terrorism &
democratic
virtues
"After
the WTC Disaster: The Sacred, the Profane, and Social Solidarity"
Janet Abu-Lughod, Sociology, New School University
"The
Shifting Grounds for Transnational Civic Activity"
Jeffrey Ayres, Political Science, St. Michael's College;
and Sidney Tarrow, Sociology, Cornell University
"Unholy
Politics"
Seyla Benhabib, Political Science, Yale University
"To Reassure,
and Protect, After September 11"
Didier Bigo, Institut d'Etudes Politiques, Paris
"Negotiating
Identity and Community After September 11"
Kay Deaux, Psychology, City University of New York
"The
Return of the State"
John A. Hall, Sociology, McGill University
"What's
New After September 11th?"
Dick Howard, Philosophy, SUNY at Stonybrook
"9/11
and the New 'Anti-politics' of 'Security'"
Kanishka Jayasuriya, Political Science, City University
of Hong Kong
"Defend
Politics Against Terrorism"
Peter Alexander Meyers, Sociology, Université de Lille
"A
Human Rights Approach to Sept. 11"
Kathryn Sikkink, Political Science, University of Minnesota
"Guarding
the Gates"
Aristide Zolberg, Political Science, New School University
other
topics ...
Globalization
Fundamentalism(s)
Competing
Narratives
New
War?
New
World Order?
Building
Peace
Recovery
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After
the WTC Disaster:
The Sacred, the Profane, and Social Solidarity
Janet
Abu-Lughod, Professor Emerita, Department of Sociology, New School University
.... What concerns me most about the World Trade Center disaster
is the way the social, not the urban, fabric was temporarily
reconstructed in the immediate aftermath. Urbanists have a
knee jerk response to "community." It is a "good"
that should be encouraged and nurtured. And in the short
run, it was absolutely essential. Some of that coming
together to rebuild was clearly spontaneous, as was the case
in Union Square which drew crowds of mourners daily, proving
that public space serves best when it permits but does not
determine what is to be done there. Union Square became a
magnet for thousands of pedestrians who felt the need to
gather, to mourn, and to dissent. (Not since the 1960s have
I seen such voices for peace. They have now dropped to a
whisper, as police and sanitation workers eventually removed
all the pictures and altars.)
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essay
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See also essay on this site by Marita Sturken
on the memorialization of the
events of Sept. 11.
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But
some of that "community" was consciously "socially constructed" and indeed
manipulated, as was the case in the carefully staged Yankee
Stadium "show." I am not suggesting that such events
were unnecessary or that they did not serve important
functions. But as I shall indicate, such primal responses
are a poor basis for establishing long-range policies for
responding internationally to the challenges posed by the
WTC tragedy.
These thoughts sent me back to two classic texts in sociological
theory: The Division of Labor in Society
and Elementary Forms of Religious Life. Although for years
I had taught both, they had never been among my favorites; I
always favored Marx over Durkheim. But
as I reread them for the nth time after the WTC disaster, I felt
finally that I had begun to understand them. But rather than being
reassured, this understanding has filled me with foreboding. Let
me point to some of the hints:
1. The destruction site began to be called "sacred ground,"
as well as "ground zero." Of course, Durkheim makes the
distinction between sacred and profane central to his definition
of religion, a distinction confirmed daily by more references to
God than I have ever heard before in US culture. The surviving
family members whose lost relatives’ bodies were never recovered
were offered urns containing the "dust" from the site in lieu
of remains. Presumably, these urns contain validation of the
sacred/sacrifice.
2. The attitudes of well-wishers toward those who had worked
or were working on the site was reverential in the extreme. The
honors accorded to agents of the State (firemen and policemen)
confirm Durkheim’s contention about the identity between
religion and society.
3. The
appearance of icons and "totemic" symbols (notably flags,
lapel pins) was immediate and ubiquitous. Interestingly enough,
they were also used as protective talismans by those whose
marginal status was marked by their complexions and/or
ethnicities.
