American “Activism”: On the Neda Video, and Other Images of the Brutal Third World

by Guest Contributor Catherine A. Traywick, originally published at Femmalia

Two weeks after the much-publicized death of Iranian protester, Neda — whose final moments were famously captured by a cell phone camera and distributed the world over — a couple dozen performers put together a music video tribute slash “non-violent resistance” anthem filmed (appropriately?) with nothing but a cell phone camera. Described by CNN as “a call to action against human rights violations by the Iranian government against Iranians,” the video’s creators/stars rap and harmonize about non-violence, their fuzzy, pixelated faces crooning between clips of the now historic footage of Neda’s death.

The graphic clips excerpted by the creators of the video for the the purpose of spreading their message of solidarity and pacifism have generated a cacophony of international outrage, sympathy, outright disbelief, and controversy since their initial circulation a few weeks ago. While the footage has galvanized protesters in Iran, creating for them a martyr to rally around as they strive for real, lasting change, it has also prompted enthusiastic Americans to wear green and tweet about revolution in what has already been described by numerous commentators as a superficial and ineffectual display of “solidarity.” The “United for Neda” video, as well-intentioned and misguided as any green-clad American, seems to fall into the latter category. Like Americans who continually replay the Neda footage in order to sustain a dimming sense of shock, outrage, and civic duty while imagining a connection to a less complacent world, the music video appropriates the controversial images of Neda with the aim of fostering activism through the propagation of sensational violence.

Plenty has been written on the subject already. Virtually every reporter covering current events in Iran has addressed the issue of Neda’s death in some way or other — sometimes dramatically (in the case of CNN, who broke the story) and sometimes tenderly (in the case of Roger Cohen, who never fails to convey a sense of humanity and compassion in his thoughtful articulations of the events unfolding in Iran). Some have gone so far as to suggest that the Neda video was a hoax based one source’s “obvious rhetorical flourish” when recounting the event, while others have criticized our macabre fascination with the woman’s death (as evidenced by the video’s propagation).

Perhaps the most interesting bit of commentary I’ve read on the subject, however, is a piece on a personal blog which suggests that Americans’ sense of humanitarian duty is only activated by their vociferous consumption of violence against people of color:

On blog threads, commenters are thanking bloggers for posting the video of Neda’s death [...]

I understand these readers’ sentiments, but why? Why must we see an Iranian woman die on a city street in order to understand the gravity of the country’s political upheaval? Why must we see brown bodies bloated and floating to give a damn about the tsunami in Myanmar or the hurricane in New Orleans? Why did we have to see Oscar Grant killed in cold blood by police on a BART platform to talk about racism and the justice system? Why did it take the mangled body of 14-year-old Emmitt Till to give America an inkling of the tyranny and danger that black folks faced in the South every day?

I think Americans are fetishizing video of Neda Soltani’s death in a way they would not if she were a young, blonde, American college student shot down on an American street. We do not need to see the lifeless bodies of those women in order to care for them. But people like Neda owe access to their deaths so Americans can access their own humanity.

While I take issue with the author’s easy assertion that the phenomenon described above is based entirely on racial dynamics, there’s value in her overall argument. I have often wondered about photojournalists’ depictions of the third world which often disproportionately emphasize the negative — particularly as compared to depictions of the first world. I’ve also been troubled by our apparent preference for images of the third world that seem to affirm our perceptions of its brutal nature. Take a look at Pulitzer Prize winners over the last decade, for example…it’s a scrapbook of third world suffering and devastation: Kevin Carter’s controversial photo of a Sudanese baby being stalked by a vulture, Stephanie Walsh’s photo series depicting a Kenyan woman’s circumcision, Carolyn Cole’s images of the effects of the Liberian civil war, Adrees Latif’s photograph of a fatally wounded man lying in a street in Myanmar, and the list goes on. Patrick Farrell, this year’s Pulitzer Prize winner for “Breaking News Photography” similarly depicts “provocative, impeccably composed images of despair after Hurricane Ike and other lethal storms caused a humanitarian disaster in Haiti.”

What leads me to argue that this is not simply a race issue, however, is our culture’s reverence for photos like those of Damon Winter — also a Pulitzer Prize winning photographer — which consist of triumphant, inspiring images of Barack Obama campaigning during the presidential primary. We love heroic depictions of America(ns), regardless of skin color — emphasis on the “heroic,” because that is how we love to see ourselves, especially in relation to the rest of world.

That’s the issue at hand, really. We craft our own national and cultural identity in opposition the that of the rest of the world; the more devastating and woeful they are, the bigger and brighter we are by comparison.

The Neda video affirms this dichotomy of the world for us, depicting “them” as either brutish or helpless while reifying our sense of superior self and, in so doing, activating our sense of entitlement as the the third world’s savior. And, while indulging a savior complex is never a productive starting point for activism, at least the intention is noble however misguided the articulation of that intention proves to be in the long run….

