginia Tech
shootings, and the thousands upon thousands who volunteered their time,
labor, money, and even their blood, as well as the countless others who
created art, contributed to memorials, or adorned their cars or bodies with
disaster-related paraphernalia—despite the fact that many knew no one who
had been personally affected by any of these disasters—all attest to a desire
for real human community and compassion that is woefully unfulfilled by
American life under normal conditions today. Perhaps that is the true aura of
disaster.
In the end, the consumption of disaster does not make us unable or
unwilling to engage with disasters on a communal level or toward
progressive political ends. It makes us feel as if we already have, simply by
consuming. It is ultimately less a form of political anesthesia than a
simulation of politics, a Potemkin village of communal sentiment that fills
our longing for a more just and humane world with disparate acts of cathartic
consumption. Still, the positive political potential underlying our
spectatorship of others’ suffering—the desire for real forms of connection
and community—remains the most redeeming feature of contemporary mass
culture. Although that desire is frequently warped when various media lenses
refract it, diffuse it, or reframe it to fit a political agenda, its overwhelming
strength should nonetheless serve notice that people want a different world
from the one in which we currently live, with a different way to understand
and respond to disasters. They want a world where risk is not leveraged for
profit or political gain but sensibly planned for with the needs of all
socioeconomic groups in mind. They want a world where preemptive
strategies are used to anticipate the real threats posed by global climate
change and global inequality rather than to invent fears of ethnic others and
justify unnecessary wars. They want a world where people can come together
not simply as a market, but as a public, to exert real agency over the policies
made in the name of their safety and security. And when disaster does strike,
they want a world where the goodwill and compassion shown by their
neighbors, by strangers in their communities, and even by distant spectators
and consumers will be matched by their own government. Although this
vision of the world is utopian, it is not unreasonable, and if contemporary
American culture is ever to give us more than just an illusion of safety, or
authenticity, or empathy, then it is this vision that we must advocate each
day, not just when disaster strikes.
We must, then, abandon the notion that any particular practice of
spectatorship is the right way to view the suffering of others. A world where
we are less vulnerable to disasters will not suddenly appear if the media
become more sensitive and humane. A world where risks are more evenly
distributed and more equitably minimized for all people will not emerge
because of disaster tourism or because of some popular backlash against
disaster tourism. Others will not suffer less in the future because we turned
our televisions, computers, or mobile devices either off or on or because we
viewed some kinds of images and not others. The disasters of the past decade
favored elites in almost every policy outcome in ways that have not
necessarily made us safer, and all despite so much genuine fear, empathy, and
concern from so many diverse viewers and consumers. New strategies of
consumption and new media technologies are unlikely to change this. We
must conclude, instead, that disasters do not favor progressive activists and
populist politics. Social justice is, after all, a long, slow struggle. It is not
typically spectacular. It does not often keep television viewers rapt with
attention for weeks on end. But unlike many of the highly emotional yet
largely symbolic forms of post-disaster spectatorship described in this book,
it might just work. After all, much social science research attests to the
greater mental health and physical security that accrue in more egalitarian
societies (see Ward and Shively 2011; Wilkinson 1996; Wilkinson and
Pickett 2009). The creation of a more just and equal society is, then, a way to
make us safer and more secure in the face of a whole host of threats—from
terrorism and natural disasters to gun violence, financial crises, and climate
change. So it is to the everyday quest for a more egalitarian society that those
of us who lived through this decade of disaster, and anyone else who wants to
forestall such catastrophes in the future, ought to devote our energy,
attention, and emotion.
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Timothy Recuber is a Visiting Assistant Professor in the
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