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recovery
"Trading
Sites - Destroyed, Revealed, Restored"
Daniel Beunza, Business, New York University, and David
Stark, Sociology and International Affairs, Columbia University
and Santa Fe Institute
"Violence
and Translation"
Veena Das, Anthropology, Johns Hopkins University
"Insurance
and Safety After September 11: Has the World Become
a "Riskier" Place?"
Robin M. Hogarth, Economics and Business, Universitat Pompeu
Fabra
"The
U.S. Bombing of Afghanistan: A Women-Centered Perspective"
Saba Gul Khattak, Research Fellow, Sustainable Development
Policy Institute, Pakistan
"Muslims
in the West: A Positive Asset"
Tariq Modood, Sociology, University of Bristol
"Memorializing
Absence"
Marita Sturken, Communications, University of Southern California
"Strength
of a City: A Disaster Research Perspective on the World Trade
Center Attack"
Kathleen Tierney, Sociology, University of Delaware
other
topics ...
Globalization
Fundamentalism(s)
Terrorism and
Democratic Virtues
Competing
Narratives
New
War?
New World Order?
Building
Peace
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Memorializing
Absence
Marita
Sturken, Associate Professor, Annenberg School for Communication,
University of Southern California
It has been said quite often since September
11 that Americans are standing at a juncture of history, that, on
that date, the world changed forever into a 'before' and an
'after.' Such proclamations of radical breaks in historical
consciousness have happened before, of course. Writing in 1924
about the experience of modernity, Virginia Woolf stated, "on or
about December 1910, human character changed." Many years later,
Theodor Adorno wrote, "to write poetry after Auschwitz is
barbaric," implying that cultural production would never be the
same in the wake of the Holocaust. There are many good arguments
to reject the current version of the shock of history insofar as
it is a particularly American-centric and provincial one, one that
awards traumatic events in the U.S. more historical weight than
those in the rest of the world. Yet, the feeling persists, that
this date will be forever be understood as one that marks the end
of one era and the beginning of another, indeed that September 11,
2001 will be remembered as the beginning of the new world of the
21st century.
In many ways, this before/after can
be attributed to the aspects of this event that were so
unanticipated, so unimaginable: the image of one plane, and then
another, colliding into the twin towers of the World Trade Center,
and the shock of the buildings' collapse, so quickly and so
controlled. As millions of witnesses watched, from Manhattan,
Brooklyn, New Jersey, and throughout the nation and the world on
their television sets, the shock of the spectacular image of the
plane's impact was replaced by an equally unbelievable image -
the absence of the twin towers in the skyline, the erasure of the
two massive buildings anchoring lower Manhattan. How instantly had
those two towers changed meaning, for never had they signified
more than in their absence. Standing untouched, the World Trade
Center had been invested with many meanings in its duration of
almost thirty years - the folly of oversized public building
projects, the banal glass towers of modernity's fading years,
the symbol of New York tourism, and, later, the arrogance of
American capital. Yet, once fallen, their absence spoke more
profoundly than their presence ever could. To look at the skyline
now is to experience the shock of absence; all images of the
towers have now taken on a poignancy that was, before September
11, unimaginable.
In the face of absence, especially
an absence so violently and tragically wrought at the cost of so
many lives, people feel a need to create a presence of some kind,
and it may be for this reason that questions of memorialization
have so quickly followed this event. It seemed as if people were
already talking of memorials the day after, when the numbers and
names of the missing were unknown and the search for survivors
still the focus of national attention. What, we might ask, is
behind this rush to memorialize and to speak of memorials? Could
we imagine people talking of memorialization after the destruction
of the Warsaw Ghetto, or the bombing of Hiroshima? Or, for that
matter, that the people of Rwanda talked of memorialization after
the massacres that killed hundreds of thousands there? Throughout
history, collective and public memorialization has most commonly
taken place with the distance of time. After wars have been
declared over, towns, cities, and nations have built memorials to
name the dead and those sacrificed. Historical figures, such as
Lincoln, Jefferson, and Roosevelt, became the focus of memorials
many decades after they died. Many of the most important memorials
in the United States took many decades to build, each the product
of bureaucratic wrangling and conflicting agendas. In recent
years, it is true, this process has accelerated. The Vietnam
Veterans Memorial was built seven years after the end of U.S.