Changing our facebook profile pictures to the color green and disseminating a video of a dying woman within circles that have absoultely no stake in the conflict that led to her death aren’t the most fruitful (or respectful) methods of supporting a cause. And while photojournalist depictions of third world devastation may expose us to issues that desperately need international support and attention, one hopes that we are evolved enough to support humanitarian (and other) causes without having to get off on images that would be considered no less than exploitative and cruel if they depicted the last moments of our own loved ones’ lives.

The kind of “activism” that is motivated by a short-term visceral response is superficial and similarly fleeting — and the artists responsible for creating the “United for Neda” video ought to make themselves aware of that fact. They, like us, should support a cause because, intellectually, we understand the ethical implications of our action and inaction, and have cultivated a sense of civic duty based on our sense of civic justice….and not because we had an emotional reaction to a moment of violence suspended in time.

(Image Credit – We Are All Neda.com)

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  1. American “Activism”: On the Neda Video, and Other Images of the Brutal Third World « Femmalia on 11 Aug 2009 at 10:16 am

    [...] In Activism., Racialicious, Third World on July 12, 2009 at 9:25 pm Cross-posted at Racialicious on July 16, [...]

Comments

  1. Rob Schmidt wrote:

    Excellent point about how we portray ourselves. I’d say it applies not only to the rest of the world, but to our own white/brown dichotomy.

    I made a similar point when I analyzed the state quarters program a couple of years ago (http://www.bluecorncomics.com/2007/05/safe-white-state-quarters.html):

    Summarizing the quarters’ message: The first (Anglo) Americans arrived by ship, fought for liberty, marched westward, found great beauty, and built great cities and monuments.

    I think the only POC the quarters depicted was King Kamehameha.

    Consider a gallery of Native American images. What do you see? People of the distant past. People stuck in warrior mode. Losers. Victims. The “vanishing breed.”

    What DON’T you see? Astronauts, scientists, engineers, doctors, lawyers, professors, writers–i.e., anyone who doesn’t fit the stereotypical mold. We celebrate white accomplishments and ignore nonwhite accomplishments. Hollywood and the rest of America’s old guard can’t fathom the idea of minority leaders and heroes.

    When someone like Sonia Sotomayor appears, we’re incredulous. She’s brown-skinned! She couldn’t possibly be intellectual, objective, and even-tempered, could she?! And so it goes.

  2. Deaf Indian Muslim Anarchist! wrote:

    Yep, this reminds me of the Rihanna-Chris Brown scandal. Nobody thought it was really real until that leaked photo of Rihanna’s bruised face came to media attention and then there was a lot of outrage thrown at Chris Brown. Because she’s black.

    If it was a major white celebrity like Jennifer Aniston or Miley Cyrus claiming to be have been physically abused and had to flee to the police, no photos would be needed to prove that the abuse was real. Because they’re white!

    Pathetic.

  3. Maria P. wrote:

    Thank heaven for this post. A journalist friend was showing me a series from a photographer he worships, and the racialized stereotyping was gagging. Pitiful yet complacently doe-eyed Africans waiting for their deaths. Skin-and-bones Indians crouched on the filthy sidewalk. The only white people were Russians, emotional robots locked in cages for the protection of their equally emotionless caretakers. I immediately thought of the Iranian video, actually, when I saw them. (I will not be watching it, but I’ve read critiques of how it’s being used.)

    Get a clue, Whiteness.

  4. Safiya Outlines wrote:

    I hate that graphic above.

    They’ve taken a woman’s murder and turned it into a cartoon. That’s not activism, it’s disrespect.

    How must Neda family feel when they see that image? She was an actual human being, not an icon for people to shed quickly forgotten tears over.

  5. Rachel_in_WY wrote:

    What DON’T you see? Astronauts, scientists, engineers, doctors, lawyers, professors, writers–i.e., anyone who doesn’t fit the stereotypical mold.

    Except for those honored few who get made into tokens…

  6. JL wrote:

    I’m curious, what do people think of Andrew Sullivan’s Iran coverage? He has certainly done the various superficial things with green, and he did put up the Neda video and write a number of posts on it. And he is not generally the most progressive guy when it comes to racial issues. On the other hand, he’s been working pretty hard to cover what has been going on in Iran in general, and to get Iranian voices out there, and he was doing so before Neda’s death. And he’s done an interesting series on Iranian culture, to debunk American stereotypes of Iranians as either extremists or joyless pitiable victims.

  7. Persia wrote:

    JL– I actually was considering commenting here about Sullivan’s coverage. I really, really love the culture series. I hope a lot of people are reading it and spreading the word, because I think it’ll do more ‘good’ than any cell phone videos.