4. Ceremonies, both spontaneous and planned (the latter widely
shown on TV) were generated, often featuring pictures of the
missing. Memorial altars were adorned with lit candles, flowers,
and poems. Secular public spaces were transformed into sacred
places, suggesting that the yearning to draw sustenance from a
collective place of worship and supplication was deep. Hymns were
sung (with God Bless America and America the Beautiful preferred
over the national anthem).
I think this is sufficient to suggest the religious character of
the response – a response intended to galvanize the society for
unity. Durkheim’s definition of religion is that it is based
upon the distinction between the sacred and the profane, that it
is a projection of a society and its moral base. So much for
Elementary Forms.
In many ways,
the related theory in The Division of Labor in Society is even
more germane because it moves beyond the symbolic to explain the
responses to the disaster. In this work, Durkheim distinguishes
between two "ideal types" of social solidarity, each with its
own degree of differentiation among people and its own
characteristic type of law (response to "crime"). In any given
society, both forms of law can co-exist, although the less
primitive the society, the higher the degree of "organic"
solidarity and therefore the greater the proportion of laws that
seek restitution, rather than repression. He states baldly that
something is criminal because it offends the collective
conscience, i.e., beliefs that members of a society share. This
common repulsion calls for vindictive punishment in order to
restore the social solidarity and to reaffirm the society.
1. The disaster has been called "a crime against humanity"
2. There has been an effort to gather support for punishment
from "our kinds of people" (you are either with us or against
us)
3. This unity must be enforced and signs of it collected
4. Deviants or persons who might be LIKE the perpetrators of the
crime are also to be punished: hence the repression of and
aggression against Arabs, Sikhs, and others with swarthy
complexions.
5. Bush’s widely watched speech before Congress promised to
"bring to justice" [punish] not only the guilty but those
harboring them: hence our bombing of Afghanistan. This is, of
course, the mechanism whereby the crime against society’s
collective conscience is transformed into restored community.
If we put these two theories together, we have a full description
of the events of the past month – at least from the standpoint
of the "blameless victim" seeking, above all, national unity.
There are some problems. The emphasis on mechanical solidarity
(undifferentiated sameness) associated with reprisals/punishments
allows no room for multiculturalism. The automatic identification between religion and society
-- or rather the use of religious symbols to restore solidarity --
allows no room for dissent or even for atheists like myself. The
public mourning/celebratory event of the catastrophe, the lengthy,
well-orchestrated ceremony held in Yankee Stadium, was designed to
show the common outrage of all religions, to define the act as
uniquely criminal, and to support the call for
retribution/punishment. While this may have served some social
purpose, it made it impossible to examine the etiology of the
affront (as indefensible as it may be) and therefore to reason as
to the best way to "restore" order. Nor was this process
assisted by George W. Bush’s address to Congress, primarily
expressing outrage at the "insult" and promising revenge.
In all, we have been reduced to the lowest primal call for
revenge, not restitution, no matter how much that motive has been
concealed in the usual "making the world safe for democracy."
I would like to suggest that this is the very worst way to conduct
international relations! It served its purpose, but it has
outlived its usefulness.
The current
response is counter-productive in the extreme. Like a bull in the
china shop, the over-armed (and expensive) threats to and bombing
of Afghanistan, which are out of proportion to the avowed pretext,
are likely to destabilize entire regions and regimes for some time
to come. The global system is not one of similarity, of mechanical
solidarity. It is a highly developed system of division of labor,
calling for organic solidarity and restitutive law. The
oversimplified punitive response to the acts of clear criminals is
more suited to tribal warfare than to any "clash of
civilization." And
yet, that latter may indeed be what the current attacks by US
forces will exacerbate in Muslim communities as diverse in beliefs
as Christianity and as scattered in space as countries on all
continents.
In contrast to these dire consequences, I’m afraid I see
the question of whether to rebuild the WTC a trivial issue. How to
rebuild a world of more peaceful coexistence of interdependent
societies is the issue I think needs more reasoned and less
emotional attention. This is unlikely to result from bombing
Afghanistan.
Adapted
from comments made October 19, 2001 at the Center for Metropolitan
Studies Center, New York University, panel discussion on the future of urban life after the World Trade
Center attack.
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