participation in the war, and even then it was considered to be
long overdue. The Oklahoma City National Memorial was opened five
years after the April 1995 bombing that killed 168 people, and it
was in many ways a memorial sped into existence by the presence of
a powerful group of family members and survivors who participated
in the memorialization process. Now, the question of
memorialization of September 11 has focused on what is called "ground
zero" in New York City, completely overshadowing the sites of
destruction at the Pentagon and in Western Pennsylvania, making it
clear that this site is the symbolic center of this tragic event.
In 1984, French
philosopher Michel de Certeau wrote in his essay "Walking in the
City," that the observation deck of the World Trade Center
promoted a god's eye view of the city, one that fulfilled "a
lust to be a viewpoint and nothing more." De Certeau contrasted
this view - in which "the gigantic mass [of the city] is
immobilized before the eyes" - to the many meaningful acts that
take place at street level, to the "speech acts" of
pedestrians that make meaning of the city's landscape.1 In many
ways, the discussions that have taken place about how to
memorialize the events of September 11 in New York City have
furthered this split view of the city - the contrast between the
towering skyscrapers and the smaller acts of meaning created at
street level. In this sense, the memory of this event already
indicates the conflicting visions of the monumental and the
individual, more intimate rituals of griefs.
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Much of the discussion of
memorialization has been preoccupied by the powerful absence of
the god's eye view from the World Trade Center and the gap that
remains in the New York skyline. Discussions about what to do with
the site have been tied up inevitably with feelings of concern
about what the absence of the World Trade Center signifies, that
is, the belief that to leave the skyline absent of its form is an
expression of weakness and defeat. (To the best of my knowledge,
the New York Times was the only publication to note that
the World Trade Center already had a memorial in it that is now
lost in the rubble, to the six people who were killed in the 1993
bombing there.)2 Stunningly, a bevy of modern architects such as Philip
Johnson and Robert Stern and MoMA architecture curator Terrence
Riley stepped forward to embrace the idea that the two towers
should be rebuilt as they were, in the words of Bernard Tschumi,
the Dean of Columbia's architecture school, only "bigger and
better"3 - an idea that disregards some basic tenets of psychology (no one
would want to work in a new terrorist target) as well as some
historical and economic ignorance (the towers were built with
public money by a public institution in a very different era of
government funding) and disregard for safety (tall skyscrapers are
notoriously difficult to evacuate). Only architects Elizabeth
Diller and Ricardo Scofidio remarked upon the power of the skyline's
transformation as its message: "Let's not build something that
would mend the skyline, it is more powerful to leave it void. We
believe it would be tragic to erase the erasure."4 |
Click here for the
series of articles in the New York Times Magazine. |
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Yet, many of the concepts of
memorialization that have been put forward in the last few weeks
have been specifically about memorializing the towers themselves.
Philippe de Montebello, director of the Metropolitan Museum of
Art, suggested that the jagged fragment of the building that
hovered over the destruction should be preserved and form part of
a memorial.5 In fact, this has been an aspect of many
memorials in the past - most notably the Hiroshima Peace Memorial
Park, which incorporates the skeletal ruins of a building, and
many World War II memorials, such as Coventry Cathedral in
England, that speak to history in their preservation of the ruins
of destroyed structures. For the
most part, these memorials use the shards of the past to convey a
warning and a bitter message about the human capacity for
violence. For de Montebello, this fragment was not only a icon of
survival, but already a "masterpiece" - not only, one
suspects, because it has created the haunting image of a modern
ruin, but because it looks already like a work of art.
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Click here for the
Peace Park home page.