  8. Rochelle wrote:

    This is all very well and good, except:

    Why do you think Neda’s family, who took the video of her dying, posted it on youtube?

    I don’t know, but I gander to take a guess that they wanted the world to know what this regime is doing to people, and know that videos and images create that visceral response.

    During this whole Iranian fiasco, I’ve just heard too many times “Iranians want this”, “Iranians want that.” But the only opinions that really made any sense to me were Iranians themselves, and my family and friends in Iran wanted people to care and do something, even if they ‘had no stake’ in the election.

  9. Catherine Traywick wrote:

    Rochelle/ JL/ Persia,

    Thanks for your comments. For the most part I agree with your sentiments. I think that it is important for injustices to be documented, especially when the perpetrators of those injustices are people in power who would otherwise get away with their crimes (such as in Oscar Grant’s case). As I mention in the piece above, I think the video of Neda was extremely important in terms of bolstering the protesters’ cause and publicizing the forces they are up against.

    What I take issue with is the way that the video and even the cause have been appropriated by Americans (and other non-Iranians) in a superficial and misguided display of solidarity/activism that actually does very little to support the people it intends to support (the “we are all neda” website from which that image comes is an example).

    I do not, however, take issue with journalists or informed activists who are supporting this cause (and other international causes) through effectual, non-appropriative methods — and I especially do not take issue with those who manage to support their causes without falling back on sensationalism.

    There is a difference between awareness-raising and sensationalism. The former appeals to our intellect and conscience in a way that is respectful of the people affected, while the latter plays on our emotions in a way that is often exploitative of its subjects and so disturbing that we are eager to forget what we saw rather than commit to a cause. Sometimes the same tool (in this case a video) is awareness-raising in one set of hands, and sensational and exploitative in another.

    - Catherine

  10. Moni wrote:

    So outrage should only be expressed and action should only be undertaken by those who are enlightened enough to appropriately meta-analyze the rationales behind their responses? Sounds a little elitist to me….

  11. EPF wrote:

    This argument is similar to Mamdani’s in his recent book Saviors and Survivors which interrogates why Americans respond so positively/emotively to Darfur, and cringe at the messiness of Iraq: messianic American manifest destiny is real, Darfur can confirm that, while also giving Americans absolution for where it has not been so manifest (Iraq)…

  12. Elar wrote:

    I don’t understand the criticism of people who want to show solidarity for Iranian protesters. Who cares if their reasons may be shallow or not fully informed? It’s a worthy cause and quite frankly, if any of these complainers took the time to listen to actual Iranians, they’d realize that these small, inconsequential signs of support are welcomed and encouraged.

    Calling out the hypocrisy of American sympathy is one (legitimate) concern, but that doesn’t make caring about Iran wrong or hypocritical in itself. The only “protester supporters” I have an issue with are neo-cons who are suddenly so concerned about the Iranian people after singing songs like “Bomb bomb Iran” and their campaign of demonizing the country as a whole. They’re the ones with sketchy, insincere motives. As for regular people who just want to show their support? Let them be.

    I agree that repeatedly seeing images of Neda’s bloody face is jarring and hard to swallow, but let’s not forget that much of the time, the people who are putting her image out there are Iranians themselves. I wouldn’t be surprised if the person who designed the graphic that goes with this post is Iranian. It doesn’t make exploiting her image right, per se, but it does go against the idea that it’s all just a case of “the West” disrespecting “the Other.”

  13. Lxy wrote:

    Like most of the West’s crocodile tears in general, American “concern” for Neda or the so-called green revolution in Iran is cynical to the core.

    The USA and West are engaged in what is called Humanitarian Imperialism.

    Humanitarian imperialism is the manipulation of concern for human rights in a targetted nation in order to advance a Western geopolitical agenda that has *nothing* to do with human rights or democracy or freedom.

    “Humanitarian Wars” and Associated Delusions
    http://www.globalresearch.ca/index.php?context=va&aid=8665

    Worse still, many Progressives have not fundamentally questioned the corporate media narrative about the “Green Revolution” or the covert role of certain countries in it.

    Has the U.S. Played a Role in Fomenting Unrest During Iran’s Election?
    http://www.foreignpolicyjournal.com/2009/06/23/has-the-u-s-played-a-role-in-fomenting-unrest-during-irans-election/

    Like Iraq, Iran just so happens to have a critical commodity (Oil) that the West covets, and it is strategically located.

    It also has a government that exercises some measure of autonomy and does not fully bow to Western dictates.

    Hence, it is an evil-doer in need of “regime change” and “liberation” by Western crusaders for democracy and human rights.

    And it’s interesting that Americans who supposedly mourn Neda are largely silent about the West’s genocide of over 1 million Iraqis or untold numbers of Afghanis and now Pakistanis in the USA-led War on Terror.

    Throwing Shoes and Other Crimes Against Humanity
    http://asianamericanmovement.wordpress.com/2009/04/25/iraq-war-shoe-throwing-bush-al-zaidi/

    In other words , citizens of Western nations that are responsible for murdering millions of people in thinly disguised wars of aggression (aka the War on Terror) somehow think they have a shred of moral legitimacy to shed crocodile tears for Iran.

    This is American/Western moral exceptionalism in all its imperial hubris.

  14. Adrianna wrote:

    When i was living in the US I was shocked by how little some Americans knew about what was going on in other countries, War in Chechnya, The Taliban before 9/11, Feminicide in Guatemala and a host of other things . Unfortunately living there I have come to realize that they need to see these images to believe that those things were happening. Images are powerful. If they can move one person to action then that is good.

    Of course there are going to be people to exploit the Images of Neda. I haven’t seen the videos. I have already seen to many dead bodies on Haitian streets to know what I would see on the video. It angers me that this is what it takes for people to feel solidarity with us people in the global south. We are otherwise invisible , non existent if we are not dying on the streets, starving and somebody wasn’t there to take the picture.

  15. RCHOUDH wrote:

    @ Lxy

    Cosign!

  16. Bagelsan wrote:

    I think Americans are fetishizing video of Neda Soltani’s death in a way they would not if she were a young, blonde, American college student shot down on an American street.

    I got completely the opposite impression; I thought that (very similar to the way young white women in distress are portrayed) once again a woman was being used as a canvas on which to paint an issue. I don’t see it as a function of her color, in this case — it seems like all young women in peril (or dead) are fetishized. The public completely *flips out* if a white girl goes missing or is murdered some graphic way, and the media paints the whole thing in absolutely lavish detail. So that’s more the vibe I got; a young women being used as a symbol of sweetness and goodness cruelly oppressed (it’s sad! But sort of titillating and sexy too!)

    I get it about the other images mentioned, with men and kids of color in abject misery or dead or what have you, but I group this particular image in with the “murdered women” group primarily, personally. Partially because, as was mentioned above, it’s being popularized not only by Americans.

  17. Daniel Cunningham wrote:

    I think this is a generally correct take on it (has Bon Jovi ever been concerned with Iran before?) but I would make one exception.

    Last year I left a job where I worked with several Iranians and I maintained passing contact with one guy. When this (the entire election debacle, pre-Neda) hit, my inbox was suddenly flooded with posts, links to articles, videos, etc. This is the same guy I emailed a day after the election and jokingly asked if he’d had a chance to vote here, in LA. Ahhhh… hindsight.

    It’s hard to ignore when someone you know is blasting you with updates and the issue does seem important (I mean, American’s weren’t exactly quiet when GWB won Florida, either.)

    I wouldn’t… so… completely discount this particular chain of events and the impact that at least some Americans feel, in areas (like LA) that have an Iranian population.

  18. Rochelle wrote:

    To be honest, I feel that Western activist-y wanna-be Global Southerner types turn into sour grapes when the average Joe American starts to care about Iran/Hondurus/Burma. It becomes a fad and these activists want everyone to know that they cared about this issue way before it became cool to do so.

    They didn’t need an image of a girl getting shot in order to care. So they criticize everyone who DID start to care only after they saw such image on CNN.

    And even if they’re not Iranian, or ever lived in Iran, they still feel the right to criticize white Americans for their ‘activism’ for the simple fact that they’re… well… white American.

    Note: I am Iranian and have lived there, but I don’t think that point is necessary in order for me to care about what goes on there. It doesn’t matter where you come from. And I’m sick of hearing people criticize non-iranians for what they say while at the same time not being Iranian themselves. What hypocracy.

    Don’t worry — soon people won’t give shit about Iran anymore and the “real” activists can go back to being the “authentic”, “real”, and altruistic angels they claim to be.

  19. Elar wrote:

    Seeing so many non-Iranian Westerners suddenly supporting Iranians and finally distinguishing the people from their government is a wonderful thing. Of course, it takes a long time to really change public opinion, but this is a big step. I never thought I’d see the day when so many Westerners are crying “Free Iran” rather than “Bomb Iran” (I know that the two aren’t necessarily mutually exclusive… but the change in attitude is appreciated).

    Regarding the article on “brown martyrs” necessary for Western sympathy, how does that explain the nonstop coverage of Iran all over the news in the week before Neda died?

    And count me as an Iranian who loves Andrew Sullivan’s coverage of the protests/election.

  20. londonmabel wrote:

    I’m inclined to agree with you, re the depiction of “third world people” in the media. That’s why I like the No 1 Ladies Detective Agency series of books (I haven’t seen the tv show)–because it presents a different image of an African country than the aids-and-starving-children picture. A more everyday picture.

  21. Sobia wrote:

    @ Lxy:

    Co-sign!