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Others have turned to
the shadow of the towers' presence in the skyline for
inspiration. Art Spiegelman created a cover of the New Yorker
in which the towers were barely visible as black shadows on black,
an image haunting in its somber familiarity. More recently, Towers
of Light, a collaboration by two sets of artists and architects to
recreate the twin towers in light, has received significant
attention and support.6
As imagined, the light will create "phantom towers" like
votive candles that seem to reach skyward. What makes this project
compelling is both its capacity to trace the shadow of the towers'
memory, to evoke both their presence and absence, and the project's
own inevitable ephemerality - that it too will become simply a
memory, that it will not attempt to replace the towers but rather
only temporarily to evoke them, and hence to evoke life before
September 11.
This preoccupation with
memorializing the twin towers has displaced to a certain extent
the profound loss of life that took place there. In the end,
whatever memorial is built on the site of Ground Zero will be a
memorial not to the twin towers of the World Trade Center but to
the ordinary people whose lives were arbitrarily caught up in
history on September 11, and whose bodies are lost there. The fact
that this site is inescapably a graveyard must factor into any
memorial design. It is most likely that the push for a memorial
will focus eventually not on replacing the skyline but on
rendering present the individuals who died there.
This marking of the individual has
already been a part of the rituals surrounding those who died on
September 11, with the lists of those lost published in full-page
ads by corporations and in the ongoing portraits of each one in
the New York Times. However, it was the posters for the
missing that first transformed the cityscape into a space for
remembrance. Flyers hurriedly made with photographs and
descriptions were posted near hospitals, rescue centers, and on
the streets of lower Manhattan, each reading first like a
declaration of personal statistics - date of birth, place of work,
clothing worn, where last seen, and unique physical
characteristics - that was a desperate call for recognition
of the individual lost. These were initially messages of hope, yet
they became very quickly messages of loss. The photographs soon
became artifacts of prior innocence, each image testimony to a
time "before" when those photographed could not have imagined
the unimaginable - nor for that matter could they have imagined
the talisman that the photograph itself would become, conveying
the pressing belief that a loved one is not gone but simply "lost."
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These
posters were the first stage of many small, individual acts
of mourning and memorialization that have taken place throughout
the city. Individual rituals of mourning and tribute to the
dead, such as leaving objects, notes, and flowers and spontaneously
building shrines, have been practiced outside of the national
arena for many decades at cemeteries or at road-side shrines
and became an aspect of national culture when visitors to
the Vietnam Memorial began to leave things there. At the bombing
site in Oklahoma City, people were drawn to the site from
the beginning to look at the destruction and they began to
leave things at a chain-link fence there: photographs, key
chains, license plates, T-shirts with names written on them,
and tributes to those who had died. The fence was then publicized
in media accounts and photos, and when the memorial was completed,
it was incorporated into the memorial's design.
In New York City, small and spontaneous memorials sprang up
around the city, in Union Square Park and at numerous fire
stations, and more widely on numerous web sites, as people
felt the need to perform some kind of ritual to mark their
loss. To leave flowers, write messages, and light candles
are declarative acts that also serve to individualize the
dead. As such, these objects and messages resist the transformation
of the individual identity of the victims into a collective
subjectivity, and thus resist the mass subjectivity of disaster
in general. The destruction of the World Trade Center, like
all events of mass injury, has created an image of injury
to a mass body, what Michael Warner defines as "an already
abstracted body" that is symbolized by the image of the destroyed
towers.7 The mass body of disasters, Warner writes,
such as natural disasters, airline disasters, and, inevitably,
terrorist acts of mass destruction, is represented as a singular
entity. The small gestures of remembrance in the face of mass
destruction are attempts to prevent the absorption of the
individual dead into a larger, singular image.
Spontaneous memorials that provide comfort to people in the
aftermath of traumatic events often become codified over a
period of time, and, inevitably either fade away or become
regulated when part of official memorials. The letters and
objects left at the Vietnam Veterans Memorial, many of which
are quite cryptic and anonymous messages to the dead presumably
left by Vietnam veterans, are now placed almost immediately
in plastic bags, gathered at the end of each day by the National
Park Service, and relegated to a government archive. At the
Oklahoma City Memorial, which has become a major tourist destination
and already has an enormous archive, an elaborate set of rules
governs the placement of objects on the memorial chairs and
the chain-link fence. People now know before coming to these
sites the role these objects of remembrance play. In New York,
the media coverage of these rituals of mourning has begun
already to make them sites of curious fascination and tourist
documentation.8
The most successful national memorials have been those
that allow visitors a wide range of potential interactions
and rituals, and, most importantly, allow them to create a
space where people can speak to the dead. These memorials
facilitate a conversation with the dead in part through naming
those who died, and, in so doing, separating them out as individuals
from the mass body of disaster. At the Vietnam Veterans Memorial,
people touch the names and make rubbings of them to take away,
and leave objects and letters to the dead with the sense that
the dead receive them. At the Oklahoma City National Memorial,
each victim is represented by a bronze chair with a lighted
base, providing a place for families to visit and for strangers
to reflect on the meaning of an individual life. The chairs
effectively evoke both the absence of the dead as they sit
unoccupied, yet their presence as well, as families come to
speak to their loved ones there.9
Ultimately, it is important that any process of memorialization
confront what memorials do well, and what they don't do. National
memorials traditionally have been built with dual purposes:
to act as forms of pedagogy about the nation and historical
figures within it, and to honor the dead. Philosopher Charles
Griswold has called them a "species of pedagogy."10
Yet, this pedagogy is highly limited. Memorials do
not teach well about history, since their role is to remember
those who died rather than to understand why they died.
One can visit the Vietnam Veterans Memorial and the Oklahoma
City National Memorial without understanding, for instance,
the fraught history of the Vietnam War and the reasons why
American lives were lost in Vietnam or what aspects of American
society gave rise to the right-wing ideology that bombed Oklahoma
City. It is important that the sites that are created to mourn
the dead do not foreclose on discussions about why their lives
were lost.
The memorials that resonate within a culture are those that
allow those debates to continue, that don't try to contain
history and memory but create a space where they are generated
in all their conflict. The challenge in New York will be to
create a memorial where the World Trade Center once stood
that provides a place to grieve for and speak to the dead,
yet which also does not allow for a smoothing over of the
search for meaning, or attempt to bring closure to an event
that should not and cannot have closure.
Footnotes
1Michel
de Certeau, "Walking in the City," The Practice of Everyday
Life. Translated by Steven Rendall. (Berkeley: University of
California Press, 1984), 91; 92.
2Jim Dwyer, "The Memorial
That Vanished," New York Times Magazine (September 23,
2001), 81.
3"To Rebuild or Not: Architects
Respond," New York Times Magazine (September 23, 2001),
81.
4Ibid.
5Philippe de Montebello, "The
Iconic Power of an Artifact," New York Times (September
25, 2001), A29.
6The
artists are Julian LaVerdiere and Paul Myoda, who were working on
an art project about the World Trade Center before the attacks,
and architects John Bennett and Gustavo Bonevardi, who had also
conceived a similar idea. They are now working together with
support from the Mayor's office and Creative Time, a public art
organization. See the cover of the New York Times Magazine
(September 23, 2001);
"Update" New York Times Magazine (October 7, 2001), 12.
7Michael
Warner, "The Mass Public and the Mass Subject," in The
Phantom Public Sphere, edited by Bruce Robbins (Minneapolis:
University of Minnesota Press, 1993), 248.
8Columbia
University has already established the Columbia University World
Trade Center Archive Project for documents related to September
11.
9One
family held a wedding at the Oklahoma City Memorial with a
photograph of the bride's father, who was killed in the bombing,
on the chair that bears his name.
10Charles
Griswold, "The Vietnam Veterans Memorial and the Washington
Mall: Philosophical Thoughts on Political Iconography," Critical
Inquiry 12 (Summer 1986), 688-719.
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Click
here for the home page of the Vietnam Memorial.
Click here
for the Oklahoma City Memorial web site.
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